Diddy On Trial Investigating Diddy's secret world, plus verdict reaction
But discussions go on about power dynamics and working practices in the music industry, as well as about coercion, control and consent.
Anoushka Mutanda-Dougherty speaks to BBC investigations correspondent Rianna Croxford about her work with producer Larissa Kennelly hearing from people who worked for Sean Combs.
And CNN anchor and former prosecutor Laura Coates tells Anoushka what she heard from one of the alternate jurors on the Diddy trial about the evidence that might have undermined the prosecution's case.
Details of organisations in the UK offering information and support with some of the issues raised are available at bbc.co.uk/actionline
Presenter: Anoushka Mutanda-Dougherty
Series Producer: Laura Jones
Senior Digital Producer: Matthew Pintus
Sound Design: Mark Burrows
Exec Producer: Nik Sindle
Senior Producer: Larissa Kennelly
Production Coordinators: Hattie Valentine and Tammy Snow
Editor: Clare Fordham
Commissioning Editor: Rhian Roberts
Assistant Commissioner: Will Drysdale
Commissioning Producer: Adam Eland
Commissioning Assistant Producer: Rechmial Miller
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Sun
22 minutes ago
- The Sun
West Ham fuming with FA as Lucas Paqueta spot-fixing case closes in on two years without a verdict
WEST HAM are furious Lucas Paqueta's spot- fixing case has been allowed to drag on into another season. The Hammers star, 27, will begin pre-season tomorrow with the cloud of a life-changing ban hanging over his head. 2 An FA investigation started in AUGUST 2023. The midfielder's hearing finally began in March this year and concluded last month. But both the player and West Ham are still awaiting a verdict. The case has taken an emotional toll on the Brazil international, who was reduced to tears following a yellow card against Tottenham in May. Paqueta was charged with four counts of spot-fixing in May last year after being accused of deliberately getting booked in Prem games. Bets across multiple bookies were traced back to Paqueta Island in Brazil where he grew up. Paqueta denies any wrongdoing and maintains his innocence. The FA investigation scuppered an £85million move to Manchester City in the summer of 2023. 2 And Paqueta's form has noticeably declined as the case rumbled on. At the end of last season, Hammers boss Graham Potter said: 'It's taken its toll on him.' Lyon man to raise funds.


Daily Mail
25 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Inside the turbulent relationship between Princess Diana's mother and grandmother which saw the pair clash in court
Princess Diana 's grandmother's turbulent relationship with her daughter saw the family members clash in a courtroom. Like many families up and down the country, the Spencers were no stranger to their fair share of family drama. Indeed, it has been well-documented that Diana and her mother, Frances Shand Kydd, had a testy relationship throughout their life with periods of reconciliation followed by long spells where the pair did not speak to one another. But it was Frances' relationship with her own mother - Lady Fermoy - which was the most volatile. Lady Fermoy died in 1993 following a short illness. During her 84 year life, the former friend and confidante to the Queen Mother never got on well with her own daughter. In his bestselling biographer about Princess Diana, Andrew Morton revealed how Lady Fermoy spoke so negatively about Frances that it left a lasting legacy on how the Palace saw Diana's mother. Speaking to Morton, Diana said: 'She [Lady Fermoy] feeds the Royal Family with hideous comments about my mother, about her running away and leaving the children. 'Whenever I mention my mother's name within the Royal Family, which I barely do, they come on me like a ton of bricks'. Lady Fermoy's 'real hatchet job' against Frances meant that her own son-in-law - Prince Charles - wouldn't talk to her, according to Diana. The details of their quarrels are not known but in a very public spat Lady Fermoy spoke out against her own daughter during Frances' bitter divorce from John Spencer, 8th Earl Spencer In 1969, Lady Fermoy testified against her own daughter in court which led to Diana's father being granted custody of the future princess and her siblings. Diana told Morton that the details of the family drama were never truly revealed to the Princes of Wales. 'The four of us never knew what happened and we don't actually want to know', she said. Born in 1908, Lady Fermoy rose to become an influential figure at court as a friend and confidante of the last Queen Mother, whose outlook had a profound influence on the future Princess of Wales. It has been suggested that Lady Fermoy was among those conniving to bring about a dynastically beneficial but inappropriate marriage between her granddaughter and the future King - although this is something she denied. Diana's own testy relationship with her mother has also been well documented. Frances with her husband John Spencer, 8th Earl Spencer. In 1969, Lady Fermoy testified against her own daughter in court which led to Diana's father being granted custody of the future princess and her siblings A particularly sour point in their relationship started around the time of what should have been one of their happiest memories together - Diana's wedding to Prince Charles in July 1981. Morton revealed how Diana felt 'let down terribly' by Frances on her wedding day. 'She kept crying and being all valiant and saying that she couldn't cope with the pressure, I tended to think I was the one under pressure because I was the bride' Diana told Morton. Diana goes on to claim that her mother drove her 'mad' during her engagement and Frances was left 'hurt' when she was not included in preparations for the big day. She even makes the shocking allegation that the stress of the wedding led her mother to begin taking the anxiety medication valium which she was on 'ever since'. After the wedding, Diana said the pair didn't speak to each other for three to four years. Despite this, Frances was spotted at Mary's Hospital following the birth of Prince William in June 1982 with the new grandmother reportedly relieved that Diana would not have to endure the pressure of producing a male heir. Frances bitter split with Diana's father in 1969 had a profound on the future princess. After the four children were left in the care of their father after a fierce custody battle when Diana was seven, Charles Spencer - Diana's younger brother - recalled that 'Diana used to wait on the doorstep for her, but she never came.' He said : 'While she was packing her stuff to leave, she promised Diana she'd come back to see her. 'Our father was a quiet, constant source of love, but our mother wasn't cut out for maternity... she couldn't do it. She was in love with someone else, infatuated really.' Despite her own troubled mother-daughter relationship, by all accounts Frances had a good relationship with her royal grandchildren. William and Harry reportedly enjoyed their visits to Frances home on the rugged and isolated Seil Island off the coast of Scotland which provided a welcome break from royal life for the young princes. However, Diana's status as one of the most famous women in the world drew a further wedge between the mother and daughter. After divorcing John Spencer, Frances married wallpaper tycoon Peter Shand Kydd. By the late 1980s Frances' second marriage had began to deteriorate and she in part blamed Diana for the break-up. Peter allegedly felt overshadowed by his more famous wife after Diana's skyrocketed the popularity of the Spencers. In its obituary for Frances, The Guardian wrote about why Peter divorced her in 1990. 'I think the pressure of it all was overwhelming and, finally, impossible for Peter. They didn't want him. They wanted me. I became Diana's mum, and not his wife,' Frances is quoted as saying. After Diana separated from Charles in 1992, Frances is reported to have not approved of her later relationships. Diana's former butler - Paul Burrell - claimed that she voiced disapproval of Diana's relationships with heart surgeon Hasnat Khan and businessman Gulu Lalvani during a particularly tetchy phone call. Frances tendency to be loose-lipped with members of the press left a damning final legacy in her relationship with Diana. This came after Frances said in an interview months before her daughter's death that it was 'absolutely wonderful' she had been stripped of her HRH title after her divorce from the then Prince Charles, which caused Diana to never speak to her mother again.


Daily Mail
25 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
The endearing nickname only Prince Philip's nearest and dearest were allowed to call him
Prince Philip had a nickname only a select few friends and members of royal staff were allowed to call him. From 'Lillibet' to 'Grandpa Wales', members of the Royal Family are known to go by many nicknames. Which is unsurprising as the Royals are surrounded by formal titles in their day-to-day life. But while some nicknames are used universally by them - such as the late Queen Elizabeth II's pet name Lillibet - the right to use some of the names has to be earnt. Indeed, there was one term of endearment for the late Prince Philip that only a number of people within the household were allowed to use. According to royal author Adrian Tinniswood, the Duke of Edinburgh was known by the acronym 'P.P' - short for Prince Philip. Over Philip's decades-long period of service the Duke was reportedly always the most popular among palace staff. In 2018, Matt Smith, who was one actor who played the Duke of Edinburgh in hit Netflix series The Crown, claimed Philip was 'the one they all love' because he is a 'man of the people'. The star also suggested 'royal protocol' had not 'dogged' Prince Philip in the same way that it had other members of the family. Speaking in an interview with Variety, Matt said: 'All the research I did found him [Prince Philip] to be brilliantly funny, very clever, very popular. 'In the royal house he's the most popular of all of them. If you've talked to any of the staff, Philip's the one they all love really. I think more than a lot of them, he's a bit more of a man of the people. 'The royal protocol hasn't dogged him in quite the same way his whole life and there's a sort of rebellion in him and a naughtiness and a cheekiness. 'I think he's quite affable and open by all accounts with the staff. They all love him.' Upon his death in April 2021, Philip showed his gratitude towards his closest aides when the Duke included three members of staff in his will. Philip is thought to have rewarded his private secretary Brigadier Archie Miller Bakewell and pages William Henderson and Stephen Niedojadlo. The trio were among a group of six aides who walked behind senior Royal Family members and Philip's coffin for his funeral procession at Windsor Castle on April 17, 2021. There are numerous other pet names that the royals have for one another. Philip lovingly referred to Elizabeth as 'Cabbage' which refers to the French phrase 'mon petit chou'. In its literal translation, it means 'my little cabbage' but the French idiom is a way of saying 'my darling'. Prince George calls his grandfather - King Charles III - 'Grandpa Wales'. King Charles and Queen Camilla are known to refer to each other as 'Fred and Gladys'. The nicknames reportedly come from BBC radio comedy series The Goon Show. Prince William was known as 'Wombat' by his mother Princess Diana. Speaking in an interview in 2007, he revealed that the name had 'stuck' with him ever since he had joined his mother and father on a tour of Australia when he was still a baby. The most bizarre nickname was reserved for Meghan with the then Prince Charles, christening the Duchess of Sussex 'Tungsten' because she is 'tough' and 'unbending'. While it might not appear like the most flattering of comparisons to be named after a type of metal, Charles intended it to be a compliment, and it stuck. The royals have long called each other by nicknames privately, and the affectionate dubbing was reportedly a way for Charles, 76, to welcome Meghan, 43, into the family. She was used to using nicknames already. Meghan wasn't even her real first name after all - it was actually Rachel - but she more commonly used her middle name, going by Meg. 'Tungsten' was first used by Charles in the early days of Harry and Meghan's life as working royals, according to T he Mail On Sunday's Charlotte Griffiths in June 2018. A Palace source told her: 'Prince Charles admires Meghan for her strength and the backbone she gives Harry, who needs a tungsten-type figure in his life as he can be a bit of a softy. It's become a term of endearment.' Tungsten is a metal that can be found on the periodic table and is known for its high melting point and core strength. It is the strongest naturally occurring metal on the planet, so the name was regarded at the time as touching praise.