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​​Rumbled: Dan Wootton ‘Comeback Planned’ on ‘Free Speech’ Platform Used by Russell Brand

Published by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 17/01/2024 - 10:35pm in

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Suspended GB News presenter Dan Wootton is preparing a return to screens on Rumble – the ‘free speech’ platform hosting former comedian Russell Brand since his YouTube earnings ban following rape allegations.

It comes as Michael Cass – the ‘official moderator’ for the ‘Dan Wootton Tonight Club’ – told its 7,400-strong X (formerly Twitter) followers that GB News had yet to announce its “intentions” around Wootton’s future and hit out at “weak and pathetic management” at the controversial channel.

Wootton is expected to return to the UK this week after a trip to his native New Zealand, from where he posted a video over the Christmas holiday in which he addressed unspecified “rumours”, claimed to have been “silenced” and called for a “media revolution”.

He offered a possible foretaste of any future Rumble content in his piece to camera in which promised to “be back” in 2024, telling followers: “You will be such an important part of that for me.”

He said: “Fishy Rishi [Sunak] is destroying the Conservative Party from the inside out. Slippery [Keir] Starmer is planning a communist takeover of the UK. The corporate media is deriding patriots as far-right yobs, and Sly [Sky] News and the British Bashing Corporation [the BBC] have hit a new low with their coverage of the conflict in Israel.”

Since mid-November GB News has – “until further notice” – filled Wootton’s week-nightly slot with appearances from colleague Patrick Christys. It is not clear whether the former Murdoch executive is continuing to collect his £600,000 annual salary, having been suspended over an on-air misogynistic rant by actor-turned-activist Laurence Fox, during which Wootton smirked as Fox made disparaging sexual remarks about political journalist Ava Evans.

That followed months of speculation about Wootton’s future on GB News after a three-year deep investigation by this newspaper into his personal and professional conduct, in which he was exposed as a serial catfish targeting friends and colleagues with attempts to obtain sexual imagery by deception.

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It also comes alongside an ongoing investigation by the Metropolitan Police into various Byline Times’ revelations, including that one alleged victim of the online pseudonym 'Martin Branning’ was blackmailed over a 10-year period.

Now three sources with knowledge of Wootton’s vision for his future are saying he is looking to life beyond GB News – with Rumble his likely choice of destination following YouTube’s move to demonetise some controversial voices, including that of Russell Brand since rape allegations emerged about the former comedian were in October.

One source said: “Dan has had to acknowledge that his broadcasting career is in limbo and that he may need to go his own way. Rumble is the preferred platform, as it would allow him to make money from adverts and crowdfunding.”

In one of his final GB News broadcasts, Wootton led coverage of the Brand allegations – themselves subject of a separate police probe – and attacked so-called “cancel culture” and “trial by media”.

On 19 September, Wootton hosted three segments addressing Brand, and strongly criticised the demonetisation of Brand’s YouTube channel, running a poll in which Wootton asked viewers to vote on whether it was “wrong” for the platform to cut off Brand’s income stream, with 76% of respondents apparently agreeing.

This newspaper further understands that Wootton is considering teaming up with conservative commentator Calvin Robinson, who himself left GB News in support of Wootton following his suspension.

“Dan and Calvin may go into partnership together," another sourced told Byline Times. "They both hope to have a base within a certain section of the GB News audience.”

Wootton, once prolific on social media, has been quieter since his suspension, but has kept his X account ticking over with retweets about ‘wokery’ and in support of hard-right Conservative Party figures and ideas.

The journalist has however been posting on social media from various international locations including France and New Zealand. Byline Times has also learned that Wootton travelled to the Grand Cayman, the famous offshore financial centre, in early December.

Dan Wootton was approached for comment.

Tom Latchem and Dan Evans are former colleagues of Dan Wootton’s from the News of the WorldNone of the sources in this investigation were paid

Postmistress announces electoral bid to oust Davey

Published by Anonymous (not verified) on Sun, 14/01/2024 - 2:55am in

LibDem leader’s refusal to meet victims of Post Office Horizon scandal triggers general election challenge

LibDem leader Ed Davey is facing an election challenge from New Malden’s former Deputy Postmistress, Yvonne Tracey, amid public outrage at his handling of the Post Office Horizon scandal, following the landmark, true-life ITV drama Mr Bates vs the Post Office.

Davey served as minister for postal affairs in the Coalition government, but for months refused to meet campaigning sub-postmaster Alan Bates and his fellow victims about ‘flaws of the Horizon system’ arguing it would not ‘serve any purpose’.

Responding to Davey’s letter, Bates said he found the 121-word response – sweeping away the suggestion of a meeting on the basis it would not serve “any useful purpose” – to be “offensive.”

Ms Tracey, served for more than 30 years, meeting residents over the counter at New Malden Post Office and now serves as an Independent councillor on Kingston Council. She said:

Come the next election, it’s incumbent on those seeking justice for our sub-postmasters to send a strong message to Sir Ed.

Sir Ed is now blaming others for his failure to challenge civil servants and do his job properly. His attitude to the hundreds of sub-postmasters over the years must be challenged.

Here in his own constituency, the sub-postmaster at Tolworth Post Office Sathyan Shiju lost his home, his business and attempted suicide on more than one occasion. He tried three times to get in touch with Sir Ed and every time he was turned away, refused or ignored.

But Ms Tracey indicated she would stand aside if a sub-postmaster or mistress who suffered directly in the scandal was willing to stand against Davey personally:

I’d encourage and wholeheartedly support the candidacy of a former sub-postmaster coming forward to take the challenge to Sir Ed – and indeed the other former postal ministers who are still MPs, who ignored the plight of sub-postmasters for years. But understandably, many of the victims have no confidence in the system and have suffered years of hell at the hands of the Post Office.

So in lieu of a sub-postmaster coming forward, I will take up the mantle. I’m standing as a resident – not a politician – to put honesty and integrity back into this election, and fight tirelessly for justice once and for all for my former colleagues.

You can find out more about her campaign on her website: www.yvonnetracey.org

If you wish to republish this post for non-commercial use, you are welcome to do so – see here for more.

‘I’m A Non-Entity Get Me Out Of Here’

Published by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 28/11/2023 - 1:27am in

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In recent decades the once very separate fields of politics and entertainment have fused into something dubbed ‘politainment’ that has made it near impossible to divine where one begins and the other ends. And nowhere has this trend been more in evidence than on ITV’s I’m A Celebrity Get Me Out Of Here.

Across 22 years the show has had a record of fielding ghastly, blood sucking creepy-crawlies against innocent parasites and the former has included Veritas founder Robert Kilroy-Silk, the Lib Dem’s Lembit ‘Cheeky’ Opik, latter day Dr Frankenstein Stanley Johnson, egg-botherer Edwina Currie, peerage-hopeful Nadine Dorries and Matt ‘hands’ Hancock.

Jungle politainment appeals to TV producers and politicians alike. Watching a member of parliament getting slimed plays to the basest instincts of the public and thus makes good TV. For the contestant, there is both the lure of the fee and the hope that such primetime appearances will raise their profile. Some – most notably Matt Hancock – are also engaging in a latter-day act of performative penitence that they hope will wipe the political slate clean.

This season Nigel Farage has added his talents to the fray and after a lifetime of spouting bollocks the former UKIP leader has pitched up in the jungle to ingest them instead. Man of the people Farage is being paid £1.5 million to appear – the largest fee in the show’s history.

Loathe him or detest him, Farage is one of Britain’s best known political players and one of its most divisive. His very appearance was likely calculated to stir controversy, grab headlines and spawn amusing interactions at the work water cooler. To that end, the producers have afforded him a lot of screen time and over the last week viewers have been subjected to Nigel Farage bathing naked (twice), eating a pizza covered in cows udders and telling the ‘bush telegraph’ that he would ‘never say never’ to being Prime Minister, much as I haven’t ruled out one day playing test match cricket on the Moon.

His very presence has led some Remainers to call for a boycott and while it is impossible to judge how effective that has been, figures appear to be down on last year. On opening night, GB News’ man on the ground the Ben Leo, having mistakenly read last year’s press release – reported the exact opposite – generating much hilarity. But having been obliged to watch hours of the show while researching this piece, I can report that laughs have been thinner on the ground than a jungle celebrity.

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There has been trauma too. Witnessing Nigel Farage’s naked torso once might be considered a misfortune, viewing it twice left me scrambling for the telephone number at the Hague. And as I’ve watched him, and the other contestants go through mind-numbing hours of repetitive tasks, challenges and pots boiling on a fire, I’ve come to conclude that those boycotting Remainers have nothing to worry about. Indeed, the only people who should be worried are the producers and their star signing – Nigel Farage.

I’m not one of those who thinks that ‘Farage doesn’t matter’ or that we should ‘simply ignore him’. As a great political thinker, the former UKIP leader might rank as a minnow in a land of Lilliputians but his simple, dangerous, brand of ‘common sense’ populist politics cuts through, with the result that we are all now living in a Faragist Brexit Dystopia. Hate him all you like, but he has a ‘common touch’ and one which has unleashed dangerous, downright stupid, ideas into the mainstream.

Farage has got a well-practiced act. He knows how to play a crowd, when to deploy that disarming cigarette infused laugh and his well-worn catchphrase ‘wouldn’t you agree’ that makes it almost impossible for anyone talking to him not to.

So, whether standing before a home crowd of Brexiters, or sharing a pint with Jacob Rees-Mogg on GB News – it works. He comes across effectively and for some – even impressively. But put him in the jungle, away from that context, alongside Jamie Lynn Spears, or the charismatic Italian jockey Frankie Dettori, or the enigmatic YouTube sensation Nella Rose and the whole act not only falls flat – but apart.

In the promo for the show Farage told the cameras: “I’ve dealt with snakes in the European parliament, I think I can deal with this too...(and) in the jungle you’re going to find the real me.”

And sure enough, we have. But behind the curtain there is no mighty Wizard of Brexit but rather a meek, middle-aged man who worries about the shape of his bottom. He might get away with that if he had something else to bring but the architect of Brexit can’t even list any proper Brexit benefits. On Sunday night’s show, Nigel was challenged by French-born maître d'hôtel Fred Siriex to ‘list three’ and his answer, which included ‘self-government’, ‘taking back control of our territorial waters’ and the ‘nuclear submarine deal with the Australians’ was thinner gruel than even that on offer on the campsite stove.

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Farage has few interests beyond fishing, pointing at the English Channel and a very narrow knowledge of military history – and unlike many of his fellow contestants, he lacks an interesting backstory and comes across as anything but charismatic. Tellingly, come Sunday the public was no longer voting for him to do tasks – not because they had warmed to him but rather, I suspect, because he brings nothing to them.

In short, I’m A Celebrity… has revealed Farage to be the worst of all things – boring – and ‘boring’ does not make good TV. He might well make it to the end, but in retrospect I suspect that both he and ITV will come to rue the day he ever agreed to appear.