The Daily Telegraph

A royal storm in a teacup that nobody asked for: the documentar­y with no new informatio­n

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The Princes and the Press BBC

★★★★★ By Anita Singh ARTS AND ENTERTAINM­ENT EDITOR

For an organisati­on in need of friends, the BBC doesn’t half like making enemies. Nobody was crying out for a documentar­y about the Royal family’s relations with the media and yet the corporatio­n decided to make one, sparking a row with the Palace. Cue dark threats about BBC boycotts; the broadcaste­r, for its part, refusing to let anyone see the contents ahead of transmissi­on.

Well, what a storm in a royal teacup that turned out to be. The Princes and the Press, on the evidence of this first episode, contained no bombshells. Instead, presenter Amol Rajan led us through what we already knew.

The timeline was laid out. Princes William and Harry developed an early hatred of the press after witnessing what happened to their mother, and later became the victims of phone hacking. William learned to play the game, Harry refused. The media’s love affair with Harry and Meghan turned sour, and paved the way for Megxit.

The Sussex squad, as Harry and Meghan’s fans like to be known, complain that the media is biased. But here was a reminder that the Cambridges took their fair share of flak at one point, with William dismissed as workshy. Rajan wasn’t here to decide whether that was true or not, he said, but to find out how those narratives took hold. He wanted to explore how “the deal” between press and Palace works, and what happens if one side doesn’t keep their side of the bargain.

That’s not to say that Rajan didn’t share his own opinions. It is clear, he concluded, that “in some tabloid quarters, racially charged tropes were evoked and gave a xenophobic whiff ” to coverage of Meghan.

Rajan once expressed republican sympathies in print, but he understand­s the new BBC mantra: personal politics should be left at the door. His journalist­ic skills failed him only once, when he allowed Meghan’s cheerleade­r-in-chief Omid Scobie to paint himself as the “only” mixed-race royal correspond­ent. Technicall­y true, but it ignores the fact that a non-white royal correspond­ent appeared in this very programme (Roya Nikkhah of The Sunday Times). A small fact but – as Prince Harry would say in his fight against fake news – truth matters.

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