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KateGate took the internet by storm. Now the tone has changed to sympathy and regret

- Natalie Stechyson

Putting an end to weeks of frenzied speculatio­n and wild rumours, the Princess of Wales revealed Friday that she has cancer and is undergoing chemothera­py.

And very quickly, the tone online changed from jokes about Catherine's so-called disappeara­nce to sympathy and regret, with some people saying they were ashamed, and others saying the princess deserves an apology.

"I think a lot of people that have been making jokes online are really going to re‐ gret it," Ellie Hall, a freelance royal correspond­ent, told CBC News Network.

"And I think that some prominent public figures who have made tongue-in-cheek remarks or, again, jokes, posted memes, are really going to be feeling bad."

WATCH | Catherine re‐ veals cancer diagnosis:

Questions swirled since surgery

Questions have swirled about Catherine's health since Jan. 17, when Kensing‐ ton Palace announced her planned abdominal surgery. At that point, she hadn't been seen publicly since Christmas Day. The initial statement offered no other details, other than clarifying that her condition wasn't cancerous.

But on Friday, in a video message, Catherine revealed that further tests after her surgery showed that "cancer had been present." At the ad‐ vice of her medical team, she said she has been under‐ going preventati­ve chemothera­py.

"This of course came as a huge shock, and William and I have been doing everything we can to process and man‐ age this privately for the sake of our young family," she said, referring to her hus‐ band, Prince William, and their children, Prince George, Princess Charlotte and Prince Louis.

"As you can imagine, this has taken time. It has taken me time to recover from ma‐ jor surgery in order to start my treatment. But, most im‐ portantly, it has taken us time to explain everything to George, Charlotte and Louis in a way that is appropriat­e for them, and to reassure them that I am going to be OK."

In a statement, British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak said that Catherine has been "subjected to intense scrutiny and has been unfairly treated by certain sections of the media around the world and on social media."

"When it comes to mat‐ ters of health, like everyone else, she must be afforded the privacy to focus on her treatment and be with her loving family."

Tone abruptly shifts From the beginning, Kens‐ ington Palace was clear: Catherine was unlikely to re‐ turn to public duties until af‐ ter Easter, and the palace would only provide updates "when there is significan­t new informatio­n to share."

But in an informatio­n vac‐ uum, people created their own theories, and the hash‐ tag #KateGate trended on‐ line.

People have made tongue-in-cheek posts sug‐ gesting that the princess was growing out bangs or recov‐ ering from a Brazilian butt lift. Many people theorized that William might be having an affair, that Catherine might be much sicker than the palace was letting on, or joked that Camilla is having her "Saltburn moment," play‐ ing the long game to destroy the Royal Family from the in‐ side out.

Some major companies and figures made jokes, as well, taking part in a popular meme making fun of a recent video sighting of William and Catherine that many believed to be fake. The Dublin Airport joked that the duo were look‐ ing "happy and relaxed" in an image it shared of them su‐ perimposed in a terminal, for instance.

Kim Kardashian joked she was going to find Kate herself, late-night talk show host Stephen Colbert "spilled the tea" on rumours of an af‐ fair and the Washington Post published an editorial car‐ toon depicting Prince William manipulati­ng a puppet of his wife in front of a palace win‐ dow.

Even the King of the Netherland­s made a Photo‐ shop joke, seemingly in refer‐ ence to the Mother's Day image of Catherine and her children that was revealed to have been edited and re‐ tracted by several news agen‐ cies.

In light of the Princess's diagnosis, the tone online changed quickly to sheepish‐ ness.

"All the Kate Middleton and Royal family jokes I laughed at these past couple of weeks and to find out she's been battling cancer … I'm going to hell," one person wrote on X.

"Hoo boy we are all a bunch of assholes," wrote an‐ other.

The news 'nobody want‐ ed'

"This was the news ab‐ solutely nobody wanted," Hall, the royal correspond­ent, told CBC News Network.

Many people online also expressed anger and dismay that Catherine blamed herself for the debacle over her Mother's Day photo, making a statement that she liked to experiment with photo editing, and apologiz‐ ing for the confusion - while she had cancer.

WATCH | Social media took scrutiny to another level:

"All she really wanted was privacy," royal commentato­r Edward Wang told CBC News Network. "And to have those rumours and conspiracy the‐ ories spun around the in‐ ternet and around the world about her for the last two months would have been in‐ credibly difficult."

He said in light of that "in‐ satiable interest" in getting details about her condition, the news is now hitting a lot of people hard.

"As someone who specu‐ lated on this without consid‐ ering it could be a serious health condition, I'm very

ashamed to be honest, and all the very best to her," wrote a user on X.

"Perhaps the media can now stop deciding if she is too thin or too puffy, too put together or too run down, too secret or too desperate for public approval. Even a royal lady, even the royal chalice of the future kings of Britain, deserves a bit of hu‐ manity," a commentary writer said in the Washington

Examiner Friday.

"Catherine deserves all of our prayers, if not an apology."

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