As you all must know, though, with regard to anonymous sources, the Press has to guarantee anonymity to their sources or they wouldn't tell them anything of importance. This happens in many stories, royal, political etc, any story which is likely to be contentious. People who serve with William in Norfolk and who served with him in Anglesey are likely to receive a severe reprimand and a black mark put against their name by the authorities concerned if they complain to the media using their own names.
I don't expect to be believed on this thread, but there was talk way back on the base at Anglesey that William would have others covering his shifts at times when he wasn't undertaking Royal duties but was elsewhere.
In September 2013, it’s rumored that he threatened bloody murder if the pictures of topless Camilla on a yacht were even discussed in the British press.
These are the three that have mentored William and Harry on how to view the press and how to deal with them. And yet it’s William who gets called petulant. Interesting.
A Clarence House official said the images of Charles and Camilla 'were taken during a day off whilst Their Royal Highnesses are clearly enjoying private time'.
It does not appear legal action is being considered.
Read more: Royal reporters make it all up - doesn't everyone know that? » The SpectatorRoyal correspondents, like humour columnists, have a licence to embellish, and readers know the deal.
Everyone does know it - From 2013
Read more: Royal reporters make it all up - doesn't everyone know that? » The Spectator
Maybe we are being unrealistic because we are interested in the royals.
Reporters report news. Anne doing 500 engagements is not news because the public expect it.
The Queen holding audiences isn't news, but it's recorded on the Royal site for historical (?) purposes.
Charles making cheese (in support of organic businesses) or Camilla reading a story to young children, or them reading to her (literacy) makes a good photo opportunity and both print and online can use it.
Charles under pressure because of politics, or William being workshy, or a Royal affair or corruption or anything else controversial is viewed as NEWS!
we don't have to like it but news is immediate, different and of wide general interest. Unfortunately these days only the latter example sells. More of the same (lots of charitable engagements unless photo opportunity) just doesn't.
News is a business and needs to make money.
Just thinking out loud.
The genie is out of the bottle with regards to social media. It's a ridiculous idea that the royals should not use it to get information out. The press uses it too. Why read the article about a Royal event if the story doesn't add to stuff we already know? The Daily Mail articles have tons of photos which draws people in. The Express doesn't.
Also I don't blame Kate for taking the Huff post offer. It brought tons of attention to a worthy cause. It's isn't Kate's job to fight for paid journalists V's blogger. Maybe have your paper partner with a charity backed by a Royal and then they will write something for your paper too.
Sent from my iPhone using The Royals Community
What I've put in bold letters is basically what Palmer said in the recent article.
"Part of the problem is that interest in the royals’ official working lives is sustained by the glamour and intrigue that supposedly surrounds the rest of their lives. If we don’t see that, it becomes more difficult."
The official public life, to him, needs the juicy tidbits and the "caught in the act" and the burp heard around the world type incident to support their livelihood. In other words, like some have suggested, they should jump through hoops like circus animals for the entertainment of the masses.
Personally, I applaud the Cambridges for doing whatever they can to draw a distinct line between public and private.
The fact that it was Palmer who wrote that is irrelevant - its true. Hardly any UK media mentioned Catherine's charity work this week and the Times only showed some tennis pix (photo-opportunity). Charles is supporting pub is the hub to keep rural communities alive - no mention apart from he fact he offered to buy a round for everyone. Camilla is championing literacy (fantastic) - absolutely no coverage. It isn't considered news by editors. Many of the journalists go on the UK trips, write pieces and they are never published. One sees Twitter comments but nothing in the press.
Its a shame but its a fact. Controversy sells, bad news sells and good news doesn't (unless one has overcome huge adversity).
We are interested but the majority aren't unless its scandal. And therefore in drawing a line, the Cambridges cease to be interesting.
I'm not saying I agree with it because I don't. But that is how here in the UK it is viewed - not by Richard or Camilla or Emily or Rebecca but by their Editors and Owners.
A couple of random thoughts:
I am totally fine with the media reporting an annual tally of engagements and pointing out that the older royals work more than younger royals, I am OK with reporting that royals are transported to some of their engagements in helicopters, I am fine with reporting on a insider tip received about how much William works at EAAA. I think that the royals should have privacy and dignity in that their phones should not be tapped, hidden cameras should not be set up to spy on them nor should phalanxes of photographers be allowed to get in their and their nanny's personal space.
I am very much in the camp that royals should be visible but there is something about Richard Palmer's perspective that seems like a perversion, or maybe it isn't and it's just an inconvenient truth. He is basically saying that the model British Royal Family is one where young ones are expected to be glamorous and scandalous and, as if that is not enough, they need to make their kids available for photo ops, or better yet when some lucky photographer gets pictures of the kids out and about with the nanny, don't object to those pictures being on the front page of all the newspapers. However the young ones and the older ones should have charitable interests so that everyone involved in this scheme can feel good about themselves. To me this is adding up to the Beckhams being the model royal family.
My full sentence was, "I am very much in the camp that royals should be visible but there is something about Richard Palmer's perspective that seems like a perversion, or maybe it isn't and it's just an inconvenient truth. "I think Palmer is given a realistic view of UK press and what sells - that's not his "perversion" as you call it.
My full sentence was, ""
What he is saying is that insight into private lives sells. And in the same way it applies to celebrities, it also applies to the BRF. His publishers are in business to make money - it isn't anything else but a business. Look at some of the threads on here - past relationships; lovers; divorce; children outside marriage; fraud in Spain etc etc. People are interested.
He is frankly being incredibly honest about how it works in a business that isn't known for honesty. And ultimately it is about what many of the British public want to know about and its gossip and scandal.
Do you buy The Sun? the Daily Express? I am guessing no since you are based in the United States. I get my royal news mostly from this site and the Daily Mail Online. While you may not follow social media there are people who do and then post their findings here. I think that the grievance being expressed is that Kensington Palace has their own social media presence and distributes to the masses via social media which cuts out the middleman, aka royal reporters. The question is why are these reporters truly put out, is it because there is something truly wrong with royals using social media, or is it because in doing so it undermines their livelihood, but not in a nefarious way, rather this is the way things are done in the 21st century.The question in my mind is that with all of the good they accomplish, and I do think that the Royal Family in Britain DOES a tremendous amount of good, how do they make the public aware just on social media? People who have an active interest (very few, really), will seek it out, but will the masses? If I'm not interested in the BRF, I don't follow any of their doings on Twiter or like or follow their Facebook. How does the average person (who makes up the majority of the public) remember why he/she wants a royal family?
These are honest questions. In this day and age perception is always more important than reality. Camilla can fight illiteracy day and night but unless there is proper coverage she gets no credit. Same with Kate and mental illness, etc, etc.
Reas more: Princess Diana would be proud of her progressive Prince William - TelegraphAs a little boy, he would have learnt that his mother threw herself down the stairs when pregnant with him.
That her marriage to his father was so miserable that she developed bulimia and began cutting herself with razor blades.
When most children are dealing with nothing more complex than times tables, he would have been dealing with the fact that both of his parents were having affairs.
He must have known, mustn’t he? Because we all did.
As a teenager, his parents would be involved in an incredibly bitter and public divorce. Both of them would appear on national television admitting to infidelities.
At 15, he would have to walk behind his mother’s coffin in front of two billion people after she was killed in a car crash that many crazy conspiracy theorists would blame on his family.
Like it or not, the Royals are the beating heart of this country – and I’m completely thrilled that they are now represented by a young family comprised of a stay-at-home dad and a mum who goes out and does most of the work. (I mean, come on, the Duchess of Cambridge is *everywhere* at the moment.)
We should be impressed that Prince William is standing his ground and ensuring that Prince George and Princess Charlotte have the kind of childhood he didn’t. He is a king I will one day be proud to have.