Fat Geezer, Iain Dale beats up elderly and puny anti-nuclear protester and scares the crap out of a dog live and recommends it to others!!
Former Conservative Party election candidate and blogger Iain Dale grabbed an anti-nuclear protester and wrestled him to the ground after he tried to interrupt a live television interview with one of his authors.
Mr Dale grabbed the man on the seafront at Brighton as Damian McBride was talking to ITV’s Daybreak programme about his memoir Power Trip, which details his dirty tricks while working as a Labour spin doctor.
The radio presenter and political commentator said he was waiting in his car waiting to drive Mr McBride to his next interview when he noticed protester Stuart Holmes.
The pair wrestled during the interview off-camera with the sound of Mr Holmes’s dog heard barking as Mr McBride talked to host Lorraine Kelly.
More discussion from this dog in a demonstration earlier this year.. notice the elderly gentleman’s extremely violent behaviour/sarc
from this event
So, the elderly gentleman was at the demo in March 2013 to support the children of Fukushima and later gets beaten up by a Conservative party dude pontificating about his years of lies.. Who is the thug here?
Common assault at least, an arrestable offence..
UPDATE FROM IAIN DALES BLOG
It Shouldn’t Happen to a Publisher: Protecting An Author During a Live Interview
24 Sep 2013 at 09:40
I knew I shouldn’t have had three weetabix this morning…
OK, so here’s what happened. Damian McBride was doing a live interview on Daybreak on the Brighton seafront. I was waiting in my car to drive him to do his next interview with Nick Ferrari on LBC when I noticed that a protester was holding a placard behind Damian which was filling a lot of the screen and totally distracting from the interview. I assumed someone from Daybreak would intervene to stop him, but no one did. So I did what any self respecting publisher would do, got out of the car, ran across and pulled him out of the shot. He started resisting and we ended up in an unseemly tumble on the ground. I was conscious of the photographers and other cameramen who were present filming the whole thing, but I was determined this idiot shouldn’t disrupt what was an important interview for my author.
I am someone who runs a mile from any form of physical confrontation normally, but I never understand why broadcasters seem to accept without question that someone with a placard or a loud voice should disrupt this sort of interview. Anyone who has seen the pictures and video can see that there was no real violence. I certainly didn’t hurt the guy. He threw a punch at me but missed, and the only injury was when the man’s dog bit him on the bum.
Anyway, now you can see why my publishing company is called Biteback.
In some ways I have committed the cardinal sin of becoming the story myself, rather than my author, and I regret that. But do I regret that I stepped in to protect my author? No I do not. One of the snappers afterwards said to me that I did what they had all been dying to do for years, as he regularly interferes with their professional work. Everyone has an inalienable right to protest, but no one has a right to make a continual nuisance of themselves and interrupt interviews like that.
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What a vicious bully