Where are they now? Credit: Anwar Hussein/Getty

It was one of journalismās greatest corrections. āWe apologise for the Princess Diana page-one headline āDi goes sex madā, which is still on the stands at some locations,ā announced the National Enquirer. āIt is currently being replaced with a special 72-page tribute issue: āA farewell to the Princess we all loved.āā
In its defence, the magazine could point to a multitude of other media outlets that had similarly been caught out by the sudden death of the Princess of Wales on 31 August 1997. And, more than the event itself, caught out by the public response.
Because the week that followed ā between the fatal car crash in the early hours of a Sunday morning and the funeral the following Saturday, 25 years today ā was an extraordinary moment, a week of all-consuming grief or hysteria (depending on taste), when nothing else seemed to happen, and nothing else mattered. There was only one subject of conversation, certainly in the media: radio phone-in shows experienced record numbers of calls, newspaper sales soared, and rolling news really came into its own.
There were two poles of attraction that week; two households, both alike in dignity. There was Kensington Palace, where Diana had lived. It became the centre of the peopleās mourning: flowers costing an estimated Ā£50 million were laid at the gates in a rising (and rotting) tide of tribute. And then there was Balmoral, where the Royal Family, including Prince Charles and his young sons, was on its annual visit. No visible expression of grief was forthcoming from that quarter, and even if that was understandable ā after all, two children had just lost their mother and might wish for some privacy ā the public was not in an understanding mood.
As the shock of the news began to recede in those days, the sorrow turned to anger, directed at the perceived failure of the royals to lead the national bereavement. āIt is as if no one in the Royal Family has a soul,ā raged The Sun, anxious to direct attention away from the paparazzi from whom Diana had been fleeing, and on whom the tabloids relied so heavily.
And since this was a time when flags were important to us, the anger focused on a third site: Buckingham Palace, where there was no flag flying at half-mast. The reasoning for this was protocol: only the Royal Standard flew over royal palaces, and then only when the monarch was in residence, and never, ever at half-mast. But that was precisely the sort of inflexible convention that Diana, the rebel daughter of an 8th Earl, had stood against. āI do things differently, because I donāt go by a rule book,ā sheād said in her 1995 Panorama interview, ābecause I lead from the heart not the head.ā
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