In a development so rich with irony it could fuel a distillery for a decade, Savannah Guthrie, the impeccably coiffed oracle of American breakfast television, has publicly implored the British press to show a modicum of decency. Yes, the same Fourth Estate that hounds celebrities like a terrier with a taste for blood, that trades in scandal like a barter economy, has been called to account. The case in question? Her mother’s, a private tragedy now dragged into the public square by the very machines Guthrie herself once operated. It’s a delicious twist, a moral panic wrapped in a conundrum, and it has landed on the desk of the UK Press Complaints Commission which, let us be honest, has all the bite of a soggy biscuit.
Let us examine the facts. Nancy Guthrie, a woman of 97, passed away recently, her obituary etched in the quiet dignity of a life well lived. But the British tabloids, ever the vultures, decided to pick at the corpse. They printed details. They speculated. They did what they do best: they turned grief into grist for the mill. And now the daughter, the very face of NBC’s “Today” show, has come crawling to the UK’s guardians of press ethics, begging for something akin to human feeling.
But here’s the rub. Savannah Guthrie is not a stranger to the media circus. She has been the ringmaster, the lion tamer, the one who throws the net over the story. She has interviewed presidents and paupers, all with that same steely smile. And now she finds herself on the other side of the lens, the subject, not the observer. It is a role reversal that would make a lesser soul weep into their cornflakes, but Guthrie has taken to Twitter, or rather X, as it is now called, a platform owned by a man who treats press ethics like a used napkin, and pleaded for a change of heart.
The response from Fleet Street? A collective shrug. The editors, those men in cheap suits with expensive cocaine habits, have issued the standard boilerplate: “We respect the privacy of individuals, but we also have a duty to report.” Duty. The word is a scab they pick at constantly, never letting it heal. They report on the private lives of public figures because it sells papers, because it fuels clicks, because it is the only currency they have left. And now, when one of their own tribe is touched by the flame, they expect sympathy? A world of irony indeed.
This incident has thrown a harsh, unforgiving light on the UK press ethics framework, a system so flimsy it would collapse under the weight of a single moral principle. The Leveson Inquiry, that grand farce of a decade ago, promised reform. It promised accountability. But what did we get? A regulatory body that is less effective than a chocolate teapot, a press that continues to behave as though the rules of decency are optional, and a public that is so numbed by the constant assault on privacy that they barely flinch anymore.
But perhaps this is the catharsis we needed. Perhaps seeing a media figure, one who has profited from the same ecosystem, now pleading for mercy will be the jolt that rattles the complacency from this industry. Perhaps this will be the moment when the UK press finally looks in the mirror and sees not the guardians of democracy, but the purveyors of a particularly nasty brand of voyeurism.
Or perhaps not. Perhaps this will be forgotten in a week, replaced by another scandal, another sob story, another batch of evaporated tears. But for now, Savannah Guthrie has asked for help. And the British press, that great, gormless beast, has a choice: to show that they are more than just a machine for the digestion of misery, or to prove once again that they are, in the words of a great poet, “a tale told by an idiot, full of sound and fury, signifying nothing.”
I, for one, will not hold my breath. But I will raise a glass of aviation gin to the hope that somewhere, in the depths of this murky bog, a conscience stirs.








