Like others I felt this was Louis Theroux's way of trying to clear his conscience.
I think it's important that he allowed some of the women who were abused to have a voice. However, I also agree with others that Louis had clearly been overlooking Saville's completely unacceptable behaviour towards women for years.
I have worked for my entire career with children who have suffered advise and the parents who have abused them so perhaps I am more alert to signs of asexual predators, but I was appalled at the way Louis needed hindsight to view the footage of Saville actions towards his work colleagues and other women they encountered together as problematic rather than just eccentric.
I feel there is a lesson on this documentary about how men can be utterly blinded to the everyday serial harassment faced by women and how women are socialised into putting up and shutting up.
I also thought it was remarkable that there were only women reporters, producers and colleagues interviewed. And when they were interviewed there was a string implication that they were somehow responsible for not stopping the abuse.
Surely event a pretend innocent like Louis theroux could see how young women at the beginning of their careers would struggle to bring down a powerful man who was serially abusing women left right and centre whilst having a direct line to Downing Street!
Sorry all of the above may be a little garbled, but the BBC and celebrity response to this case just utterly infuriates me. The more they try to look shocked and innocent the more they implicate their own willingness to look away from what was in plain sight