- Fri May 25, 2007 8:45 am
#286316
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/6690289.stm
So what do you think of that? Surely this is the sort of thing that while she might not want to know about it at the moment, she may regret not going to the funeral in years to come?
The Australian version of the TV programme Big Brother has come under criticism for deciding not to tell a contestant that her father had died.
Emma Cornell has been cut off from the outside world since entering the reality TV show's house a month ago.
She still does not know that her father Raymond died of cancer last week.
But a spokesman for Channel Ten, which broadcasts the programme, has defended its decision, said it was acting according to her family's wishes.
"Her dad didn't want her to be upset or to feel like she had to leave the house to come to his funeral," Ms Cornell's boyfriend, Tim Stanton, told local media.
"She might be upset when she comes out and finds out what has happened, but I think she'll understand," he said.
But Chris Hall, a spokesman for the Australian Centre for Grief and Bereavement, said he did not think that this was in Ms Cornell's best interests.
"I still think that one needs to weigh up the risks in terms of following a course of action that may be well-intentioned but may ultimately not serve the bereaved person well," he said.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/6690289.stm
So what do you think of that? Surely this is the sort of thing that while she might not want to know about it at the moment, she may regret not going to the funeral in years to come?