Princess Diana: The Mourning After
Princess Diana: The Mourning After

Princess Diana: The Mourning After

August 01, 1998 | 50 min

In "Diana: The Mourning After" Christopher Hitchens sets out to examine the bogusness of "a nation's grief", tries to uncover the few voices of sanity that cut against the grain of contrived hysteria. His findings suggested that the collective hordes of emotive Dianaphiles sobbing in the streets were not only encouraged but emulated by the media. In the aftermath of Diana's death a three-line whip was enforced on newspapers and on TV, selling the sainthood line wholesale. The suspicion was that journalists, like the public, greeted the death as a chance to wax emotional in print, as a change from the customary knowing cynicism, to wheel out all those portentous phrases they'd been saving up for the big occasion. Sadly, they just seemed to be showboating; the eulogies, laments and tear-soaked platitudes ringing risibly hollow.

Genres

Documentary

Cast

Naomi Scott

Christopher Hitchens

Share on social media

More Like This

Digital Edition
Leaving Neverland 3
Diana: 7 Days That Shook the Windsors
One Rogue Reporter
Diana, Our Mother: Her Life and Legacy
Into the Deep: The Submarine Murder Case
Outfoxed: Rupert Murdoch's War on Journalism
Nothing to Hide
News Without A Newsroom
Princess Diana: Tragedy or Treason?
Time Bomb Y2K
The Cleaners
WMD: Weapons of Mass Deception
Citizen Krone, Austria between the Lines
The Emma Bovary Trial
State of Silence
What About ME?
Désentubage cathodique
The Fantastic
i -Documentary Of The Journalist-