image In an easily imaginable parallel universe New Labour reintroduced the death penalty for murderers and child rapists in 2005. Its first victim was convicted paedophile and 70s musician Gary Glitter. Travellers from this parallel universe took control of Channel 4 and screened a documentary about it tonight.

Observer journalists and former Sun ranters took their chance for a few degrading minutes of TV exposure and were intercut with actors in the docudrama format. Right wing Tory and occasional reality TV star Anne Widdecombe was there too. She was probably serious when she insisted that evil exists and there’d be a lot less of it around if more people were hanged.  Only Hilton McRae emerged with any credit from ninety minutes of undiluted oddness. He did a first class job of depicting the singer’s unstable, exuberant creepiness and represented him as an isolated, unrepentant, unsupportable pariah who collapses in tears reading his final statement. Which is probably what would happen.

To the extent that the programme had a thesis it was that majority opinion in Britain has had its wish granted and capital punishment has been restored. The one thing that it did well was to present what the death penalty in the 21st century might look like. The only real changes are that the judge no longer says “and may God have mercy on your soul”; the condemned prisoner has to wear a bright orange jump suit, in a Guantanamo stylee and the hangman is now a “hanging technician”. The tradtional rope and drop are unchanged.

Wrestling with the surrealism of the whole thing is made no easier by the specially commissioned piece of music shown as the executioners walk towards the cell and Glitter cracks up. Imagine a cheapo drum and bass backing track with clips of Gary Glitter orating from the dock. Not easy, is it?

Denied any dignity even at the end the script’s last words for its anti-hero are; “This isn’t happening. It’s gotta be a wind up.”

In what can only have been a wilful attempt to make the whole farrago even more bizarre and meaningless than it already was, the impact of the voiceover during the closing credits inviting viewers to join a discussion of the issues was slightly reduced by the spectre of celebrity chef Gordon Ramsay’s ugly mug grinning across the right half of the screen.

Not even Jack Straw or the Tories have mooted bringing back the death penalty in recent years. The topic is a complete non-debate in Europe and you can only wonder to what degree Colombian marching powder influenced the commissioning and broadcasting of one of the oddest bits of television you’re ever likely to see.

The only bit of good news for Glitter in the whole thing was that he would have picked up a few quid in song royalties now that his work now goes unheard.

4 responses to “The deeply weird execution of Gary Glitter”

  1. I watched this programme for about 10 minutes and found it completely sickening.
    The blurring of real interviews, acting and fake documentary history is probably what the News would be like in a future totalitarian state.
    When Anne Widdicombe started blathering on about “evil” I switched off..
    Now there’s an example of someone who uses religion to serve political reaction if ever there was one.

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  2. The verdict I reached was that this programme should have been put out of its misery from the start.

    It had the potential to be interesting and thought-provoking but instead writers, it seems, have been skooled in the art of reality television, along with memory spans of 15 mins or less, and they don’t possess the skill set in creating good dramatic imaginative and creative television. The Gary Glitter ‘docudrama’ was a stark and v. good example of this…..

    Oh, and seeing not just Widdicombe but fecking Gary Bushell…jeepers!

    Charlie Brooker is spot-on here http://www.guardian.co.uk/tv-and-radio/2009/nov/07/charlie-brooker-screenburn-gary-glitter

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  3. […] Madam Miaow on comedy and offence. Scarleteen invites us to the 6th Feminist Carnival. Kevin writes about a former left-winger who has well and truly sold-out. Benjamin on Kevin Rudd’s racism and Tamil asylum seekers. Splintered on the fall of the house of Paisley. Feministing highlights the problems of faith based charities and homophobia. Sunny believes that Lefties should stop cutting their noses to spite their face. Penny Red shows solidarity to ‘knickers girl’. Philippa on feminism and disability.Cath Elliott talks about sex. Oh, indeed surreal week for C4 commissioning and executing Gary Glitter …. Red Baron thought the programme did ok while Liam thought it was deeply weird. […]

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  4. […] of Gary Glitter” . I didn’t see that apparently bizarre piece of programming, but it was reviewed by Liam. I am not sure that the death penalty is quite such a non-debate as Liam thinks, although it has […]

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