123kitty
Not being a tv fan I haven't watched this programme, but I have seen newspaper photos of KG's husband in hospital - which I found very intrusive.
Very sick people are vulnerable. And we see them in their most susceptible and unguarded moments.
The question is - is it good or bad that we are made aware of the frailty of the human condition?
I presume that Kate would not have allowed the photo's if she thought Derek would object.
If it helps people - carers like myself - to feel less 'alone', less alienated from the rest of society, and if it helps others to understand the severity of an illness that is dismissed by many as "just like the Flu" or a "bad cold" and make them more careful in the way they behave... is it really so "intrusive"?
I know the great British stiff upper lip would have us suffer in silence, because it's "dignified" - and believe me, many of us do suffer in silence, day in, day out, often exhausted and sometimes depressed... but we do it, because we care and because it has to be done. Successive governments have shown their indifference - even contempt - for 'unpaid' carers, and this one is no different (this isn't 'Boris bashing' - the problem existed long before he ever got a sniff at Downing Street)... some of the comments on here ("milking it"? dear God) reflect that contempt, too.
I'm glad people got the chance (because you can always choose not to watch the programme) to see what the world - that 'nether' world - is like. And it's like that for millions of people - without the necessary finances to make it as comfortable as Kate does for Derek.
At some point, we are all going to be cared for by someone to some degree or other (unless of course you simply drop dead in your shoes).
Kate and Derek earn their living through the media - Kate has used her means to keep things ticking over... that's how we live, that's her job. And she's used her talent and know how to highlight the awfulness of long Covid, and the rigours of looking after not only her partner, but the children and herself and the home. She can afford a carer - good for her, I'd also get that help if I could afford it, but I don't begrudge her because she can. What is money for - for the average person - if not to make life more comfortable?
... "intrusive"? Only if he didn't want to be seen like that - and I'm sure Kate cares enough about him to have thought carefully before handing over those photo's. Perhaps it makes people feel uncomfortable, but that is more their problem than hers. Illness is uncomfortable, for the ill and the carer, and that's what she's showing us.