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John's win is a victory for us all

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Published Date: 30 January 2008
IT was a victory for the ordinary man (and woman) when John Loughton won Big Brother: Celebrity Hijack on Monday night. The hulking, ginger-haired 20-year-old from Pilton was about as far removed as it is possible to imagine from the plastic-looking, fame-seeking wannabes who make up the usual reality TV show fodder.
John was raised, the eldest of four brothers, in Pilton and Muirhouse, areas where he readily admits educational expectations were low. But a determination to rise above his circumstances spurred him on to knuckle down at school and gain a place at university.

An Evening News youth award-winner and now chairman of the Scottish Youth Parliament, John pipped the competition in the E4 show by showcasing his refreshing normality. And it was hard to avoid an inward cheer when, after scooping the title, he immediately announced his intention to hand over a large chunk of his £50,000 prize to his unassuming mum Donna McColl.

John's is another example of a story we all love to hear – triumph against the odds, an inspirational tale of someone who has escaped the poverty trap or smashed the class barrier. It's a bit like when, against all probability, kind-hearted but impoverished, chocolate-loving schoolboy Charlie Bucket wins a golden ticket to enter Willy Wonka's magical chocolate factory – and then goes on to own it.

But the question is: will John make good on the promise he's shown so far and achieve his dreams, said to include becoming Prime Minister? Or will his decision to go on Big Brother see him end up just another casualty of the reality show route to fame?

Leon Jackson, from Whitburn, was the last local boy to leapfrog to fame when he won ITV1's X Factor talent show. Weekly national exposure was a huge catapult for the 19-year-old, who'd only sung publicly for the first time a few months prior to the show, at karaoke.

He soon got an early taste of the perils of celebrity though – a severe throat infection forced him to cancel what could have been the highlight of his career to date, an appearance at Edinburgh's Hogmanay. Before he'd even emerged from his sick bed, he was savaged for his lack of staying power by singer Amy Macdonald, who felt that not having come up the hard way, he wasn't tough enough to deal with success.

Inspirational stories can provide much-needed motivation for those trapped in the rut of believing their future prospects are bleak. Sir Tom Farmer still gives speeches sharing his story of how he went from a 14-year-old school leaver to millionaire tycoon of the Kwik-Fit empire and owner of Hibernian FC.

It is hard not to admire the spirit of Edinburgh oarsmen Reinhardt Von Hof, Leven Brown and Rob Loder-Symonds, who rowed for 33 days through storms, pain, bereavement and exhaustion to cross the Atlantic in record time. The plucky rowers set themselves an enormous feat of physical and mental endurance and then let nothing stand between them and achieving it.

Saturday's Evening News also offered a chance to reflect on how winners can emerge even from the most miserable circumstances when David Goldberg, from Liberton, told how he'd escaped a Nazi death camp by a hair's breadth.

Arrested with his five-year-old brother and put onto a train to Poland, it was only by chance the train was turned back at the border. Otherwise, David is sure he would have shared the fate of 20 close relatives who died at Auschwitz.

The 84-year-old now dedicates much of his life to telling schoolchildren and students about his experiences, so the Holocaust is never forgotten or repeated.

That John Loughton sat on the BB throne on Monday should serve as a good reminder that with the right mental attitude we can all triumph. Eloquent, smartly-dressed – OK, perhaps too soberly attired for a young fella of 20 – he doesn't have the natural sense of entitlement that comes with a public school education. Instead, he has the confidence of a young man who has coped with circumstances that might have floored less determined adolescents.

When he couldn't get peace to study in his mum's council flat, crowded with three boisterous younger brothers, he took himself off to stay with his grandparents. When he was teased for being brainy, it merely made him more determined to go into politics.

John told the Evening News just a few months ago that the problems he'd faced growing up were tightly wound up with class perceptions. But there was no way he was going to have his ambitions dampened by other people's image of what people from his area could achieve.

"Coming from where I'm from there's a prerequisite for failing," he said, "There's no real prospects – but a lad from Pilton can get out there and be like anyone else. I do want to prove people wrong and show others it can be done. I want to show other young people that anything is possible."

So far John's been true to his word, on the strength of hard work and ambition. With £50,000 to spend and the springboard of a reality show to launch him we can just wait with baited breath to see what he does next. Good luck to him.

The full article contains 905 words and appears in Edinburgh Evening News newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 30 January 2008 9:48 AM
  • Source: Edinburgh Evening News
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

Choose a nameDr_Joseph_Phd,

Tynescos 30/01/2008 12:29:03
Telling lies, feigning injury and playing the goon. Well done John Loughton, a fruitful political career awaits.
2

Alternative (High Octane) Fuel Head,

Edinburgh 30/01/2008 12:46:14
I ask again...

Just what has this bloke achieved?

I'm not proud of the fact that he "won". I'm not even pleased for him. If anything, I feel a bit sorry for him and even more sorry for those who have elevated him to (decidedly temporary) celebrity status because of this.

There would be less fuss made if someone had successfully built a rocket in their garden shed and used it to go to the moon and back.
3

Duncan in Edinburgh,

30/01/2008 13:15:03
#1 What exactly has this guy done to you that you insist on misrepresenting him at every opportunity? I mean, given that you are fully aware of the fact that Big Brother is a game, and the aim is to win, and that following the instructions you are given is the only way to win, and that the "lying" you constantly refer to was him following instructions - given all that, what exactly is your problem?

Please don't reply by repeating that he lied. I want to know why you insist on telling this half-truth - what is *your* motivation to act against this man's interests? What do you gain from it?
4

,

30/01/2008 13:31:03
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
5

AJ Fife,

30/01/2008 13:33:27
Is John a Labour man?
6

,

30/01/2008 14:19:18
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
7

Choose a nameDr_Joseph_Phd,

Tynescos 30/01/2008 15:22:15
#3 Duncan

John Loughton's aim was to win? His open letter to the SYP doesn't mention this. This is his stated aim:
"I'm doing this because I think it presents the next big opportunity to deliver change for young people."

Answers on the back of a fag packet as to what changes John Loughton has delivered...

If John Loughton lies and feigns injury under the instruction of Matt Lucas to attain E4's £50K gutter culture carrot, what depths will he stoop to in order to further his own political ambitions?
8

Duncan in Edinburgh,

30/01/2008 20:05:24
#7 You have failed to answer my question - what is your motivation to repeat this slur? What do you gain from it? Do you know the guy? Has he insulted your mother? What?

Your criticisms are bizarre: he didn't mention wanting to win in one sentence from a statement to the SYP?? he hasn't yet managed to deliver changes a full 48 hours after winning???

It just doesn't make any sense. What is your agenda here?
9

Choose a nameDr_Joseph_Phd,

Tynescos 30/01/2008 22:44:09
Duncan,

These are not aspersions; these are facts. John Loughton wilfully lied, deceived and acted the fool.

This is not the type of man who I want to see as a future politician (though I'm sure he'd fit right in with many of the dubious types currently in office).

I would prefer that John Loughton sat down and inspected his behaviour. Lying because Matt Lucas told you is no excuse. If John Loughton is prepared to wilfully deceive to win a crumbling, insipid gameshow and 50 thousand greasy Endemol greenbacks, what lows and deceit will be plumbed for a leg up in John Loughton's political career?

My only agenda is a preference for honesty and morality.
10

Duncan in Edinburgh,

31/01/2008 08:45:47
#9 Good grief, do you write to actors condemning their actions when they play a baddie in a film? There's as much logic in that as in your condemnation of this man. I have a preference for honesty and morality in politics too, but I also have a brain which allows me to distinguish between a TV show and an individual's opinion.
11

Choose a nameDr_Joseph_Phd,

Tynescos 31/01/2008 10:21:12
Duncan,

A grown man feigning cramp, telling lies and crawling on the floor are not traits I respect.

When an actor plays someone who has cramp his colleagues are all aware that it is a part being played. This is not deception, unlike John Loughton's loathesome antics.

I prefer to see people, especially those who place themselves in a position of authority, show a stronger will than that.
12

Duncan in Edinburgh,

31/01/2008 11:41:52
#11 I understand your preference for moral leadership. But why this tireless invective against someone who to all rational thought has shown no weakness of morals at all, but has simply participated in a TV show?

I ask again, what is your beef with this man? A general desire for moral leadership is simply not a justification for the level of abuse you have heaped on him. It strikes me that you have some other axe to grind here and you are not divulging what it is. In which case your own morals are to be questioned.
13

Choose a nameDr_Joseph_Phd,

Tynescos 31/01/2008 11:52:08
I have not levelled any abuse toward John Loughton. My comments stem from actions John Loughton has voluntarily taken on a TV show he voluntarily participated in.

Feigning injury to unknowing individuals is wilful deception and highlights a lack of moral substance. Add in the lies and you have my 'beef'.

 

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