Bangkok Post

Suicide of Love Island host sparks demands for tougher media rules in United Kingdom

- KATE HOLTON

The death of one of Britain’s most famous TV stars, Love Island host Caroline Flack, has sparked a debate over the behaviour of the tabloid press and whether social media companies need to do more to remove toxic content.

The 40-year-old Flack, the former presenter of the hugely popular reality show Love Island and a winner of Britain’s version of Dancing With The Stars, was found dead in her London flat this weekend after she committed suicide.

Friends of the presenter have accused the tabloid press and social media trolls of hounding her after she was charged with assaulting her boyfriend in December, a charge she denied.

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s spokesman called her death a tragedy and said social media companies needed to do more to make sure that robust processes were in place to remove unacceptab­le content.

“Caroline Flack was relentless­ly trolled online, but this trolling was amplified and legitimise­d by the mainstream press and they should not be allowed to dodge their share of the blame,” said Tracy Brabin, the opposition Labour Party’s culture spokeswoma­n.

Britain is once again discussing the role of its tabloid press, just weeks after Prince Harry and his wife Meghan moved to Canada, partly to avoid what they said was misleading and unfair reporting.

While tabloids such as Rupert Murdoch’s Sun, the Daily Mirror and Daily Mail play a key role in launching the careers of many reality TV stars, they also tend to track their every move and relationsh­ip, and recycle some of the most toxic online criticism to generate new headlines. A public inquiry was held into Britain’s media in 2011 after Murdoch’s now defunct News Of The World newspaper admitted hacking into the voicemails of thousands of public figures to get scoops, sparking a major scandal that shook the press, police and politician­s at the time.

Just hours before ITV’s Love Island was due to return on Monday after two days off air, hundreds of thousands of people had signed online petitions calling for another inquiry and tougher rules around the way the press can cover celebritie­s.

One petition called for a ban on the use of anonymous quotes, the invasion of privacy, and the publicatio­n of private informatio­n and medical records.

The daughter of a Coca-Cola sales representa­tive, Flack began as a pizza waitress but became one of the most prominent female leaders of Britain’s boom in reality television.

After a period as an actress in the early 2000s, she became a presenter of shows such as The X Factor and won Strictly Come Dancing in 2014.

On Love Island she presented a dating show that brings together young single men and women who have to couple up in a sunshine-soaked villa to win fame. Their intimate relationsh­ips,

Flack. including in the bedroom, are broadcast on television while the public chooses who to vote off the show.

Only those who avoid being dumped stand a chance of winning.

Flack had stepped down from presenting Love Island after she was charged with assaulting her boyfriend in December. Her boyfriend, Lewis Burton, did not support the prosecutio­n.

Flack herself had talked in the past about her problems with depression, and in December she used Instagram to thank those who had shown their support.

“This kind of scrutiny and speculatio­n is a lot … for one person to take on their own,” she wrote.

“I’m a human being at the end of the day and I’m not going to be silenced when I have a story to tell and a life to keep going with.

“I have nothing but love to give and best wishes for everyone.”

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Caroline

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