The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

BBC gets complaints over too much Prince Philip coverage

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LONDON — The BBC received a record-breaking number of complaints following its extensive coverage of Prince Philip’s death, with more than 110,000 people contacting the broadcaste­r to grumble over changes to scheduled programmin­g and “excessive” reporting on his life and legacy.

According to British media, the outpouring of criticism makes his death the most-complained­about event in the country’s television history, with the wave of backlash forcing the BBC to temporaril­y build a dedicated complaints page where people could object to the programmin­g.

Philip, also known as the Duke of Edinburgh, husband to reigning British monarch Queen Elizabeth II “passed away peacefully” on Friday at Windsor Castle - where he had been staying amid the coronaviru­s pandemic. Following the news of his death, the BBC revised its schedule to make way for tributes, pulling popular television shows such as “Gardeners’ World” and postponing the “Masterchef ” final.

The BBC defended its coverage, saying it was “proud of the role we play during moments of national significan­ce,” but it did not disclose the precise number of complaints received. Official figures are expected to be published this week on the broadcaste­r’s biweekly complaint log.

While the broadcaste­r has since removed the dedicated complaints page, which read: “We’re receiving complaints about too much TV coverage of the death of HRH Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh,” it did not go unnoticed.

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