The collateral damage for these shutdowns is always people like the lady posting here earlier about what she feels is counterfeit goods she received. Before these people went under, days from first broadcasting, it was those people that never received rattan furniture etc. they’d ordered from the previous version of Ideal World, with presenters still fiddling away (as in playing a metaphorical violin) on the deck of their own Titanic as the channel was sinking before their very eyes. No doubt other examples can be given from those auction channels that sunk before these two. The behind the scenes staff can also be included with customers as the ones who suffer in these situations.
Whereas, the grinning presenters just shrug their collective shoulders and walk on to another gig. Most living in good addresses and having comfortable standards of living, they repeat to themselves the ‘Nothing to do with us, Guv’ mantras, put themselves in front of somebody else’s camera and flog some more goods - leaving those who bought goods not received or not as described on their watches to sort it out. None of them generally seem to display any sense of public moral responsibility in trying to sort out the mess their sales pitches leave behind them - Alex Knowles being a rare, rare exception.
When will the likes of Iles etc. finally accept shopping television is an industry with only a finite number of mainly older buyers, and just give it up as a bad job for creating a successful business for future years - or days in Not Seen on TV’s particular case.