In the last days of Diana, Princess of Wales, the media was
on her case more or less round the clock. There was constant pursuit, much of
the copy fuelled by photos taken by paparazzi photographers. In the days
following her death, that same media turned to play the other side of the
field, blaming and stoking anger against the same snappers that they had been
paying handsomely just days before.
Such is the routine hypocrisy of the Fourth Estate, which
has been deployed in similar fashion following the sad death of nurse Jacintha
Saldanha, who had answered the phone at the King Edward VII Hospital early one
morning last week and put
through a prank call made by two hosts from Australian station 2Day FM to
the ward occupied by Kate, Duchess of Cambridge.
At first, the papers simply
reported the hoax call. Then they pored over the contents. Then came the why-oh-why
stories. What effect this must have had on Ms Saldanha, away from her family in
Bristol while discharging her duties in London, can only be imagined, although
we do know that the hospital did not admonish or otherwise discipline her for
the incident.
Then
came the news of Ms Saldanha’s death. Just as with Diana all those years
ago, the papers that had been happily feeding on the 2Day FM prank call
immediately about-turned and went after the two hosts. And to be on the safe
side, the Saturday edition of the Daily
Mail put a photo of one of those hosts, Mel Greig, showing a big smile and
plenty of cleavage, on its front page.
So now
the Fourth Estate is talking of “anger”
against Ms Greig and her co-host Michael Christian, 2Day FM, owners Southern
Cross Austereo, and just about anyone else with an Australasian accent. Rumours
that the legendarily foul mouthed Paul Dacre will deploy Amanda Platell to
write an account of what it is like to personally play both hero and villain are as yet unconfirmed.
On top of the usual level of intrusion, the
press has trawled every Twitter feed and Facebook page they can find for
the family of Ms Saldanha. Relatives in the Indian city of Mangalore have been
sought out and paraded for the cameras. Australian PM Julia Gillard has had to
make a statement. A
letter from the hospital upbraiding the Australian broadcasters was “damning”, because it came from a
peer of the realm.
Yet very few stop and think what is going on here: it is the
press who are stoking this wave of anger simply to feed off it and thus
generate more cheap copy. After all, with Kate having left the hospital and
returned to a life well away from the snappers – and a staff alert to blagging
and the rest of the “Dark Arts” –
there had to be something to fill the void. So they trample over the memory of
Jacintha Saldanha instead.
And, conveniently, it’s someone else’s fault, as with Diana.
No change there, then.
2 comments:
Please take this further.
What if Chris Jefferies had been pushed over the edge by media intrusion?
Or Marianne Faithful who, incredibly, isnt quite as attractive as she was 47 years ago.
The hospital has also done a good job of shifting the blame. he question should be, why wasn't it someone who was trained to deal with calls who answered the phone?
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