After the French weekly "news" magazine Paris Match published a long-lens photo in it most recent issue in which five-month-old Giulia Sarkozy's face is clearly visible, two other French celebrity rags have followed suit.
And France's first lady Carla Bruni-Sarkozy is livid.
It doesn't really matter what you think of Bruni-Sarkozy's past - or her present come to that.
You might well regard her as a somewhat laughable and/or incongrous presence alongside her husband Nicolas Sarkozy as he seeks a second term as French president.
But put aside whatever you think about her previous relationships, her career as a top model and the delightful strains of her raspy voice as a singer for one moment and concentrate on her role as a mother.
And surely you have to admit that she has a point in being furious at the French media for not respecting the rights of her five-month-old daughter, Giulia.
Even before she was born in October 2011, Giulia was the focus of more media attention than probably even your average famous adult could handle.
When Bruni-Sarkozy went into hospital for the birth there was a virtual media pack camped outside the hospital, waiting, ready to report ...well what usually happens after a woman has been pregnant for nine months: she gives birth.
Bruni-Sarkozy - or rather Giulia, kept the hungry "newshounds" waiting a while, but then she popped into the world becoming and remaining for the moment, arguably one of the world's most famous babies.
All of course because her parents are who they are.
So that makes her fair game doesn't it? The paparazzi should be able to take whatever long-lens photos they like and magazines publish them regardless.
After all Giulia is newsworthy because her parents are. They survive and thrive partially through exposure so they should expect their children to...well learn to cope with fame.
That's far from being how Bruni-Sarkozy sees it and she insisted from the moment her daughter was born that the French media cut her, and in particular Giulia, some slack and not invade what are very private moments for both of them
So her wrath - measured to say the very least - after the French weekly magazine Paris Match published a photo of the two of them in its last issue, was perhaps more than understandable.
"Because I believe in the principle of the freedom of the press, I have always accepted without any problem the publication of photographs or unauthorised information, even when it's erroneous, concerning my private life," she writes on her official site.
But I deplore any use made of images of children as well as any reporting which might touch on their private lives," she continues.
"I have repeatedly expressed my views on this subject. My position has not changed."
The call though, seems to have fallen on deaf ears as far as the French media is concerned - at least the celebrity and gossip sector of the magazine market.
Paris Match has already featured a photo of Bruni-Sarkozy with Giula on its front cover; one in which the face of the five-month-old is clearly visible.
And two other French magazines are set to follow that example this week with Voici and Closer both planning to publish the photo as a "scoop".
Mexico/Guatemala [Travel writing reformatted for Instagram]
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I’ve taken some of my old travel essays and mashed them into an
Instgram-friendly ready-to-consume serving. In 2005 my
then-girlfriend-now-wife and I fle...
1 comment:
Oh poor Carla. She must be in shock.
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