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Andrew Neil slams British culture for making icons of Russell Brand and Jimmy Saville

Published 09:29 21 Sept 2023 BST

Updated 09:33 21 Sept 2023 BST

Steve Hopkins
Andrew Neil slams British culture for making icons of Russell Brand and Jimmy Saville

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The former BBC newsreader also criticised the 'hypocrisy' of people 'rushing to dissociate themselves' with Brand

Andrew Neil has unleashed a scathing attack on British culture, comparing the rise of Russell Brand to that of disgraced sex offender Jimmy Saville.

The former BBC and GB News broadcaster lamented how the UK "elevated people of no talent, people of no redeeming value whatsoever, to the status of national icons."

Neil appeared on Piers Morgan: Uncensored on Tuesday where he offered his opinion on the investigation into Brand, which revealed multiple allegations of sexual assault against the comic. The 48-year-old denies all criminal allegations.

He continued: "It’s just nonsense, and this power of celebrity which seems to have the ability to make sensible people stupid, this is another classic example of it and it is corrosive to our culture."

Neil also criticised the "hypocrisy" of people "rushing to dissociate themselves" with Brand and questioned why they were "ever associated with him in the first place". He went on to list a large number of media outlets and networks Brand had been interviewed on or, in some cases, worked on. The BBC and Channel 4 are wiping programmes that feature Brand from their platforms. YouTube has suspended ads on his content and his comedy tour has been postponed.

Neil described Brand as "neither funny but consistently vulgar, rude and unwatchable," and asked why "the BBC, Channel 4, The Guardian, The News State, the Labour Party, ever want to be associated with essentially this sleazebag in the first place?"

Neil was also asked his thoughts on trial by media, as Brand has not been charged with anything. He dismissed this, saying the media is doing what it is supposed to.

Neil continued: "It isn’t trial by media. The newspaper and TV station have done their job. Now if there’s going to be a trial it’s a job for the police … the job for the newspaper is to expose and reveal, that’s what they’ve done."

Earlier in the interview, Piers spoke about a 2006 interview where he had jokingly asked Brand about being a "sexual predator." At the time, Brand is said to have been in a relationship with a 16-year-old schoolgirl.

In a statement on Friday ahead of the report, Brand said the allegations against him “pertain to the time when I was working in the mainstream, when I was in the newspapers all the time, when I was in the movies, and as I have written about extensively in my books, I was very, very promiscuous.”

He continued: “Now during that time of promiscuity the relationships I had were absolutely, always consensual. I was always transparent about that then, almost too transparent, and I am being transparent about it now as well.

“To see that transparency metastasised into something criminal, that I absolutely deny, makes me question – is there another agenda at play?”

Brand has claimed that there is witnesses whose evidence “directly contradicts the narrative that these two mainstream media outlets are trying to construct.”

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