Re: Reaction to Jackos passing away.
I doubt it'll be a Diana style thing, not on this side of the Atlantic anyway. Many people had no time for him, or pitied him etc., but few seemed to really idolise/appreciate/look up to him. Therefore few feel any great sense of loss.
Britain was fascinated by their princess, she was good looking, never did anything of note out of the way, they had goodwill towards her since Charles seemed a bit of knob and she had to put up with that, plus there was the whole mystery about the circumstances of her death. So while it was a bit OTT at the time it was understandable to a fair degree. I was in London at the time and went to see the funeral cortege passing, not because I thought much about her before her death or on her death, but because it seemed a bit of a historical (and hysterical) moment.
I doubt it'll be a Diana style thing, not on this side of the Atlantic anyway. Many people had no time for him, or pitied him etc., but few seemed to really idolise/appreciate/look up to him. Therefore few feel any great sense of loss.
Britain was fascinated by their princess, she was good looking, never did anything of note out of the way, they had goodwill towards her since Charles seemed a bit of knob and she had to put up with that, plus there was the whole mystery about the circumstances of her death. So while it was a bit OTT at the time it was understandable to a fair degree. I was in London at the time and went to see the funeral cortege passing, not because I thought much about her before her death or on her death, but because it seemed a bit of a historical (and hysterical) moment.