“'Have you an ounce of
sympathy in your nasty little heart?': Katie Hopkins is slammed after failing
to acknowledge Peaches Geldof's death” scolded
the Mail on Tuesday morning,
making sure they gave Ms Hopkins as little time as possible before laying into
her for not having the good grace to open her mouth, put her foot in it, and help
them generate even more cheap copy.
Dignified silence, both then and now
Dredging up the This
Morning argument between the two, the Mail
got one of its gofers to monitor mentions of Ms Hopkins on Twitter. They found
just three (by comparison, she has around 158,000 followers). She was then
accused of “Tweeting and Retweeting
irrelevant remarks”. The Mail,
however, was not so reticent.
Just reporting Peaches Geldof’s death was not sufficient. We
had
to hear about “Peaches Geldof's
haunting last column for baby magazine is revealed as police scour her home for
clues to her death” (irrelevant, much?) and
then came a characteristically tedious diatribe from Amanda Bloody Platell,
which, it hardly needs to be said, was also little more than click-bait.
Supposedly wonderful diarist Sebastian Shakespeare also
had to have his ninepence worth.
And then came the
truly vacuous: “Nick Grimshaw and
Alexa Chung head out to dinner in LA as they prepare to support Pixie Geldof in
wake of sister’s tragic death”. Would anyone like to
sink even lower? You betcha, says Sarah: “'She was a sweet, funny girl...
it's a tragedy': Simon Cowell pays tribute to Peaches Geldof”. It couldn’t get
any more desperate. Or could it?
Oh
yes it could: “Gavin Rossdale takes
heartbroken daughter Daisy Lowe to lunch in LA following the sudden death of
her pal Peaches Geldof”. By this morning, there was
even something from tired and unfunny churnalist Richard Littlejohn: “The sudden death of a young mother is always
sad. But that doesn’t explain the distasteful outpouring of vicarious grief
over Peaches Geldof”.
That would be the “vicarious
grief” on which his paper had been shamelessly trading all week, including
“Peaches Geldof 'was found dead with her
11-month-old son by her side after husband raised the alarm because she wasn't
answering her phone'” today, which we also did not need to know.
Meanwhile, Ms Hopkins has
used her Sun column to say,
simply, “Peaches
didn’t want a tweet from me. She didn’t welcome it in life. She certainly
didn’t need it in death. She was tough enough not to seek approval from anyone.
I admire that trait in others… Peaches didn’t need tweets from celebrities or
strangers – she just needed a mother’s love”. That would appear to be one-nil to the Hopkins.
One also wonders if this is connected to Ms Hopkins
appearing on Channel 5, and Dacre’s hatred of Richard “Dirty” Desmond. Oh, it might just be. More than a little.
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