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Sports

Melbourne Demons need to fix their second halves ahead of AFL finals series

With AFL finals looming large, the focus is intensifying on the legitimate challengers for the flag.

Geelong and Collingwood are top of the form line, with impressive winning streaks ahead of September.

Hovering in third place, by virtue of a sliver of percentage that separates them from fourth and fifth, are the Demons.

Even after a dramatic loss to the unstoppable Magpies at a rocking MCG last Friday night, pundits are largely keeping faith with a Melbourne side that has now lost six of its past 10 games.

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Australia

Affirmative consent laws

All sex is rape, argued radical feminist Andrea Dworkin. She believed that because we live in a patriarchal society heterosexual sex can only be understood as domination: “the pure, sterile formal expression of men’s contempt for women.”

Dworkin’s polemics from the 1980s and 1990s made her the enemy of “sex positive” feminists who were pro porn and pro sex work. Indeed most people recoiled from her unyielding, dark take on sex, which seemed to strip women of all carnal agency, and joy. But I had a bit of time for Dworkin’s ideas of her, despite being heterosexual myself (within a measly margin of error). She was articulating something previously unsayable about encounters between men and women: the eroticism stems for the former violating the boundaries of the latter. Even when the parties are equally enthusiastic, the subtext of conquest and submission lurks in the bedroom like a third person.

A bill to pass affirmative consent laws was introduced to Victoria's parliament last week.  The proposed changes are in part driven by the #Metoo movement.

A bill to pass affirmative consent laws was introduced to Victoria’s parliament last week. The proposed changes are in part driven by the #Metoo movement.Credit:Damian Dovarganes

Dworkin died in 2005. But as the New York Times′ Michelle Goldberg noted in 2019, in the #MeToo era, feminists began invoking the firebrand theorist “in a spirit of respect and rediscovery”. This is not because women suddenly believe all sex is rape, or all men rapists. But because, Goldberg argued, Dworkin has relevance for a new generation “engaged, in a pitched cultural battle over whose experiences and assumptions define our common reality”.

I hear Dworkian echoes in the wave of “affirmative consent” reforms to sexual assault laws. Such legislation was introduced into Victoria’s parliament last week; Queensland is likely to follow, and NSW passed similar laws last year.

Under the Victorian bill, a man – the actual wording is gender neutral, but the overwhelming reality of sexual assault is not – can only reasonably believe a woman was consenting throughout an encounter if he took active steps to find out, such as asking her, or looking for signs of reciprocity like removing clothes. Radical? Well, it sounds radical. Like I said, I hear echoes of Dworkin who talked about “presumptive rape”.

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You could read into the bill an assumption that the sex act in question was non-consensual unless the accused has evidence to the contrary. And that is a significant philosophical flip; the “no means no” mantra of the 1970s has become “only ‘yes’ means yes”. Rape laws have traditionally favored men who managed to breach women’s boundaries, which were considered rubbery to start with. Affirmative consent, says Victoria’s Attorney-General Jaclyn Symes, shifts the scrutiny from the victim – what she did, what she wore – to the accused; what did I have do to ascertain her state of mind?

The defense barristers argue, as they’re professionally obliged to do, that the laws could criminalize cases in the “grey zone,” ensnaring hapless, emotionally unintelligent teenage boys – who don’t fit the traditional profile of a predator – after a night of drunken misadventure. To which the feminist campaigners say, yes that’s the point of the exercise: to eradicate the gray zone because the woman who is feeling degraded in the aftermath of an encounter doesn’t think the zone’s gray anyway.

If I was convinced of the accuracy of the underlying premise – namely that the proposed laws have the serious potential to criminalize cases that don’t presently make the cut for rape – then I’d be more sympathetic to the defense barristers’ warnings about unintended consequences. But I’m not convinced, for what my opinion’s worth. Largely because I don’t think this new articulation of what constitutes “reasonable belief” in another’s consent is a significant departure from the current law. Unless I’m misreading the text, an accused doesn’t have to ask if the other party’s consenting: they just need to actively seek out positive cues, and be on alert for negative ones.

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US

Appeals court rules IRS must provide Trump’s tax returns to House committee

The Internal Revenue Service must hand over former President Trump’s tax returns to a House committee, a federal appeals court ruled on Tuesday, dismissing a long-running legal challenge to block tax officials from complying with a request for the records from Democratic lawmakers.

A three-judge panel for the DC Circuit Court of Appeals unanimously sided with the Biden administration and the House Ways and Means Committee, ruling against Trump’s arguments against the committee’s authority, his privacy concerns and his claim that complying with the request would be unconstitutional.

“The 2021 Request seeks information that may inform the United States House of Representatives Committee on Ways and Means as to the efficacy of the Presidential Audit Program, and therefore, was made in furtherance of a subject upon which legislation could be had,” Judge David Sentelle wrote in the panel’s opinion.

“Further, the Request did not violate separation of powers principles under any of the potentially applicable tests primarily because the burden on the Executive Branch and the Trump Parties is relatively minor.”

Sentelle was appointed by former President Reagan. The two other judges on the panel, Karen Henderson and Robert Wilkins, were appointed by former Presidents George HW Bush and Obama, respectively.

Attorneys representing Trump did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Rep. Richard Neal (D-Mass.), the chairman of the Ways and Means committee, applauded the decision on Tuesday.

“With great patience, we followed the judicial process, and yet again, our position has been affirmed by the Courts,” Neal said in a statement. “I’m pleased that this long-anticipated opinion makes clear the law is on our side. When we receive the returns, we will begin our oversight of the IRS’s mandatory presidential audit program.”

Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) also described the order as a victory.

“Access to the former president’s tax returns is crucial to upholding the public interest, our national security and our Democracy. We look forward to the IRS complying with this ruling and delivering the requested documents so that Ways and Means can begin its oversight responsibilities of the mandatory presidential audit program,” she said in a statement.

Neal first requested the tax returns from the Treasury Department in 2019. The Trump administration refused to comply with the request and the House committee sued in federal court later that year.

After the Biden administration took over last year, the Justice Department reversed its legal position in the case and tax officials were ordered to comply with the request, prompting Trump to file a motion in his personal capacity to try to prevent the documents from being turned over. .

Federal tax law requires Treasury officials to hand over individual tax returns upon receiving a written request from the chairman of the Ways and Means Committee.

Trump’s lawyers had argued that the law is unconstitutional and that compliance with the request would pose First Amendment and separation of powers concerns.

But the three-judge panel on Tuesday rejected those arguments as well as the former president’s allegations that the request, and the willingness to comply, is improper because of the political motivations of the two branches.

“While it is possible that Congress may attempt to threaten the sitting President with an invasive request after leaving office, every President takes office knowing that he will be subject to the same laws as all other citizens upon leaving office,” the decision reads. “This is a feature of our democratic republic, not a bug.”

Updated at 2:38 pm

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Categories
Sports

Cricket umpire Rudi Koertzen killed in car crash aged 73

Former international cricket umpire Rudi Koertzen has died in a car crash in South Africa.

Koertzen, 73, was on his way back home from Cape Town after a weekend of golf when the fatal accident happened on Tuesday morning (local time).

Three others were also killed in the crash at Riversdale, around 300km east of Cape Town.

Koertzen became an umpire in 1981 and made his debut as an international umpire in 1992 during India’s historic tour of South Africa.

He was on the International Cricket Council’s elite panel of umpires for eight years and officiated in 331 matches, a record at the time of his retirement in 2010 that has since been surpassed by Pakistan’s Aleem Dar.

“It is a very big loss, foremost for his family and then for South Africa and cricket,” Dar said.

“I stood in so many games with him. He was not only very good as an umpire but also an excellent colleague, always very cooperative on the field and also always willing to help off the field.

“Because of the way he was, he was also well-respected by players.”

Koertzen’s time as an umpire was best remembered for the entertainingly slow raising of his finger to dismiss a batter.

A number of professional cricketers around the world expressed their condolences at the news of Koertzen’s death.

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Koertzen still occasionally umpired in amateur cricket in his hometown of Despatch in South Africa’s Eastern Cape.

Reuters/ABC

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Categories
Australia

Sydney news: Illawarra South Coast Line commuters urged to take alternative transport due to industrial action

Here’s what you need to know this morning.

Illawarra rail line closed

From 10am to 4pm today there will be no trains running on the T4 Eastern Suburbs and Illawarra and South Coast rail lines due to ongoing industrial action.

Although the protected action does not officially start until 10am, the head of Sydney Trains predicts impacts from about 6am.

“We urge all our customers to plan ahead by catching alternative public transport or working from home on Wednesday if possible,” Matt Longland said.

He said the line, which runs from Bondi Junction to Bomaderry, would not be fully operational until about 8pm.

Rail, Tram and Bus Union (RTBU) secretary Alex Claassens said union members were fighting for a greater commitment from the government to fix the new intercity fleet.

The RTBU says the fleet, built in South Korea, has a safety flaw which means guards cannot monitor passengers getting on and off the train.

The government has agreed to the safety changes in an enterprise agreement but the union wants a deed of agreement.

Mr Claassens said the NSW government chose to inconvenience customers on the T4 line today by not bringing in trains from other areas.

“90 per cent of our train crews and trains are still available to go form the other regions into that region to provide a level of service,” he said.

“Unfortunately… [Sydney Trains] management made a decision that they weren’t going to run any additional trains on that Illawarra line.”

Monkeypox vaccine rollout goal

a health professional holding a vial of monkeypox dose
There are currently 33 cases of the virus in NSW, two of which were locally acquired.(Reuters: Given Ruvic/Illustration)

The government wants everyone in NSW who takes HIV-prevention medication to be vaccinated against monkeypox before WorldPride 2023.

Health Minister Brad Hazzard said the government was aiming to have the 22,000 people who currently took pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) inoculated before Sydney hosted the pride event next March.

“NSW Health has been working with community partners … including doctors who have a special interest in HIV and sexual health … to support the vaccine rollout,” Mr Hazzard said during Question Time in parliament yesterday.

“With monkeypox cases increasing internationally, it’s expected there will be further cases in NSW and local transmission may increase rapidly.”

Men who have sex with men are considered most at risk of contracting monkeypox, which spreads through skin to skin contact.

There are currently 33 cases of the virus in NSW, two of which were locally acquired.

Vaccines are already being distributed in Sydney and on the Far North Coast, with 5,500 doses being provided by the federal government.

NSW Health expects to receive between 24,500 and 30,000 doses in September and another 70,000 in early 2023.

The symptoms of monkeypox include headache, fever, chills, sore throat, body aches, rash, swollen lymph nodes and fatigue. The rash may initially look like pimples.

Resignation letter sought from building commissioner

The NSW Building Commissioner’s private resignation could be made public amid scrutiny over the conduct of sacked Fair Trading minister Eleni Petinos.

Commissioner David Chandler quit in late July.

The state opposition wants to see Mr Chandler’s resignation letter, amid reports the relationship between Mr Chandler and Ms Petinos had soured.

Debate on a motion to compel the state government to hand over a copy of the letter is expected today.

Ms Petinos was sacked from cabinet last month over bullying allegations.

Bill to ban Nazi symbols passes

A state government bill to ban displays of Nazi symbols in public has passed the lower house with unanimous support.

The bill criminalises knowingly displaying a Nazi symbol in public without a “reasonable excuse”, which includes artistic, academic or educational purposes.

Offenders can face 12 months’ imprisonment or fines of up to $11,000 for individuals and $55,000 for corporations.

Attorney-General Mark Speakman said the bill would provide additional safeguards against hate speech.

“The display of a Nazi symbol undermines our shared values ​​and causes harm and distress to others in the community, including those from the Jewish faith,” he said.

“This bill recognizes that the public display of Nazi symbols is abhorrent, except in very limited circumstances such as for educational purposes.”

The bill will ensure that use of a swastika by religious groups including Buddhists, Hindus and Jains will not be a criminal offence.

Mr Speakman said he expected the bill to pass the upper house and be enacted by next week.

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Categories
US

Few clues as desperate search for missing Tahoe teen Kiely Rodni hits day 3

The frantic search for Kiely Rodni continues in the Tahoe area Tuesday after the 16-year-old seemingly vanished into thin air after attending a party over the weekend.

Kiely was last seen around 1:30 am on August 6 near the Prosser Family Campground about 10 minutes north of Truckee. According to the Placer County Sheriff’s Office, she was attending a party “of more than 100 juveniles and young adults.” Her vehicle, a silver 2013 Honda CRV, is also missing, and her phone has been out of service since she disappeared.

The sheriff’s office and FBI are treating the case as a possible abduction because Kiely’s vehicle is still missing. On Monday, search-and-rescue teams fanned out across the area looking for any sign of Kiely. A helicopter was also deployed for aerial sweeps along the I-80 corridor between Donner Summit and the Nevada border.

“Despite the numerous resources we have utilized, Kiely and her vehicle are still missing,” the sheriff’s office said in a statement Monday afternoon. “We are currently coordinating with the California Highway Patrol, Truckee Police, FBI, and the Nevada County Sheriff’s Office as we continue our search for Kiely.”

There are a flurry of online rumors but scant real clues in the case. Friends say Kiely intended to stay at the campground overnight, but they lost track of her in the large party. At least one witness says Kiely was too intoxicated to drive.

Kiely Rodni, 16, has been missing since Aug. 6, 2022 after disappearing while attending a party at a campground in Truckee.

Kiely Rodni, 16, has been missing since Aug. 6, 2022 after disappearing while attending a party at a campground in Truckee.

Placer County Sheriff’s Office/Handout

“I know that she wasn’t in the right mindset or state to drive. And if she were to have driven, she wouldn’t have made it far,” a friend told CBS News. “So my concern is that somebody might have offered to drive her home de ella and then did n’t take her home.”

Detectives say they’ve had difficulty getting witness statements due to the age of party-goers and the underage drinking that occurred at the gathering.

“If you are a parent of a child who attended this party or attended yourself, please look at yours or your child’s photos/videos/social media for any images of Kiely potential persons of interest in the background,” states a website run by Kiely’s loved ones. “Someone out of place, someone no one really knows. We are still piecing together a usable timeline; who she may have been with, when she may have left.”

Volunteers will be meeting at the Truckee community rec center this morning to conduct more searches. At 5 pm tonight, friends are hosting a “teen to teen” meetup at the Tahoe City Save Mart parking lot to encourage young witnesses to come forward without adults or law enforcement present.

Kiely is 5-foot-7 and 115 pounds and has blonde hair, hazel eyes and a nose ring. She has multiple piercings and a tattoo of the number 17 on her ribs. Witnesses say she was wearing a black tank top and green Dickies pants at the party. Her silver Honda CRV de Ella has the California license plate 8YUR127. Kiely’s family runs the Lost Trail Lodge in Truckee, about a 12-mile drive from the Prosser campground.

“We just want her home. We’re so scared and we miss her so much and we love her so much,” Kiely’s mother Lindsey Rodni-Nieman said Monday. “Kiely, we love you, and if you see this, please just come home. I want nothing more than to hug you.”

Anyone with information regarding Kiely’s disappearance is asked to immediately contact the Placer County Sheriff’s Office tip line at 530-581-6320, option 7. Callers may remain anonymous.

Categories
Sports

Port Adelaide Prison Bar jumper feud with Collingwood, teal stripes offer, David Koch vs Eddie McGuire

The ongoing Prison Bar jumper feud has taken a fresh twist, with Collingwood reportedly prepared to offer a teal-coloured alternative to Port Adelaide.

Power president David Koch was fuming earlier this month when he claimed he’d “been played” by the Magpies after the Power’s request to wear their heritage jumper, which features thin black and white stripes in a panel, was again knocked back by the Victorian club.

But the Herald Sun reported on Tuesday night the Pies were prepared to make a minor concession and allow the Power to wear their prison bar jumper once a season … if Port was happy for the white in the panels of the jumper to be replaced by teal stripes.

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Collingwood believes the compromise would allow Port to combine its proud SANFL heritage, which includes 36 SA league premierships, with its 25-year AFL history as teal has featured heavily in many Power jumpers since they entered the competition in 1997.

An agreement was put in place when Port Adelaide entered the AFL that the Prison Bar jumper could only be worn in AFL heritage rounds. But as there’s no longer one dedicated AFL-driven round by the AFL, the Power want to don their Prison Bar guernsey for one Showdown against the Crows per year – a request the Magpies have so far denied.

Connor Rozee wearing the Prison Bar strip at training in 2021. Picture: Dean MartinSource: News Corp Australia

“We always have discussions,” Magpies chief executive Mark Anderson told SEN last month, Port is a great football club and we do have great respect for them, so (we are) always happy to sit down and have a conversation and we have since signing that agreement as well,” he said.

“But as we stand here now, the agreement is the agreement.”

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Koch said earlier this month he was hopeful clubs could move “past these trivial arguments”, saying the club’s request was “logical, harming nobody and promoting the history of Australian football”.

“What we are asking for is entirely reasonable. To wear our iconic Prison Bar Guernsey in Showdowns to celebrate the heritage of Port Adelaide and South Australian football. Not against Collingwood, just two times a year, in Adelaide. I don’t see how it impacts anyone negatively at all,” he said.

Last year, the Power were threatened with the loss of premiership points if they wore the Prison Bar jumper against the AFL’s ruling for a Showdown.

Cheekily, the team waited until post-match to change out of their playing strip to don the heritage jumper.

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Categories
Australia

Female GPs say ‘inadequate’ Medicare rebates, pressure to bulk bill patients adds to emotional burn out

For two years, Sarah McLay has dipped into her personal savings, sacrificed a take-home wage and run her central Queensland medical practice at a loss of “several hundred thousand dollars”.

Regardless of the hours Dr McLay worked or the patients she saw, the numbers did not stack up.

“We were really subsidizing the public’s health care,” Dr McLay said.

“Nothing is ever truly free. Everything costs someone something.”

Most patients probably don’t think about the finances of a medical clinic — and that’s provided you can get into the waiting room in the first place.

Yet financial strain is part of a hidden toll that Dr McLay and other general practitioners say is disproportionately affecting women and adding to skills shortages as burnt-out doctors leave the profession.

A financial and emotional gender disparity has emerged because female GPs tended to see more patients needing longer consultations.

A woman with mid-length brown hair smiles at the camera, she is wearing a stethoscope around her neck.
Dr McLay says Clermont will have no permanent doctor if she was forced to close her clinic.(Supplied)

“Yes, I did medicine because I wanted to help people, but I can’t change the reality that our Medicare rebate is actually completely inadequate to pay our bills,” Dr McLay said.

“I can’t keep sacrificing and suffering because the government doesn’t value what we do.”

Short appointments more lucrative

General practitioners across the board have reported struggling to provide care with Medicare rebates that have not increased with inflation.

Louise Stone, a Canberra GP and medical educator said short consultations received a higher rebate per minute than longer appointments.

Dr Stone said she would “earn four times as much” doing back-to-back vaccination appointments than a 40-minute consult for someone with mental health or chronic physical conditions.

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Categories
US

Russia-Ukraine War News: Live Updates

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Ukraine claimed responsibility for a rare attack on a Russian air base in the occupied Crimean Peninsula.CreditCredit…Reuters

ODESA, Ukraine — A series of explosions rocked a key Russian air base on the Kremlin-occupied Crimean Peninsula on Tuesday, sending up huge plumes of smoke, killing at least one person and sowing confusion among local officials about what exactly had occurred.

As Russian and occupation officials scrambled to determine the cause, raising the terrorist threat level in the area, a senior Ukrainian military official with knowledge of the situation said that Ukrainian forces were behind the blast at the Saki Air Base on the western coast of Crimea.

“This was an air base from which plans regularly took off for attacks against our forces in the southern theater,” the official said, speaking on the condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive military matters. The official would not disclose the type of weapon used in the attack, saying only that “a device exclusively of Ukrainian manufacture was used.”

A Ukrainian attack on Russian forces in the Crimean Peninsula would represent a significant expansion of Ukraine’s offensive efforts, which until now have been largely limited to pushing Russian troops back from occupied territories after Feb. 24, when the invasion began.

It would also be an embarrassment for President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia, who often speaks of Crimea, which he illegally annexed from Ukraine in 2014, as if it were hallowed ground.

Ukraine possesses few weapons that can reach the peninsula, aside from aircraft that would risk being shot down immediately by Russia’s heavy air defenses in the region. The air base, which is near the city of Novofederivka, is nearly 200 miles from the nearest Ukrainian military position.

Videos verified and reviewed by The New York Times show that a plume of smoke was rising from the air base just before the explosions. There were at least three explosions: two in quick succession and a third a few moments later. It is unclear from the videos what caused the blasts. In addition, a video uploaded to social media shows at least one warplane, an Su-24M, completely destroyed on the tarmac at the base.

The senior Ukrainian official said the attack involved partisan resistance forces loyal to the government in Kyiv, but he would not disclose whether those forces carried out the attack or assisted regular Ukrainian military units in targeting the base, as has sometimes occurred in other Russian-occupied territories.

To reach targets deep behind enemy lines, Ukraine has increasingly turned to guerrillas in Russian-occupied territories, officials said. Partisans, for instance, have helped Ukrainian forces target Russian bases and ammunition depots in the Kherson Region, Ukrainian officials say.

Publicly, Ukrainian officials on Tuesday would not confirm the involvement of Ukraine’s military. Ukraine’s defense ministry said in a statement that it could not “determine the cause of the explosion,” and suggested that personnel at the base adhere to no-smoking regulations.

Other officials did not exactly deny that Ukraine was behind the explosion.

“The future of the Crimea is to be a pearl of the Black Sea, a national park with unique nature and a world resort, not a military base for terrorists,” Mykhailo Podolyak, a senior adviser to President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine, said in to tweet. “It is just the beginning.”

Russia’s Defense Ministry said in a statement that the explosion was caused by the detonation of stockpiled ordnance for warplanes at the base. While the ministry offered no speculation about whether Ukrainian forces might have been involved, the decision by Crimea’s Kremlin-installed leader, Sergei Aksyonov, to raise the terrorist threat level to yellow suggested that officials were concerned about security on the peninsula.

“This measure is exclusively prophylactic, because the situation in the region is under full control,” Mr. Aksyonov said in a statement on Telegram.

In the eight years of Russia’s occupation of Crimea, the peninsula has transformed from a quiet southern Ukrainian beach destination into a major base of military operations. The Saki Air Base is home to Russia’s 43rd Separate Naval Attack Regiment, which is part of the Black Sea Fleet. Ukraine’s military intelligence service has accused pilots from the regiment of committing war crimes by bombing civilian areas during the war.

Shortly after the explosion occurred, Mr. Aksyonov arrived at the scene. Standing in front of a large black plume of smoke, he said that a three-mile perimeter had been erected around the site of the base to protect residents.

“Unfortunately, one person died,” he said. “I express my most sincere sympathies to family and friends.” Crimea’s health ministry said that at least nine people had been injured.

Christiaan Triebert contributed reporting.

Categories
Entertainment

The Princess: Princess Diana documentary uses archive to chart public and paparazzi obsession

“All we do is take pictures,” says an unseen paparazzo midway through the new Princess Diana documentary, The Princess. “The decision to buy the pictures is taken by the picture editors of the world, and they buy the pictures so their readers can see them. So at the end of the day, the buck stops with the readers.”

It’s a cop-out, of course, and just one of the many unsettling voices laid over the film’s archival tapestry of news footage, television clips and tabloid shots, which resembles less historical record than it does some kind of elaborate media simulation; a woman’s life manufactured and sold to an eager public until her handlers decided she was expendable.

But the remark does summon those age-old specters of supply and demand. Who really killed Diana that fateful day in 1997, when her Mercedes collided with a Parisian pole at high speed? Was it the paparazzi? The Queen? Might it have been – to paraphrase Sympathy for the Devil – you and me?

Thousands of flowers laid on the pavement leading to Kensington Palace;  a newspaper featuring Princess Diana in the foreground
After their divorce in 1996, Diana stayed in the Kensington Palace apartment she’d shared with Charles until her death the following year.(Supplied: Madman)

As one of the reigning titans of late-20th-century monoculture, the Princess of Wales was both a harbinger of our current 24/7 celebrity obsession and the last – alongside her fellow superstar deer-in-the-spotlights, Michael Jackson – of a literal dying breed of stars, their colossal fame complicated by narratives often dependent on, and at the mercy of, a ruthless media.

Comprised entirely of archival footage, the film captures the short, meteoric life of the world’s most photographed woman through the eyes of the mass media that surveilled her, moving from the tail end of Diana Spencer’s teenage years to the turbulent events of the 90s that played out across the tabloids.

It’s an approach that’s become more common in documentary cinema in recent years, especially in films that tangle with beloved famous figures, such as Asif Kapadia’s Amy, or the forthcoming David Bowie tribute Moonage Daydream; these are works that eschew talking heads and downplay overt editorialising, allowing the footage to speak for itself. (Frederick Wiseman, venerable master of the form, is owed quite a few checks.)

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