farmchoice wrote: » i was working in a pub in london. the next day i bought the irish sunday independent . it had an article inside and the headline was ''its do or die for Di and Dodi'' it was pulled form all the Irish editions but the international one had already gone out.
Your Face wrote: » Wow, I never knew that her death would have such an impact on people, that they would remember exactly where they were.
sbsquarepants wrote: » It's sad when any young woman dies in an accident, but that's about it - it was no more or less sad than anyone else. I think since her death she's been elevated to some saint like status that just doesn't match the basically parasitic life she lived.
alchemist33 wrote: » I remember when the BBC did their "greatest Briton" programme and she made it into the last six. She was obviously going to pale in comparison to Newton, Churchill so they made one of the categories "compassion". She was famous and glamorous, and may well have been a nice person, but I don't see why so many people say they identified with her. Not many people have much in common with a princess.
freshpopcorn wrote: » Where were you when you heard princess Diana had died?
73Cat wrote: » It was shocking enough at the time I suppose, but can't understand it being in the news so much all these years later.
NIMAN wrote: » She was a bit man-mad from all reports. Her kids seemed to be secondary to her concerns.
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