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Rolf Harris

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View Mapletree's Profile Mapletree Flag Croydon 04 Jul 14 1.12pm Send a Private Message to Mapletree Add Mapletree as a friend

Quote Cucking Funt at 04 Jul 2014 1.04pm

Quote Mapletree at 04 Jul 2014 12.28pm

And here is an interesting quote from an interview Rolf did with the Guardian in 2001:

In 1985, he made Britain's first programme warning children about sex abuse. Years earlier he had seen a teacher friend who had told him that she had just given a talk to her pupils about abuse and, halfway through, a child ran out of the classroom and vomited up his past. Harris says he was naive, he didn't know that such things happened, and he became determined to address the subject on telly. He was told that it would be the death of his career. Typically, Harris not only made the programme, he managed to do it with a sing-song element. And he starts singing. "My body's no body's body but mine/You take care of your body/I'll look after mine."

So you can't say he didn't know how much damage he was doing.


Puzzled. What does that mean?


I can only guess that - all in a rush - he told people about unpleasant experiences he had prior to that day Cucking.

 

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View Mapletree's Profile Mapletree Flag Croydon 04 Jul 14 1.13pm Send a Private Message to Mapletree Add Mapletree as a friend

Quote Mapletree at 04 Jul 2014 1.12pm

Quote Cucking Funt at 04 Jul 2014 1.04pm

Quote Mapletree at 04 Jul 2014 12.28pm

And here is an interesting quote from an interview Rolf did with the Guardian in 2001:

In 1985, he made Britain's first programme warning children about sex abuse. Years earlier he had seen a teacher friend who had told him that she had just given a talk to her pupils about abuse and, halfway through, a child ran out of the classroom and vomited up his past. Harris says he was naive, he didn't know that such things happened, and he became determined to address the subject on telly. He was told that it would be the death of his career. Typically, Harris not only made the programme, he managed to do it with a sing-song element. And he starts singing. "My body's no body's body but mine/You take care of your body/I'll look after mine."

So you can't say he didn't know how much damage he was doing.


Puzzled. What does that mean?


I can only guess that - all in a rush - he told people about unpleasant experiences he had prior to that day Cucking.


Thinking about it I guess that vomiting always entails revisiting something you thought was in the past.

 

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View Kermit8's Profile Kermit8 Flag Hevon 04 Jul 14 1.14pm Send a Private Message to Kermit8 Add Kermit8 as a friend

"vomited up his past"

Love it. I'll be using that.


Think it means a wordless articulation, Funty.

 


Big chest and massive boobs

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View Cucking Funt's Profile Cucking Funt Flag Clapham on the Back 04 Jul 14 1.18pm Send a Private Message to Cucking Funt Add Cucking Funt as a friend

Quote Mapletree at 04 Jul 2014 1.12pm

Quote Cucking Funt at 04 Jul 2014 1.04pm

Quote Mapletree at 04 Jul 2014 12.28pm

And here is an interesting quote from an interview Rolf did with the Guardian in 2001:

In 1985, he made Britain's first programme warning children about sex abuse. Years earlier he had seen a teacher friend who had told him that she had just given a talk to her pupils about abuse and, halfway through, a child ran out of the classroom and vomited up his past. Harris says he was naive, he didn't know that such things happened, and he became determined to address the subject on telly. He was told that it would be the death of his career. Typically, Harris not only made the programme, he managed to do it with a sing-song element. And he starts singing. "My body's no body's body but mine/You take care of your body/I'll look after mine."

So you can't say he didn't know how much damage he was doing.


Puzzled. What does that mean?


I can only guess that - all in a rush - he told people about unpleasant experiences he had prior to that day Cucking.


I suppose. Strange way of reporting it. Did the subject matter cause the poor kid to throw up because of the memories the talk brought back or did he metaphorically vomit up his story to someone as a result of it? Doesn't make a lot of difference, I know, but I wish newspapers could just report instead of using gratuitous and pointless hyperbole.

 


Wife beating may be socially acceptable in Sheffield, but it is a different matter in Cheltenham

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View Mapletree's Profile Mapletree Flag Croydon 04 Jul 14 1.19pm Send a Private Message to Mapletree Add Mapletree as a friend

Quote Cucking Funt at 04 Jul 2014 1.18pm

Quote Mapletree at 04 Jul 2014 1.12pm

Quote Cucking Funt at 04 Jul 2014 1.04pm

Quote Mapletree at 04 Jul 2014 12.28pm

And here is an interesting quote from an interview Rolf did with the Guardian in 2001:

In 1985, he made Britain's first programme warning children about sex abuse. Years earlier he had seen a teacher friend who had told him that she had just given a talk to her pupils about abuse and, halfway through, a child ran out of the classroom and vomited up his past. Harris says he was naive, he didn't know that such things happened, and he became determined to address the subject on telly. He was told that it would be the death of his career. Typically, Harris not only made the programme, he managed to do it with a sing-song element. And he starts singing. "My body's no body's body but mine/You take care of your body/I'll look after mine."

So you can't say he didn't know how much damage he was doing.


Puzzled. What does that mean?


I can only guess that - all in a rush - he told people about unpleasant experiences he had prior to that day Cucking.


I suppose. Strange way of reporting it. Did the subject matter cause the poor kid to throw up because of the memories the talk brought back or did he metaphorically vomit up his story to someone as a result of it? Doesn't make a lot of difference, I know, but I wish newspapers could just report instead of using gratuitous and pointless hyperbole.


The Guardian had interesting ways of doing things 13 years ago....

 

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View Cucking Funt's Profile Cucking Funt Flag Clapham on the Back 04 Jul 14 1.22pm Send a Private Message to Cucking Funt Add Cucking Funt as a friend

Quote Mapletree at 04 Jul 2014 1.19pm

Quote Cucking Funt at 04 Jul 2014 1.18pm

Quote Mapletree at 04 Jul 2014 1.12pm

Quote Cucking Funt at 04 Jul 2014 1.04pm

Quote Mapletree at 04 Jul 2014 12.28pm

And here is an interesting quote from an interview Rolf did with the Guardian in 2001:

In 1985, he made Britain's first programme warning children about sex abuse. Years earlier he had seen a teacher friend who had told him that she had just given a talk to her pupils about abuse and, halfway through, a child ran out of the classroom and vomited up his past. Harris says he was naive, he didn't know that such things happened, and he became determined to address the subject on telly. He was told that it would be the death of his career. Typically, Harris not only made the programme, he managed to do it with a sing-song element. And he starts singing. "My body's no body's body but mine/You take care of your body/I'll look after mine."

So you can't say he didn't know how much damage he was doing.


Puzzled. What does that mean?


I can only guess that - all in a rush - he told people about unpleasant experiences he had prior to that day Cucking.


I suppose. Strange way of reporting it. Did the subject matter cause the poor kid to throw up because of the memories the talk brought back or did he metaphorically vomit up his story to someone as a result of it? Doesn't make a lot of difference, I know, but I wish newspapers could just report instead of using gratuitous and pointless hyperbole.


The Guardian had interesting ways of doing things 13 years ago....


So it seems!

Anyway, the judge has said he's going to take into account 1. the apparent abuse of trust and 2. the age difference. Looks like it's going to be a sizeable dollop of porridge.

 


Wife beating may be socially acceptable in Sheffield, but it is a different matter in Cheltenham

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View Moose's Profile Moose Flag In the sewer pipe... 04 Jul 14 1.23pm Send a Private Message to Moose Add Moose as a friend

5 years 9 months. Poor.

 


Goodness is what you do. Not who you pray to.

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Catfish Flag Burgess Hill 04 Jul 14 1.26pm

Out in 3.

 


Yes, I am an agent of Satan but my duties are largely ceremonial

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View Cucking Funt's Profile Cucking Funt Flag Clapham on the Back 04 Jul 14 1.35pm Send a Private Message to Cucking Funt Add Cucking Funt as a friend

Quote Moose at 04 Jul 2014 1.23pm

5 years 9 months. Poor.


At age 84, it's a bit of a whopper.

 


Wife beating may be socially acceptable in Sheffield, but it is a different matter in Cheltenham

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View The Chaser1's Profile The Chaser1 Flag 04 Jul 14 1.36pm Send a Private Message to The Chaser1 Add The Chaser1 as a friend

He is a lucky nonce it should've been 10 or more years.

 


To be wronged is nothing unless you continue to remember it.

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View Moose's Profile Moose Flag In the sewer pipe... 04 Jul 14 1.56pm Send a Private Message to Moose Add Moose as a friend

Quote Cucking Funt at 04 Jul 2014 1.35pm

Quote Moose at 04 Jul 2014 1.23pm

5 years 9 months. Poor.


At age 84, it's a bit of a whopper.


I haven't heard those words since you last whispered them into my ear.

 


Goodness is what you do. Not who you pray to.

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View DanH's Profile DanH Flag SW2 04 Jul 14 2.00pm Send a Private Message to DanH Add DanH as a friend

Quote Moose at 04 Jul 2014 1.56pm

Quote Cucking Funt at 04 Jul 2014 1.35pm

Quote Moose at 04 Jul 2014 1.23pm

5 years 9 months. Poor.


At age 84, it's a bit of a whopper.


I haven't heard those words since you last whispered them into my ear.


Hahahaha.

 

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