The slow-motion car crash that was Gary Linekerâs tenure at the BBC has finally become the smoking pile of wreckage that some of us predicted.
Lineker has used his status and celebrity on a number of occasions to flout the broadcasterâs impartiality guidelines with deeply political outbursts on social media.
While many ordinary viewers struggled to afford the licence fee, he was gobbling up a vast ÂŁ1.35million salary, making him the best-paid broadcaster in the whole Corporation.
Then yesterday, the Match Of The Day presenter stepped down for good. If his departure seemed inevitable, it took far too long. Linekerâs pay, pronouncements and arrogance were so far out of touch with viewers, it was surprising he was still on our screens at all.
During my time as Culture Secretary, I held a number of meetings with the Director-General, Tim Davie. I told him the BBC needed radical change and that it should axe the licence fee â which I viewed as a regressive tax â in favour of a funding model which didnât penalise pensioners and the poor.
But I also said the Corporation should abandon its disastrous habit of pumping gargantuan sums of money into the wallets of puffed-up celebrities.
Lineker is a case in point.
The âfaceâ of BBC football coverage for more than two decades, it seems he was entirely free to break the rules lesser mortals must obey.
Gary Lineker has used his status on a number of occasions to flout the BBCâs impartiality guidelines with deeply political outbursts on social media, writes Nadine Dorries
Lineker playing against Paraguay during the 1986 World Cup in Mexico in June that year
Lineker started his media career at Radio 5 Live and went on to present Match of the Day, including this special on the FA Cup final, alongside Alan Hansen (right)
But he is not alone. And having worked so hard to create such ânational treasuresâ, perhaps itâs no surprise that the BBC looks reluctant to hold them to account when they err. Transformed into demi-gods, they have the cloak of BBC protection thrown around them, making them feel they are untouchable.
The once-respected newsreader Huw Edwards, king of state occasions, resigned in disgrace last year following claims he paid a young person for sexually explicit images. He was later convicted of possessing indecent images of children.
Yet we learned at the weekend that BBC executives knew complaints had been made about his inappropriate behaviour as far back as 2012. Was nothing learned from the Savile case?
Comedian Russell Brand was another figure given towering national status, despite â as it emerged â widespread warnings about his lewd behaviour.
While Linekerâs case is very different from those of Brand and Edwards, the point is that the BBC spent huge sums of money propelling all three men into the TV stratosphere.
No doubt talented in their own ways (Lineker was certainly a brilliant footballer), I donât think any of them came close to justifying the wealth and fame they garnered at the BBC.
Rich rewards and great influence are thrust upon stars like these. They take top billing in our daily lives â even as the power drains from the organisation that helped create them and is placed on the individuals instead.
Stacey Solomon â presenter of the BBCâs Bafta-nominated Sort Your Life Out â is the latest to get the âsheâs so specialâ treatment.
Lured away from ITVâs Loose Women with the promise of taking her career to the next level, BBC executives hoped her bright-eyed, girl-next-door appeal would be ratings gold and would draw in young mothers and families. Then, last week, came Ms Solomonâs act of self-sabotage.
Stacey Solomon â presenter of the BBCâs Bafta-nominated Sort Your Life Out â is the latest to get the âsheâs so specialâ treatment, writes Nadine Dorries
Stacey Solomon on her new BBC One series Stacey & Joe. She horrified BBC bosses after posting a social media video rant complaining bitterly about her Bafta 'snub'
Distressed that her show did not receive a Bafta, Ms Solomon horrified BBC bosses with a long social media video rant complaining bitterly at the âsnubâ.
Such outbursts reek of privilege. More to the point, it shines a light on what can happen when someone is feted as a celebrity without real justification. Ordinary rules somehow donât apply.
How can the BBC deal with this corrosive culture of entitlement? How can it nip the âLineker effectâ in the bud?
I believe Tim Davie is a good man attempting to manage a monolithic organisation embedded in impenetrable Left-wing culture. And if I were still in government today, my advice would be the same: step up and focus on content, not so-called stars.
Ring the changes and give others a chance in front of the camera. Why not have two or three presenters where you currently have one?
This, we are told, will be the approach taken by Match Of The Day next season. Perhaps the Beeb has been listening.
But there is more to be done. The BBC is losing half a million licence-fee payers a year. It canât go on like this.
Is the Corporation prepared to embrace the future or will it persist as a dinosaur trudging towards oblivion?
The viewers have the power of the remote in their hands. Change or die.
On a recent podcast, the great Ann Widdecombe said that âthe quality of parliamentarians is the lowest I can ever rememberâ.Â
Ann isnât wrong.
When writing my last book, Downfall, about the sad decline of the Conservative party, I was shocked to find myself exposed to a number of risquĂŠ and sexually explicit WhatsApp threads â from MPs! âcontaining images and messages I would rather have not seen.
Last weekend, we learned that a senior Tory had been photographed dressed in a dog costume and led by a leash.
This, he had accidentally posted on a WhatsApp thread.
Iâm told the picture revealed him to be a âfurryâ, which, in case (like me) you didnât know, is someone who enjoys dressing up as an animal as a sexual fantasy. âA furryâ. You really couldnât make it up.
 Iâm loving the photographs of Judy Finnigan celebrating her 77th birthday with her family.
She looks radiant, beautiful and happy. She gives hope to all women who have faced their battles in life â which is most of us.
I hope I look as well as she does when I reach her age!
Kevin Spacey is about to receive a lifetime achievement award at the Cannes Film Festival for his âenduring impact on cinema the arts and decades of artistic brillianceâ. He has certainly bounced back from the abyss.
In 2017, he was fired from Netflixâs House Of Cards following sexual misconduct claims â which he has always denied. A civil case against him in America collapsed.
And in 2023, at Southwark Crown Court, Spacey was found not guilty of sexual assault.
Now, heâs clearly on the comeback trail. Last year, Spacey won a best performance trophy at the Folkestone Independent Film Awards. Then came Italyâs Nations Award for Lifetime Achievement at a gala in Taormina, Sicily.
Spacey clearly wants back in. And who would bet against him?
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