Princess Diana's death

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Hitchington

Lovely stuff
Location
That London
I recall being off my head in some taxi going across London after being on a night out at, I think, Ministry of Sound. The taxi driver had the radio on. But to be honest it could have been Ministry of Justice.

On the day of the funeral I was no doubt off my head again. Things were rather cloudy and muddled back then. They are cloudy and muddled now but not for the same reasons.:cheers:
1997 was a good year.
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I can't believe some of the posts on here - perhaps it has become trendy to not give a f*** about her in the intervening years, but that certainly wasn't the case at the time.
It was for me.
 

slowmotion

Quite dreadful
Location
lost somewhere
We had been in Canada for three weeks and got back the day before her death so we knew very little about the Dodi/Di media frenzy that had been building up. Of course I felt sympathy for her family, and was sad that she died and that two boys had lost their mother but, although not a republican, I wasn't very interested in the lives of the Royal Family. Until the Wednesday, life went on as normal, and then the whole country seemed to go utterly bonkers. Back to back maudlin songs when you tuned into a rock station.....phone calls from people abroad who you barely knew saying how sorry they were for "You Brits". Madness.
 

smutchin

Cat 6 Racer
Location
The Red Enclave
perhaps it has become trendy to not give a f*** about her in the intervening years, but that certainly wasn't the case at the time

I'm sure you actually believe that, and it's forgivable, given that only one point of view was reported by the popular media at the time, but the sycophancy and pseudo-grief was by no means universal, as the article linked to by @slowmotion demonstrates. I don't think anyone among my social circle ever gave a f*** about Diana, either before or after her death. That's nothing to do with being 'trendy', it's that she was wholly irrelevant to most of us.
 

Fnaar

Smutmaster General
Location
Thumberland
It was a very weird time. I'm basically a republican in my outlook, don't think we should have a monarchy at all. Had just returned from holiday with the family the previous evening, and I got up early to make a coffee, and heard it on the radio. Bunged the telly on, told Mrs Fnaar, and it took me a while to convince her I wasn't telling porkies. We spent much of that day watching the news channels for reasons I still can't explain, given my outlook. At the time, I worked 3 mins walk from Buck House, and I did go round to check the scene, and found it oddly moving. Then I went to a pub nearby, and a woman (complete stranger) started chatting to me and basically kept trying to snog me. :smile: Strange days indeed.
 

Vapin' Joe

Formerly known as Smokin Joe
I'm sure you actually believe that, and it's forgivable, given that only one point of view was reported by the popular media at the time, but the sycophancy and pseudo-grief was by no means universal, as the article linked to by @slowmotion demonstrates. I don't think anyone among my social circle ever gave a f*** about Diana, either before or after her death. That's nothing to do with being 'trendy', it's that she was wholly irrelevant to most of us.
Exactly.
 
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