Kate Middleton and the Internet’s Communal Fictions
Critics at Large | The New Yorker
The New Yorker
4.4 • 679 Ratings
🗓️ 28 March 2024
⏱️ 47 minutes
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Summary
News of Kate Middleton’s cancer diagnosis arrived after months of speculation regarding the royal’s whereabouts. Had the Princess of Wales, who had not been seen in public since Christmas Day, absconded to a faraway hideout? Was trouble at home—an affair, perhaps—keeping her out of the public eye? What truths hid behind the obviously doctored family photograph? #WhereisKateMiddleton trended as the online world offered up a set of elaborate hypotheses increasingly untethered from reality. On this episode of Critics at Large, the staff writers Vinson Cunningham, Naomi Fry, and Alexandra Schwartz discuss how a particular brand of “fan fiction” has enveloped the Royal Family, and how, like the #FreeBritney movement, the episode illustrates how conspiracy thinking has become a regular facet of online life. The hosts discuss “The Paranoid Style in American Politics,” an essay by the historian Richard Hofstadter, from 1964, that traces conspiratorial thought across history, as well as Naomi Klein’s 2023 book “Doppelganger.” How, then, should we navigate a world in which it’s more and more difficult to separate fact from fiction? Some antidotes may lie in the fictions themselves. “The rest of us who are not as conspiratorial in bent could spend more time looking at those conspiracies,” Cunningham says. “To understand what a troubling number of our fellows believe is a kind of tonic action.”
Read, watch, and listen with the critics:
“Don’t Blame ‘Stupid People on the Internet’ for Palace’s Princess Kate Lies,” by Will Bunch (the Philadelphia Inquirer)
“Doppelganger,” by Naomi Klein
“The Paranoid Style in American Politics,” by Richard Hofstadter (Harper’s Magazine)
“The Parallax View” (1974)
“Cutter’s Way” (1981)
“Reddit’s I.P.O. Is a Content Moderation Success Story,” by Kevin Roose (the New York Times)
New episodes drop every Thursday. Follow Critics at Large wherever you get your podcasts.
Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | How much do you guys follow what the royals are up to? Like, what is your level of royal engagement? Alex? Are you abreast? Well, I am now. I mean, isn't the name of the person Duchess, like, Cholrode-Rod-L-Loh or something? Well, I think it's pronounced chumly. It's like... That's it. I said all those consonants just lead to that. Exactly. |
| 0:23.4 | So we're speaking of course. like that's it it's spelled all those consonants just lead to that it's spelled chal of de mon leo something |
| 0:22.7 | so we're speaking of course |
| 0:25.3 | about Lady Rose |
| 0:26.6 | of course |
| 0:27.9 | Hanbury |
| 0:28.7 | nay Hanbury |
| 0:30.2 | now Chumley |
| 0:32.1 | she's a bird like |
| 0:33.9 | Aristo |
| 0:35.4 | who has been rumored to be carrying on an affair with William. |
| 0:43.0 | Those letters equal Chumley is what you're telling me. |
| 0:45.2 | Can I just spell out the letters here? |
| 0:46.9 | Yes, please do. |
| 0:47.9 | C-H. |
| 0:48.9 | Yes. |
| 0:49.5 | Oh, okay. |
| 0:50.5 | A little bit of an eyebrow raise there for me. |
| 0:53.1 | Then we get an L, M-O-N-D-E-L-E-Y. |
| 0:58.2 | Chal-M-A-L-E-Y. |
| 0:59.2 | Chal-M-A-L-L-L-L-E-Y. |
| 1:00.4 | And that's Chum-L-L-L-B-W-Boy. |
... |
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