“Tonight, the way I feel at the moment, I can sum it up in one word: deep upset and sadness,” said CNN’s Richard Quest live on TV from Britain today of the death of Queen Elizabeth II.Queen Elizabeth II: Her Life And Duty To Service Photo GalleryIn a fast-moving day that saw the announcement just hours before that the 96-year-old monarch was “under medical supervision,” the impromptu response of the Warner Bros Discovery-owned cable newser’s Business Editor-at-Large was typical of U.S.
media.When the official announcement of “London Bridge is down” went out, almost two weeks of long-planned coverage on the death of the Queen started to fill UK screens.
However, on this side of the Atlantic, things are still coming together, we’ve learned.News executives have been meeting throughout the morning to make plans for extensive coverage during the next few days, with expectation that major news anchors of both broadcast and cable news outlets will travel to London.
The expectation is that they will remain there for the elaborate funeral later this month.Queen Elizabeth II Death: Obituary, Photo Gallery, Reaction & MoreIn America, all of the broadcast networks cut into their regularly scheduled programming this morning with special reports on Elizabeth II’s death.
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