AP: A Newspaper Says Video Of Prince William And Kate Should Halt Royal Rumor Mill. That’s A Tall Order
LONDON (AP) β The late Queen Elizabeth II used to say that the royal family has to be seen to be believed.
That became glaringly evident as the absence of Kate, the Princess of Wales, from public view unleashed an escalating frenzy of wildΒ speculation, skepticism and flat-out conspiracy theoriesΒ fueled by online armchair detectives.
It’s unlikely to let up even though Kate and husband Prince William have been filmed at a farm shop near their Windsor home β the first footage of the 42-year-old princess since she hadΒ abdominal surgeryΒ for an unspecified condition two months ago.
The Sun newspaper plastered its front page with βGreat to see you again, Kate!β and said it had decided to publish the footage βin a bid to bring an end to what the Palace has called the βmadness of social media.ββ
But that probably won’t stem the tide of feverish and at times fantastical speculation that has swirled about the princessβs condition during her absence.
βThe potency and legitimacy of monarchy comes from visibility,β said Anna Whitelock, professor of history of the monarchy at London’s City University. βVisibility is the βcontractβ between a monarch and their people.β
Evidence of that lies in the steady stream of photos ofΒ King Charles IIIΒ meeting dignitaries and officials released by the palace since the monarch announced in February that he is being treated for an unspecified form of cancer. Charlesβ relative openness about his diagnosis was a departure for the generally secretive royal family.
Kate has not been as open, or as successful, at controlling the narrative.
Palace officials gave little detail about Kate’s condition beyond saying that it wasn’t cancer-related, the surgery was successful and recuperation will keep Kate away from public duties until after Easter. Thatβs likely to mean she’ll be out of sight until her children go back to school on April 17.
Experts who study conspiracy theories say the snowballing conjecture surrounding Kate isn’t so different from how dozens of other βnonstandard beliefsβ gain momentum.
βThe moment there’s an information gap, people will fill it. And they can fill that space quite quickly … when we have such a fast-moving mediascape,” said Simeon Yates, a professor of digital culture at the University of Liverpool.
Speculation didn’t stop after William and Kate’s Kensington Palace office released a photo of Kate and her children George, Charlotte and Louis on March 10 to coincide with Motherβs Day in the U.K. The move backfired whenΒ The Associated PressΒ and other news agencies retracted the picture from publication because it appeared to have been manipulated, fueling even more conjecture.
Although there was no suggestion the image was fake, inconsistencies such as the alignment of Princess Charlotteβs left hand with the sleeve of her sweater suggested it had been altered.
KateΒ issued a statementΒ acknowledging she liked to βexperiment with editingβ and apologizing for βany confusionβ the photo had caused.
The manipulated photo set off a new round of speculation, some of it centered on unsubstantiated theories that the image wasn’t recent or that Kate had been photoshopped in β alongside even more bizarre claims.
The palace and the British government have tried to ignore the conjecture but occasionally have had to respond. The British Embassy in Kyiv released a statement saying Monday βnews about King Charles III death is fake,β after Russian outlets falsely reported the monarchβs demise.
The video clip published by The Sun late Monday appears to show William and Kate smiling as they walked together, carrying shopping bags. It said the footage was taken Saturday in Windsor, west of London.
The Sun quoted Nelson Silva, who said he filmed the video, as saying, βKate looked happy and relaxed. They look happy just to be able to go to a shop and mingle.β
Kensington Palace did not comment on the video.
Yates said that βKategateβ resonates because so many people in the U.K., the United States and around the world feel emotionally invested in the royal family β an institution thatβs both public and secretive.
βThereβs quite an emotional thrill of thinking, βI know thereβs a secret going on,β” he said. βThereβs an enjoyment in thinking, well you know, βI know something special.β It makes you feel better.β
Daniel Allington, who studies conspiracy theories at Kingβs College London, agreed that the Kate speculation has its roots in people’s emotional connection to the British royal family.
βBecause of that, they want to talk about them, they want to know about them, and when there is very little known, people end up speculating. They are trying to make something out of nothing,β Allington said.
He also predicted that quieting the international frenzy won’t be a simple task.
βOnce people start doubting, they can doubt practically everything. Once people start going on that track of speculation about the truth being hidden, itβs very difficult to get them off that track,β he said.