Very happy to share that the TV adaptation of Royal Spin — which I have been developing with our genius showrunner and writer Emily Fox, and Universal Television — has a US home at NBC’s @Peacock!
Details via @Deadline: https://t.co/dnvkQvH2H3
@likethiscontent Honestly? I checked everything off my list: the contracts I wanted, books, TV, podcast etc. I told the stories I wanted to tell, and the media noise around me was beyond tedious. Now I’m building new things☺️
🚨🚨 BREAKING NEWS: Protestors have asked Charles and William ‘What did you know about Andrew?’ at the Commonwealth Day Service. It’s time for the royals to stop dodging accountability. #NotMyKing#AbolishTheMonarchy#Epstein
For years, criticism of the royal institution has too often been framed by large parts of the media as disloyalty rather than journalism. This has created a culture where asking tough questions or exposing problematic behaviour invites personal attack instead of engagement.
The Andrew situation shows why scrutiny (even of those in public favour) matters. It is not anti-monarchy; it’s pro-transparency. When institutions close ranks and media deference replaces investigation, the truth gets delayed — with potentially catastrophic consequences.
BAFTA and the BBC failed Michael B. Jordan, Delroy Lindo, the Tourette's community and viewers when they allowed the N-word to be aired during the BAFTA Film Awards ceremony.
With a tape delay, this moment could have been handled differently. The audio could have been muted in the broadcast. The segment could have been edited. Instead, the slur went out. And now it lives online — free to be clipped, circulated, divorced from explanation and used as shorthand outrage. Or worse, it can be used to spread hate. https://t.co/7RYqGI5zLO
🗣️ 'The Epstein affair does not undermine the integrity of the Royal family. They deserve sympathy, not reproof'
Read Charles Moore's comment below ⤵️
https://t.co/55smoPhtPw
@mandyandy551 I spent years being VERY vocal about the heinous allegations around Andrew — at a time when many others chose to prioritise their Palace relations. I left the royal beat two years ago, I turn down every commentary offer, and I couldn’t care less if another copy of that book sells