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More double-Danish and Dutch pastries as the BBC hails the cougar queen of Holland
This article is more than 2 years old.
Broadcaster misidentifies Margethe as the regent of the Netherlands and Frederik as her husband
A decade ago, the Los Angeles Times had to publish an apology after mixing up Danish and Dutch – its seventh such mistake in just two years (see factbox below).
“A March 9 op-ed about the erosion of free-speech protections referred to a controversy over 2005 cartoons that satirised the prophet Mohammed,” read the correction. “Those cartoons were Danish, not Dutch.”
Most international residents in Denmark experience the same every time they return to their homelands.
“So you live in Denmark; how’s your Dutch coming along?” they’re asked.
Cougar queen
But you would expect the BBC, given that the British broadcaster is only located 800 km away, would know the difference between Denmark and the Netherlands by now. Well, at the funeral of Queen Elizabeth II, the answer was a big resounding no.
Not only did the commentator identify Danish Queen Margrethe II as the “queen of Holland”, but she described her son and heir, Crown Prince Frederik, as her husband, “the king of Holland”. And to make matters even worse, she phrased them as king and queen. See the video here.
It was the second blunder to hit the Danish Royal House, which shortly before the funeral learned it could only send two guests, not three as was previously indicated in the invitation and then announced to the Danish media. This meant Crown Princess Mary had to stay home.
The BBC embarrassment, meanwhile, follows a BBC News auto-subtitle cock-up that reported British Queen Consort Camilla would not be a ‘Queen Regina’ (a ruling queen), but mis-spelt regina as vagina.