Daily Mail

BBC LOST PLOT OVER THE DEATH OF DIANA

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TowaRDS the end of august 1997, I was on a short holiday, sipping an early morning coffee on the hotel terrace in Istanbul, when the waiter approached with a message.

It was from the office in London, asking me to phone urgently.

I did. They told me Princess Diana had been killed in a car crash, and would I please return to London asap. I pretended it was a dodgy line and said I’d call them back. and when I did, I said no.

My bosses were puzzled. Diana’s death was a massive story — it dominated the news for weeks to come. But I knew I would make a rotten job of reporting it.

My suspicions were confirmed when I returned to London several days later. It was a city — indeed, a nation — in mourning. or, at least, that’s what we were told by every news bulletin. But it wasn’t.

True, a vast mountain of flowers and cuddly toys had been left at the gates of Kensington Palace and every person vox-popped by television seemed to be mourning. Even the Queen was forced to speak in public of her own grief and flags were lowered to half-mast.

The message was clear: a transforma­tion had overtaken the nation. what I saw with my own eyes, however, told me something else.

I went to Parliament Square, where hundreds were camping out to get a decent view of the funeral planned for the weekend — but the atmosphere was not one of mourning.

They were there for much the same reason that people camp out to get a good spot for a big royal wedding. They were spectators rather than mourners.

I went to a concert in the Royal albert Hall — the first I’ve ever attended when the audience was instructed not to applaud. It was meant as a mark of respect for the princess but the audience seemed baffled.

It was hard to avoid the conclusion that the media — above all the BBC — was not so much reflecting the national mood as creating it.

Interestin­gly, the initial reaction to Diana’s death had been relatively low-key. In fact, the audience for a BBC1 special programme — broadcast on the evening after the tragedy — was surprising­ly modest.

But as the week wore on and we continued to be bombarded with endless accounts of the nation’s ‘outpouring of grief’, the mood clearly changed.

Now, I have no problem with newspapers setting out to create a mood, but I do have a problem with the BBC doing the same. It’s not for us to tell the nation what it should be feeling.

Indeed, I suspect the vast majority of the population was not, in any real sense, grieving.

of course, we all felt that the death of the princess was a tragedy. So is the death of any human being in such circumstan­ces. But to invoke a national mood of mourning for a single individual with whom we did not have any direct connection is simply wrong, if only because it invites comparison­s.

In my case, I found it hard not to reflect on the tragedy of aberfan a generation earlier, when a tip of colliery slurry slid down and engulfed a junior school.

Surely the deaths of 116 children in one welsh village was a greater justificat­ion for national mourning than the deaths of three people in Paris? Even if one of them was once married to the heir to the throne. Journalist­s must deal in facts. So what ‘facts’ were the BBC relying on to define the national mood in the days after Princess Diana met her untimely death?

we knew that a very large number of people had expressed their sadness in a variety of ways. and that huge numbers would turn out to watch the funeral procession make its sad way through London.

What we had no conceivabl­e way of knowing was how many of those people were there for the spectacle — or simply because they wanted to be part of an extraordin­ary moment in the nation’s life. we didn’t know how many were grieving. and we never will.

That’s one of the reasons why I had no wish to be part of the team reporting on the death of Diana. I would also have found it very difficult, if not impossible, to sound as though I were grieving.

Like countless millions, I felt sadness at her death, but no more than I’ve felt at any of the other untimely deaths of people I didn’t know personally.

So, no, the nation had not changed. The media had simply helped to create a mood by seeing what we wanted to see.

 ??  ?? Grief: But did the BBC help to create the mood of national mourning after Princess Diana died?
Grief: But did the BBC help to create the mood of national mourning after Princess Diana died?

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