The footage was livestreamed to tens of millions but at least five short clips have already been deleted online.
The United Kingdom recently observed a full ten days of official mourning for Queen Elizabeth II, who died on September 8 at the age of 96. But British broadcasters are being told to compile just one hour from their non-stop coverage for any future broadcasts and submit that hour to the royal family for approval. Any use of footage beyond that one-hour would also need to be cleared with Buckingham Palace in the future.
Where does that leave online coverage, something you’d assume could live on the web forever? The royal family already had at leastfrom the Queen’s memorial and funeral services at Westminster Abbey and Windsor Castle purged from UK media websites, according to the Guardian, though longer streams still survive for those who know where to look. The BBC’s digital video repository, iPlayer, has just a few weeks left before those longer streams are purged.
What are the royals trying to hide from the public? As it turns out, nothing as scandalous as you’d expect, given the history of people like Prince Andrew, the new king’s brother and a notable associate of deceased pedophile
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