Piers Morgan Uncensored - Piers Morgan Uncensored: Brand Cancelled Continues

Episode Date: September 19, 2023

On tonight's episode of Piers Morgan Uncensored, Piers continues the debate as Russell Brand continues to be cancelled. Watch Piers Morgan Uncensored at 8 pm on TalkTV on Sky 522, Virgin Media 606, Fr...eeview 237 and Freesat 217. Listen on DAB+ and the app.  Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Tonight, I'll Peers Morgan on censor. Russell Brand's tour is postponed. His book deal is shelved. Now YouTube strips his earnings over claims of sexual abuse and rape. Should they have the power to cancel before any conviction? Spotlight on the media as Brands fans cry conspiracy and executives face questions on what they knew and when. I'll talk to mainstream media beasts, Andrew Neal and Robert Peston. I'm Mariela Frostrup, by the way, I might add. Plus rugby legend Danny Cypriani knows a thing or two about surviving. the media storm. One of the most privateest stories go public. He joins me, live in the studio. Live from the news building in London, this is Pearce Morgan Uncensurate. Well, good evening from London. Welcome to Pierce Morgan Unsensor. Russell Brand is facing shocking accusations of rape, sexual assault and emotional abuse. If he's charged and convicted, he'll deserve everything the law throws at him. No decent person would disagree with that. But what if he isn't? What if Russell Brand has committed no crimes. As we sit here today, he's not been proven guilty of any crimes, but since these
Starting point is 00:01:11 allegations were made public, Brand has rapidly begun to lose pretty much everything. He's been dropped by his management agency, his book deal has been shelved, his theatre tour postponed, Netflix and BBC Eye Player, began taking down his content, and today YouTube ruled that he can't make any money from the videos he posed to his six and a half million followers by banning all advertising. Now, a reminder, Russell Brand has vehemently denied the allegations against him. And ironically, he did so in a video posted to YouTube. Amidst this litany of astonishing, rather Baroque attacks are some very serious allegations that I absolutely refute. These allegations pertain to the time when I was working in the mainstream,
Starting point is 00:01:54 when I was in the newspapers all the time, when I was in the movies. And as I've written about extensively in my books, I was very, very promiscuous. 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'm being transparent about it now as well. And to see that transparency metastasized into something criminal that I absolutely deny makes me question,
Starting point is 00:02:20 is there another agenda at play? Well, it might be or they might not, but YouTube says it's demonetized brands page because of its creator responsibility guidelines, saying if a creator's off-platform behavior harms our users, employees or ecosystem, we take action to protect the community. But what is the behavior that he's supposedly done that's harmed the community that's been proven beyond any doubt? As far as we all know at the moment, they are accusations,
Starting point is 00:02:46 albeit very serious ones that were done in extremely well-researched and meticulous investigative journalism by the Sunday Times and by Channel 4's dispatches program. But there's something slightly Orwellian about a business that says it will still host his videos, keeping millions of eyeballs on their platform, but won't share any of the monetary spoils. We know the big tech companies have got this wrong before. Thousands were suspended, losing their main source of income, for claiming that, for example, face masks don't really work that well against COVID, and that the virus probably leaked from a Chinese lab.
Starting point is 00:03:18 Both of those things now look like to have some merit to them. Now, I love YouTube. Millions of people watch this show on YouTube. We have one and a half million subscribers to our YouTube channel. But plainly, it's perilous in a free democratic society. any powerful business to appoint itself, judge, jury, and perhaps premature executioner. And the way the story is playing out online is evidence of a slightly bigger problem, which is tribalism. Millions of people have raced to Russell Brown's defense without even reading
Starting point is 00:03:46 the heinous claims about it. They all think it's a conspiracy by the mainstream media, to crush a man who got too close to the truth. I think that's rubbish, personally. Millions more have convicted him based on their opinions, forcing companies to end his career before he's had any due process. I think they are wrong to race to conviction point two. Well, joining me now to discuss always is Titans Radio broadcaster and author Mariela Frostrop, ITV's political editor,
Starting point is 00:04:11 an author of The Crash, a thrilling new novel, Robert Peston, and author of The War on the West, Douglas Murray over in New York. Let me start with you, Douglas, because I've not had the take yet from New York. What's the mood there? Because Russell Brand's a big name in America,
Starting point is 00:04:26 big Hollywood star, of course, a big media figure there as well. How has this gone down in America? Well, you say he's big in America. He is famous, but he's not a big talent. His attempt to break Hollywood some years ago was a flop. Everyone recognizes that. And it's been argued that his more recent trajectory
Starting point is 00:04:46 into the sort of fever swamps of conspiracy theory as a sort of result of that. He tried his career in the UK, he came to America to try to do it, didn't work. And then he became this sort of self-appointed guru who most recently could be found on his YouTube channel claiming that the Maui fires were arguably started by Black Rock lasers, although there was no evidence for that,
Starting point is 00:05:07 but there wasn't any evidence not for it either. I mean, this was, for anyone unfamiliar with it, the territory that he had got himself into. So there's enormous interest in it, of course, as there is in all of these media stories, but it's not the case that he's regarded as any kind of talent. Mariela, I read this report in the Sunday Times, then I watched the dispatcher thing.
Starting point is 00:05:28 I think you've got to do that to make any measured judgment about where we are with this. It seemed to me, with my former newspaper editor hat on, incredibly well-researched investigative journalism, obviously gone through many layers of fact-checking and legal work, but ultimately, in some of the cases, certainly, it will be a case of the word of the person making the allegations against Brandt, and he's vehemently denied any criminality here. Is it right that he should be unceremoniously cancelled by all these companies, before we've really got to a conclusion on this.
Starting point is 00:06:04 Well, my greatest surprise, quite frankly, is that he's been allowed to broadcast for as long as he has, because if you look back at some of the quotes from his delightful memoir, My Booky Wood, then you'll find extremely misogynistic, extremely unsavory. And I would say in many cases, alluding to an issue on his part with what is
Starting point is 00:06:24 and isn't consensual sense. Well, it's interesting you say that. So I found an interview I did with him in 2006, which is the same year I think that he was going out with this 16-year-old girl and picking her up from school. And it was a classic brand interview at the time where I asked for reasons that I'm not entirely sure
Starting point is 00:06:42 other than it must have been jocular at the time, are you a more successful sexual predator? Now you don't drink. Now I meant it as a joke. I didn't have any information about him actually being a sexual predator. He said, yes, but I resent the word predator. I like to think of myself as a conduit of natural forces
Starting point is 00:06:58 after all, the most natural thing in the world for people to do is to use the euphemism for having sex. And people want to do it. He said, so all you have to do is remove all the reasons why women don't actually go through with it, like pride and reputation. You just have to unpick the conditions stopping women going straight to bed with you. And then he said this, to your point. I asked him if he was attracting more women since becoming a celebrity. He said, actually, always changes the amount of seduction required has decreased to almost preposterous proportions now I'm famous.
Starting point is 00:07:27 I've always been good at pulling. because I'm quite charming. But if I talk to 10 women in the old days, then I'd back myself to pool two or three. Now I wouldn't be happy with less than eight or nine. And whereas I would have devoted a lot of time to seduction, depending on the quality of the target, now I just get on with it.
Starting point is 00:07:43 Fame has been very helpful in that respect. Now, these are damning quotes, right? But that's a damning question as well, if you don't mind the saying. Because if you can say to him as a joke question, you're a more successful sexual predator now that you don't drink, I agree. Then actually what it reflects is a culture where it's acceptable to make jokes about things that are incredibly serious. I totally agree.
Starting point is 00:08:07 And that for me is the biggest issue with all of this. You know, if criminal proceedings go ahead and if he's found guilty, that's a completely separate thing. And I'm not in any way qualified to talk about that. But certainly as a woman who's been in the public eye for the last 35 years, you know, the atmosphere and the ability for people to use. use their power and to promote themselves in a certain way and to discuss and laugh about things that really aren't funny. I think began in the kind of mid-90s with all those lad magazines.
Starting point is 00:08:41 Yeah, I don't disagree. And of course, we saw what happened with the thing with Jonathan Ross with poor, with the young woman, Georgina Bailey, was on my show last night talking about the effect that had on her life. Robert, I mean, he goes on to say, he boasts endlessly about the number of women he slept with and so on, but he goes on to say that he,
Starting point is 00:08:58 treats women as goddesses. He never wants to be misogynistic or aggressive towards women. He kind of qualifies it all, as he's often done, leaving you sort of wondering, well, what is the real Russell brand here? Maybe from these investigations, we are finding out the sinister reality, but maybe we're not. I mean, I do think if you believe in due process, if you believe in the law doing its job,
Starting point is 00:09:21 it is too early to convict it. So, look, we'll, I'm sure, contributors to your show, peers believe in due process. But on the other hand, you know, there have been more than rumours. It's been a sort of open secret in parts of the media for years. This character was seen by women who we had had relationships with as abusive. And I mean, you know, my partner, Charlotte Edwards wrote in The Standard a few years ago about, you know, what an appalling man he was in terms of his relationships with women. And she was responding actually curiously
Starting point is 00:10:03 to a Sunday Times interview with him in which he'd said he'd become a great supporter of Me Too. And I mean this was a sort of, I mean this was like an insult really, but there wasn't the outrage you would have expected. So I mean, many would say yes it's great that Channel 4 and the Sunday Times have done an important investigation about how some, an individual seems to have abused his power as a result of his fame but you slightly ask yourself why weren't they
Starting point is 00:10:33 doing this year you know why why was he being given respectability over many years why was the investigation in a sense so late but also I mean it's interesting you know that Charlotte writes this article but actually he's written far more damning thing well yeah including in this movie have written about him if you look at these quotes from my bookie work by my twenties I would relish the challenge of chaste maids and the search for the correct combination of words required to decode their moral resistance, the no obstacle course I call it. You know, as I escorted Michaela, a lap dancer, he slapped him after sex through the front door.
Starting point is 00:11:07 I felt very strongly that I needed to avenge the slap. I spat in her face. That's in his words, in his book. Totally. And what's in, I do think, you know, one of the things that all of the media, both from tabloid to sort of broad she and indeed television, everybody has questions to answer here. because everybody lent him respectability in different ways. You know, I mean, the News Night interview, you know, where he's taken, you know, this is a man whose ideas are absurd. And yet, you know, the BBC gives him a platform as though he's some great thinker.
Starting point is 00:11:41 He was invited to Parliament to talk about drug law. Well, Ed Miliband basically had him trying to prop up his, he's going to be Prime Minister. Because there's this ridiculous idea that somehow he has this connection with young people. The Guardian had him, I mean, Alan Rosbridge has been very pompous about this on Twitter, and very highfaluting. He had him next to him in the Guardian editorial conference sitting next to Rushbridgeer, basically detainting what was going to happen to the paper.
Starting point is 00:12:03 So I think how you legitimize somebody, how you give them respectability, how you give them this cloak which allows them to do some really terrible things. I think there are questions for everybody. Well, let me bring in Douglas. One other thing, which I think is really, really important in all of this is that we have to look at our own culture
Starting point is 00:12:20 over the last two decades. And I feel so strongly that the proliferation of pornography, which has been facilitated by the World Wide Web, has turned, has normalized behavior. I mean, we were joking about the 90s and what that was like. But that was not aggressive, and it wasn't anything to do with violence against women. What's become normalized amongst young people
Starting point is 00:12:41 who've had their sex education delivered to them through the Internet without any kind of guidance, is that this is normal behavior, that it is funny. I mean, if you listen to clips of him doing live performances where he's saying some of the violent things I've ever heard, of things I've ever heard, you'll hear men and women laughing in the audience because somehow we've decided that this is normal. He got a standing ovation on the day this all dropped that night on stage, which I found very disconcerting to watch. I mean, I would make the point which we made
Starting point is 00:13:08 yesterday is that since the Me Too and Times Up campaigns in particular, a lot of this stuff looking back to the kind of banter as it was described at the time. He won the Shagger of the Year award at the Sun, three years running. Everyone thought that was funny, right? No one was as morally outraged as they are now. I do think the moral conviction of Brand historically is pretty intense right now. I'm probably perfectly justified. I don't think
Starting point is 00:13:32 Propheuity is a crime, but I think that the way in which you humiliate and disparage people and the sorts of things that he's describing, that's not about promiscuity. That's about a blatant disregard of women. Let me bring in Douglas again. Douglas, if you listen patiently to this, I suppose the point about this
Starting point is 00:13:49 is, there is a theory, which we had a King's Council yesterday, talking to us, that all this does, all this social media speculation, all the raging opinions on either side, they actually make it incredibly difficult for him ever to face a fair trial if he ever face a trial at all. Therefore, justice itself doesn't get served, it gets damaged by this. That's another part of the equation. Well, look, there's some truth in that. I just wanted to return to something that Robert said earlier, which is that, first of all, it was a sort of open secret in the media. Whenever the general public discover there's a sort of open secret in the media,
Starting point is 00:14:22 general public always ask, well, why did the media keep it to itself? And it's a perfectly legitimate question to ask. And the second question to ask, it's a point to make, if I may, is Robert said everyone enabled him. That's not true. I can give a list of the people who enabled him. The BBC, Channel 4, the Guardian that hosted him as a columnist as well as an attendant at editorial conferences, the new statesman that made him the editor for one issue. And this is important because this was at the height of the...
Starting point is 00:14:52 the allegations that were made against him. At this same time, if I may point out, Charles Moore, at the Telegraph and the Spectator, pointed out that Russell Brand's behavior was so abhorrent at the BBC that he would no longer pay the BBC license fee. It was not the case that everyone fell for this charlatan. It was not the case that everyone thought
Starting point is 00:15:11 he was God's gift and that he could swing an election. It was a very strange time on the British left, and it was the British left that enabled him now, and I could just make this one point. I don't want to be partisan about this because there's a non-partisan point, but it is important to note that as Russell Brand has, in my view,
Starting point is 00:15:30 given himself cover by fleeing to this weird far-right conspiracy place, almost nobody on the right of the spectrum has welcomed him. I mean, the telegraph is not giving him guest Collins. He is not being invited into the editorial meetings of the telegraph. There is some responsibility that the people
Starting point is 00:15:49 who enabled him in Britain should take. instead of, as always, covering it wildly. Sorry, but you can't make this a political. The government of the day, not Labor, facilitated him and invited him to speak in Parliament about what should be drug policy in this country. How on earth he would have any sort of credibility in that sphere, I've no idea.
Starting point is 00:16:10 The fact of the matter is that what we're dealing with is someone who is clearly a sex predator. Well, hang on and as his face pointed out, the tabloids like the sun, thought he was a funny. That's the fact that he can draw an audience that's kept him in business, which is economic. You are calling him a sex predator.
Starting point is 00:16:28 He's a sex predator. He's a sex predator. He said it himself. I've got four quotes all by him. I know. Which, to me, instantly define him as such. It's your analysis of his... On what he says. He would dispute that. But you called him a sex predator for the question.
Starting point is 00:16:39 No, no, I did. I did. And he didn't mind that at all. Well, he did. He objected immediately. He said, I resent the word predator, right? So he doesn't categorize... He says he was wildly promiscuous.
Starting point is 00:16:48 loved sex with thousands of women. But that's not a crime. The question is, has what he's done actually become criminality? He's Sunday time... He's been accused of rape. Yeah, he's been accused of crime. I painted verbal pictures and begged until she kissed me.
Starting point is 00:17:03 I lied and danced and evoked the spirit of pan till reluctantly she removed her bra. I used tears and emotional blackmail to secure the immolation of her neckers. I mean, you know, I don't have to say anything, really. I think it speaks for us out. When did that book come out? It came out, I think, about 2004.
Starting point is 00:17:20 Right. But I don't remember any action being taken about the book, right? I don't even know who published it. I'm not an expert on Russell Brand. But I am an expert on sexism in society, and I don't think that you can call it an either right wing or a left wing or indeed a mainstream or a non-mainstream thing. It's everywhere.
Starting point is 00:17:37 I'm not going to defend Russell Brand. I want to see how this plays out. You're going to work to see what everyone else says. No, no, no. I want to see how it plays out. But there is one small point just to pick up something at Douglas. said, I was, you know, in terms of who may be, you know, right now, one of the most absolutely most powerful people in the world,
Starting point is 00:17:55 definitely not on the left. Elon Musk, you know, said, you know, like the competition. No wonder they're coming after you. So, you know, he has been endorsed by people of all change, shall we say. But I can think of a lot of rock stars. He's got Andrew Tate right behind him. But primarily, you and I first met in the music business when you were a music beer.
Starting point is 00:18:15 There were lots of rock stars and pop stars. who were behaving just like Russell Brand and boasting about it. Morals and the discussion. But no one's saying he's unique. That's the tragedy. That's what I'm trying to say is that this is a cultural societal issue. I think what's changed. Wild, brazen, boastful promiscuity by male celebrities
Starting point is 00:18:34 used to be celebrated. It definitely isn't now. There's been a shift in the way these are viewed morals. But peers, there has always been a line though. And the line is criminality. Can we just look at Andrew Tate and his enormous success? He boasts about his sexuality all the time. I mean, it's not that it's a thing of the past.
Starting point is 00:18:53 It's just that Russell Brand is the object of our ire at the moment. But what we're not doing is shifting whatever the expression is. You know, we need to change the culture. I totally agree. I totally agree. If I may, very quickly, peers. Very quickly. There's one very quick point to make, if I may, which is that there's a question of due process here that you've rightly raised. And many people have been saying, well, how could the girls in question,
Starting point is 00:19:15 the young women in question, get a fair trial? I think that's an incredibly important point to raise. But one of the answers is how few rape accusations actually make it through, not just to trial and to conviction. And I would like to see in our society not just these high-profile celebrity-related cases going to trial and getting more success, but think of the hundreds of girls in places like Telford who raped in need. I want equal justice across the border, not just on celebrity cases.
Starting point is 00:19:44 Yeah, I totally agree. I think we can all agree on that. We would agree. Robert, you've got a brilliant new thriller, The Crash. It's not the story of Russell Brand, although it could be. No, it couldn't be. And the mainstream media on the back couldn't be more excited by this. You've quoted every paper saying it's the greatest book of all time.
Starting point is 00:20:00 Give me a very quick summary of what this is. So it's a story about the crash, as it says. It's set in 2007, 2008, a story that I was sort of somewhat immersed in. And it's basically about central character, a journalist at the BBC. I wonder where I got that idea from. So original. Whose on-off girlfriend is found hanged in her flat. It's a story about the abuse of power by people at the top of a big organization,
Starting point is 00:20:29 something we've just been talking about, and his quest to find out why she died. Excellent. And he's taken all the sexy bits out on the advice of his life. There's quite a sex. They're just our sex scenes, as it were. There's a sort of, there's a nuance. You knew where the line was.
Starting point is 00:20:44 You knew where the line was. I knew with that. Certainly in terms of good taste, I knew in the line. Robert, Mariela, thank you very much indeed. Thank you to Douglas over in New York. Well, unscens it next. Last, a top lawyer told me the media coverage
Starting point is 00:20:55 of the brand scandal could prevent a fair trial while media executives face a stampede of questions about what they knew and when. Who better to ask about all this, the media titan, Andrew Neal, former editor of the Sunday Times. He joins me next. Welcome back, lots of media organisations
Starting point is 00:21:25 from Channel 4 to the BBC and The Guardian are facing tough questions of the apparently open secret of Russell Brown. behavior, but the spotlight's also been turned on journalists who reported the claims against him. Brown's defenders asked why now? Why didn't they go to police? And legal experts have warned he'll have no prospect of a fair trial given all this open speculation. Joining me now discuss this is the broadcast from former editor for Sunday Times, Andrew Neal. Andrew, great to have you on. I'm Piers Morgan Nus. Thank you for coming on. Can't they give anyone better placed than you?
Starting point is 00:21:54 A former editor for Sunday Times. So let me start with their investigation. When you read you, what was your verdict professionally as a piece of investigative journalism? When I read it and finished it, I was very proud of the Sunday Times. It was exactly in the tradition of that newspaper's history of investigative journalism. When I took over as editor, that tradition had died a little bit. I did my best when I was there to put investigative journalism back into the center of it. We've got a lot of great investigative stories, the famous Insight Team, probably the most famous investigative unit in the world, had new life,
Starting point is 00:22:30 in it and that has continued. You know, people often say, oh, investigative journalism is dead. Well, this shows that it isn't. It was meticulous. It was unhurried. That you go over four years. Investment of journalism is expensive, but not quick. You've got to get things right. You've got to get
Starting point is 00:22:45 a lawyer. Sometimes the life of it's lawyered out of it. And of course, they gave Mr. Brand eight days to respond. And you and I know, as ex-editors, peers, they're given the ability in Britain to get gagging injunctions to stop publication of stories. That was quite a dangerous thing to do. So I think
Starting point is 00:23:05 they did everything the right way. They presented it correctly. They got the research done correctly. They laid it out and let's see where it goes from here. Yeah. And I think that's the crucial bit for me is that lots of people jumping on various bandwagons here, many racing to say, well, he's obviously guilty. That's it. He must be cancelled forever from everything, which is already happening corporately, others going the other way, saying, no, it's all a conspiracy by mainstream media, which of course is, I think, a lot of nonsense. I'm sure you share that. Have you seen your tweets about that? So what we're left with is where this will go legally. And there is a concern by the legal world that this may already actually no longer be able to go to a courtroom
Starting point is 00:23:47 because of all the prejudicial material's been out there. What do you say to that? It's the usual self-cleaning of lawyers who don't like journalists, but they don't like us as much as we don't like lawyers. And, you know, if you followed this line, then we do nothing. We do no serious journalism at all. Oh, we can't publish this. It might affect a fair trial somewhere at some unspecified period down the pike. And I would just point out, if it wasn't for the Sunday Times Channel 4 investigation, you and I wouldn't be talking about the possibility of criminal proceedings in the first place. There's plenty of time to get to that. It's only because of this investment of journalism that there's even now the possibility. You know,
Starting point is 00:24:27 know whether it will happen or at least the possibility of of criminal proceedings taking place. That wouldn't have happened without this investigation. So I really think that is a way of trying to stop journalists doing their proper job. We need more of this, not less. Yeah, and actually, I was reminding people yesterday, the Harvey Weinstein scandal was broken by journalists,
Starting point is 00:24:49 women going to journalists, who then published the revelations. That led to a police investigation, and now he's languishing in prison probably the rest of his life. But that started the same way. And I think for the women involved, this is very important, too. We know how difficult it is for women to come forward in these circumstances. We know the pressures not to do are huge. And it could be in this case, as in the Weinstein case,
Starting point is 00:25:13 that women speaking to journalists, to newspapers first, is an interim stage before it then results in wider proceedings and facilitates their ability to do so. And I think that's another plus too. But there is, you know, there's a bedrock of a democratic society, which is innocent to proven guilty. And that's not proven guilty by a newspaper or by social media. Ultimately, it has to be proven in a court of law.
Starting point is 00:25:42 And I have a view about this, that whatever you think of Russell Brand, and you can make your own mind up about his morals from everything. He said himself, Mariella read out some pretty disturbing stuff early from his own book, his own words. I read some from an interview I did with him for GQ. which now looks pretty unsavory. But he remains at the moment somebody who should be considered innocent to proven guilty by the law, shouldn't he?
Starting point is 00:26:06 Yes, and that's our way of doing things. But the newspaper is not, or Channel 4, they're not trying and convicting them. That's not their job. Their job is to put in from it. Don't forget, the best definition of journalism is to put into the public domain facts that powerful people don't want to see in the public domain.
Starting point is 00:26:25 And this is a classic example of that. This isn't trial by media. The newspaper and the television station have done their job. It is now, if this is going to be a trial, that's a job for the police. That's a job for the prosecution service. That's a job for the courts. Not a job for the newspapers to do that. Their job is to expose and reveal.
Starting point is 00:26:46 That's what they've done. Whether we go forward into criminal matters is another matter entirely. not from the media to decide. I think the one thing that we do already know is whether criminality is involved and not, which, as I say, is not for me a journalist that decide. It's pretty clear there was some egregious behavior going on here, some behavior that anybody should be ashamed of, and that major media companies were complicit.
Starting point is 00:27:14 And I think we're seeing a lot of hypocrisy now, because I see all these people now rushing to disassociate themselves for Russell Brown. Well, I'm going to ask a fundamental question. Why were they ever associated with him in the first place? For me, some of the most revealing footage in the documentary was not the investigative journalism, strong as it was. It was his performances as a so-called stand-up comedian in which he was neither funny,
Starting point is 00:27:40 but consistently vulgar, rude and unwatchable. Why did the BBC, why did Channel 4, why did the Guardian, why did the new states, Why did the Labour Party ever wanted to be associated with essentially this sleaze bag in the first place? You know, I mean, I think to play devil's advocate, the answer, I would imagine, is that although you found him grotesque and unfunny, clearly a lot of people found him hilarious.
Starting point is 00:28:09 They just did. You know, he sold buckets of books. He put loads of ratings onto television programs. He wrote columns that were widely disseminated and enjoyed. So he's one of those very polarizing. figures and he does have, I mean, he's got six and a half million people subscribe to his YouTube channel. There's a huge following there. And I'm sure that if you and I put public hangs on our program be pretty good for ratings for a while as well. You know, there are some
Starting point is 00:28:35 things as standards and, you know, particularly in Britain where there's this strong tradition of public service broadcasting and not just doing it for the money, not just doing it because it's commercial, because it gives big ratings. It was two public service broadcasters, the VBC, and Channel 4, which facilitated this guy to do it. And they shouldn't have done. And we have an ability in our culture. I think it's true in America, parts of Europe, but above all in Britain, where we elevate people of no talent,
Starting point is 00:29:06 people of no redeeming value whatsoever, to the status of national icons. I give you Jimmy Sauer. A classic example of that. A man of no talent who had a hotline to Margaret Thatcher, and the royal family. And in a different way, I'm not comparing it to in terms of what they did,
Starting point is 00:29:25 in a different way we elevated Russell Graham to be this man that seemed to have the pulse of young people in British society, whose every word we should hang on and was worthy of interviews on the BBC's News Night or Guardian conferences or editing the news statesman. It's just nonsense. And this power of celebrity,
Starting point is 00:29:46 which seems to have the ability to make sensible people stupid. This is another classic example of it and it is corrosive of our culture and what is good in it. Andrew Neal, I think in cricket parlance you've just come off the long run and I appreciate you joining the programme. You can see behind me there's a good cricket match going on here that's the year England won the ashes. Fantastic. Well then it's an appropriate analogy Andrew great to talk to you. Thank you. Thank you yes. Well I said to next tonight, rugby legend Danny Sipriani
Starting point is 00:30:18 and surviving the storm when the most private are stories about it goes public. Look about two peers, Wilkinson, Sir Danny Sipriani is one of England's greatest rugby talents, playing for England, Gloucesterabath, among others, and doing it with such flair and brilliance, but it was life off the field that dominated many headlines. His challenges with addictions and relationships
Starting point is 00:30:51 with celebrity girlfriends put him back on the front pages as much as rugby put him onto the back ones. And his new book, Who Am I? He shares the truth behind those headlines. I'm glad of this. I'm joined by Danny. Great to see you. Love the book.
Starting point is 00:31:04 Love the honesty. Love the fact you just gave yourself as hard a time as anyone else has ever given you. But you kind of self-explored at the same time about who you are. And it's interesting reading it because I'm not going to compare you to Russell Brand. But in certain parts of his story, there are parallels. One, he rises and becomes this huge sort of celebrity figure. He's a bit of a sex addict. And you talk very openly about that in your book.
Starting point is 00:31:31 and the way he talks about all the women he's sleeping with and so on, may be unthinkable to a lot of people, to you. You're like, yeah, well, I've been there. I've led that kind of very promiscuous life. Just on that, when you come out the other end after being through that, do you ever look back and do you feel a sense of shame about it? Or do you feel, no, that was all part of me being a younger guy? I carried a lot of shame for a while,
Starting point is 00:31:56 and even though you're behaving in a way which you're trying to gain some momentary pleasure or some feel within it to feel good in that moment or release yourself from the chaotic nature of your mind. That often comes low and down periods off that as well and you're then constantly trying to distract yourselves in other ways. I wouldn't have labelled myself an adult addict because then that's something else I've got to get over. But I was definitely always trying to feel better in some way
Starting point is 00:32:21 and I lent into some substance. I lent into frequenting women in the way I did. But by carrying the shame, when I met my beautiful wife and I bared all to her and we went through some tough periods in 12 months because there was things within me that I held onto for so long because the nature of my behaviour actually stemmed from some form of pain and I held onto that and I did feel like I was one of the worst people in the world and carried all this shame but when you find something that sees you for you and shows you love and I was able to sit with it and let that melt away you know I recognize it's just
Starting point is 00:32:54 part of the past. Interestingly I've talked to Russell Brand over the years different times of his life career and in the GQ one in 2006 he was his full promiscuous boastful worst as many people would see it very different character I interviewed later when he himself got married and then had kids and so on certainly abandoned a lot of that rhetoric and looked like he's sort of grown up for one of a better phrase but he's now facing trial possibly a real one but at the moment trial by media and social media you've been in that position not quite like he has or for the same reasons But you've been on the receiving and a lot of judgmental stuff about you and how you lead your life. What's it like to be in the eye of a tabloid storm?
Starting point is 00:33:38 Yeah, so for me, the allegations weren't as serious as the ones that Russell are facing. It was often judgment on my behaviours and, you know, immature and certain things that were behaving in my life. You know, but when you are in that middle of it and you're trying to figure out who you are and those are snippets of your life that are getting written about, you know, it can really affect you in your sight. You know, I've lived that through with Caroline and everything that happened to go. Judge by social media, judged by how everyone's going on it. You know, the nature of the media, they know what they were doing in terms of revealing all these allegations. And now Russell's getting judged, left, right and center from everyone.
Starting point is 00:34:15 And, you know, you can't condone his behavior. Do you see parallels, obviously, different circumstances, different allegations? But you and I were both talking to Caroline. You obviously dated her and you were very close to her, close than I was. but I was trying to help her give her some advice behind the scenes in that last period of her life because I knew that she was, you could tell, she was on the edge, you know.
Starting point is 00:34:36 And it's very hard because she's the one on the receiving end of it. And it was vicious and relentless, and it led to the tragic eventuality of her taking her life. When you see that, you look at what's happening to Russell Brand, or we've seen it with Philip Schofield earlier this year, Hugh Edwards and others. Do you feel sympathy for them, regardless of the circumstance? They're all separate instances, aren't they?
Starting point is 00:35:00 They're all separate cases. Caroline was a five-foot woman and her boyfriend was six-foot-five, and he was well within his right to protect himself in that fashion. And what transpired there was what happened. But the nature of how the media then turned on her, how they turn and they decide to create the whole fanfare around it, it does put the individual under pressure. But then ultimately, you know, we need to wait for the judicial process.
Starting point is 00:35:23 We need to wait for the truth of that. But it's already happened now because social media and the media and every single news outlet is judging and critiquing people that are involved, left, right and center. And it may be, in Russell Brown's case, that it's thoroughly deserved, and he turns out to be this vile sexual predator
Starting point is 00:35:40 that the allegations suggest. Or it may be that he's not. I just don't think we're quite there yet, because it's one version of events put forward by these women who should absolutely be listened to and respected, and they should have their say. But he's also entitled to defend himself, if necessary, in accord a law.
Starting point is 00:35:57 for sure the only thing I can relate it to recently is the excerpts on my book and how people took certain snippets and created stories on the back of that. But when you read the whole book, it's a very different story. In this sense, you know, we need to wait for the judicial process and let that go down the line because ultimately everyone now has a judgment on Russell left or right and it's splitting people. It's creating a real negative sound bite in our nation. Well, very tribal, isn't it? Everyone's taking a view. Everyone's got to be one side or the other. I'm kind of in the middle, right?
Starting point is 00:36:27 I'm not defending him, but nor am I saying he should be automatically cancelled from everything because I don't think we've gone through proper due process yet. Yeah, you can't condone the allegations whatsoever. They're very serious, so it is important that we let the judicial process go ahead, as you said. You have a strange connection, not a strange, just a connection, but you went out with Kirsty Gallagher, the TV presenter, her sister is married to Russell Brand. Have you had any contact with Kirsty about this? I haven't, no.
Starting point is 00:36:55 I met Russell and, you know, he was a lovely. lovely guy and he obviously turned his life around. But at some point, you know, at some point, you know, we need to find out more of the facts later down the line rather than the trial continuing the fashion that it is. Very hard for Kirsty's sister. I mean, she's pregnant. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:37:13 They've already got two daughters, I think. Very tough for her, isn't it? Yeah, for sure. It's going to be a tough situation for all involved, you know, and all it's doing is creating negative sound bites and negative conversations and more. stuff in the media that people are going to just create more judgment and more critique on the whole scenario. We need to remember that the victims involved in allegations that are serious,
Starting point is 00:37:37 but we also need to wait for the due process rather than sitting there pointing fingers, making judgments, because ultimately that's the nature of the media and what they create. It's actually social media is a bigger problem because everyone's got an opinion. They all want to spew their opinions. They're incredibly judgmental, and there's no real restrictions on what people can do on social media. They can say, say what they like. I mean, I've seen people say the most terrible things about people all this year that I've known. A lot of it totally inaccurate. Yeah, but the social media wouldn't kick in if the mainstream media didn't print the stories in such an early fashion in the way they have.
Starting point is 00:38:13 You know, and it's not, this isn't a story. These are people's lives at risk. The victims who have, the allegations have been made and also against Russell. So rather than this become another story and another drama, we should wait for the judicial process. and we should wait for that to play out because people's lives on both sides are all going to get affected. You were my kind of sportsman. You play with flair. You were different. You didn't play by the normal rule book.
Starting point is 00:38:41 You got into trouble a few times. You were a bit of a naughty boy. All my favorites, right? From me and both them to Ben Stokes, to Gaza to George Beck, whoever it may be. I like sportsmen that are slightly flawed if that's not a disrespectful thing to say. I'm reading your book. I love the fact that you're all those things, but also slightly vulnerable.
Starting point is 00:39:03 I mean, when you got to the end of the book, what did you feel you learned about yourself? For me, it was a very revealing process of going over times that I, you know, for me, the sport part was easy. The training was the fun bit, the games was the fun bit, and I felt very in-flow,
Starting point is 00:39:17 I felt very in the moment, and I could go and express myself and play at an extremely high level. But my life off the field that was disrupted a lot because of my own upbringing and my trauma involved. and everything that I'd been through and also I was going through life alone.
Starting point is 00:39:31 I didn't have much port of call to turn to. So I was figuring out a lot of things on my own. So when I looked back and went through the whole book and I was able to share and express from a loving place and the wisdom of the experience, it was really cathartic to be able to release that because I wasn't feeling the same constraints or the confliction that I felt at that point.
Starting point is 00:39:52 So it shows that through time and moving on, you can let go and turn your pain into purpose and turn it into love. Do you wish you were in the England team playing in the World Cup? I'm enjoying watching it. I'd always love to be involved playing at some point, but for me, I'm enjoying watching it, and I'm enjoying this whole process
Starting point is 00:40:09 and everything that's coming in my way. Well, you know, Danny, a lot of people had views about you, good, bad and ugly, and when I read the more negative stuff, I judge people how I find them. You and I have had a lot of chat over the years. We don't really know each other, but we just have. We had various connections,
Starting point is 00:40:25 Caroline and others. But the thing that I remember most about you, I had a friend of mine from my village called Wayne who had terminal cancer, and he put on a day, a rugby day, to raise money for a cancer charity. And I just sent you a message saying, if there's anything you could offer for the auction.
Starting point is 00:40:41 And you sent a huge bag of stuff with your shirt, your boots, some tickets to games. It was a whole load of stuff, just like that. And I judge people how I found them and you're one of the good guys. and he massively appreciated that and raised a lot of money off the back of it so thank you for that
Starting point is 00:40:59 I've never had a chance to say it publicly but I appreciate it, but I appreciated that and I love the book I think the book, it's called Who Am I? I think the answer is you're probably a bit flawed like all of us but you're essentially a good bloke and you've ended up in a good place
Starting point is 00:41:13 very much so and if I've been running the England rugby team you'd be there in the team dazzling like he always used to it weren't too bad was it it was great mate you were a great place Good to see. Cheers, that new mate.
Starting point is 00:41:25 Unsensitive next. Shouldn't YouTube have the power to demonetised Russell Brown before he's been convicted of any crime? The Pierce Pack returns next. Welcome back to Pierce Morgan Unsens. With me are my Pat legal journalist Avis Santina talked to be presented to Richard Tyson,
Starting point is 00:41:53 talks to be contributor to Paula Rohn, Adrian. Well, you were steamed up last night about this and it was actually you made some great points. Richard, not had your view on this year. What is your view? Where are we on this Russell Brown scam? I'm not a Russell Brown fan at all. I think he's vulgar.
Starting point is 00:42:09 Frankly, I think a lot of what he said and does has been absolutely vile. My question, though, is that you know, you've got this very serious investigation that's taken a very long time. I was slightly surprised that they didn't immediately pass their files to the police. And also, as far as I'm aware, the four alleged victims in this have not yet made a complaint to the police, although that may have changed in the last trial. I think another woman has come forward, but someone else has.
Starting point is 00:42:38 who has gone straight to the police. I just find that strange, odd. Well, Paul, you've been in family law. Do you find that strange? Not at all. I don't find that strange at all. And Richard, this is one of the myths that we need to bust. The fact that somehow the victim is not a victim
Starting point is 00:42:56 if they don't report the alleged crime within a certain period of time. That's simply not true. Remember, for the survivor, and I do prefer the word survivor, of abuse, they live that every day. This isn't about what happened last week or a year ago or two weeks or two years ago. It's what's happened to them and they live it every day.
Starting point is 00:43:16 And the fact that they are strong enough to come forward today or tomorrow is not something that should be questioned or judged. Well, hang on, Paula. Here's what I would say to that. We have this debate last night, but I'm going to say it again, because I've written a column for The Sun about this. I have a problem when we use language like victims and survivors when this is an ongoing process because it implies
Starting point is 00:43:38 we've already reached a guilty verdict that this man is guilty of crimes these are his victims and they are survivors. To me they're accusers and I would say the same if it was male accusers we had all this with Cliff Richard or a male accuser accusing him a sexual assault turned out to be complete nonsense
Starting point is 00:43:55 by which time Cliff Richard's reputation trashed BBC flying over his house he eventually won a lawsuit but the language is important we have a situation where people have made very serious allegations. If Russell Brown is found guilty of these, then absolutely throw the book of it.
Starting point is 00:44:10 Is he not entitled at the moment to at least have the language tempered around these allegations? So when we're, I'm not specifically referencing Russell Brand and I can't because it would be inappropriate for me to do so. We are talking about allegations. There's been no arrest yet. There is an ongoing. Normally what happens?
Starting point is 00:44:29 But I just want to answer your question, peers, about you being uncomfortable with the language. I'm not uncomfortable. with the language. I choose to use the word survivor, and that's what I'll continue to do. And let me explain to you why. Because we know that sexual assaults are underreported,
Starting point is 00:44:44 be that male or female survivors. We know that, it's accepted. And when you look at incidences of non-reporting, let me explain to you, one in two rapes are committed by a partner or ex-partner. Six out of seven of those are perpetrators. by somebody who the person knew. What you have in a situation
Starting point is 00:45:08 where you are dating somebody, where you know somebody, where you are flirting with somebody is you are incredibly embarrassed on top of the pain and suffering that you've had. I get all this. I don't feel...
Starting point is 00:45:19 I get all this. Normally when criminal... I also interviewed an 18-year-old boy earlier this year who was put in remand in prison for two months, accused of being a rapist. It turned out the woman accused with total fantasist
Starting point is 00:45:32 who caused her own injuries and is now languishing By which time, his house has been daubed with rapists and so on. So that's why I think you've got to be careful. I want to bring, you've been very patient, Ava. Specifically about the corporate meltdown that's going on with Russell Brand. YouTube have now said, he can leave his videos up there so they can make money from it. But he can't make any money from advertising.
Starting point is 00:45:55 Does that seem right and proper to you? Well, I use YouTube every day. It's one of our main platforms. And actually, that money would just be held for him. So if he's then found innocent or found not guilty or he's cleared, then YouTube can re-grant him access to that pot. So he's actually not losing any money. It's just being stored in a pot.
Starting point is 00:46:11 Basically, what YouTube have said is, you put out a video denying allegations and you had a little donate button on there, and we're not comfortable. Google aren't comfortable with that, so they've taken away his ability to monetize it. I also want to talk about the lad culture, because I think we were talking about this upstairs.
Starting point is 00:46:26 I think the big problem on social media and the reason that it's had the reaction that it has, a lot of people defending, Russell Brand is because a lot of men felt vindicated by that lad culture that was going on in the 2000s, that real tabloid, dirty, treating women like filth, lad culture. And I think a lot of men are now worried that they're going to have their actions reassessed by people in their lives who were there during that time. I think this defence of him is coming from that place of, or if they're going for him, they're going to come for me as well. Possibly. I think that's possible. I don't like the extremities on either side of this debate.
Starting point is 00:46:58 I don't like the ones who want to immediately convict and hang him. I don't like the ones saying it's a conspiracy, he's being stitched up by mainstream media. We run out of time. Thank you, Pac. Great to see. I've got to mention your earrings, which are fabulous. That's it from me. We're up to you.
Starting point is 00:47:11 Keep it uncensored. And sparkle like Paula. Good night.

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