The journey from there to here
Published on April 1, 2005 By Gideon MacLeish In Entertainment
Apparently in a snafu that was dubbed "NOT an April Fool's Day joke", the BBC sent a request to the Bob Marley foundation to request an interview with the singer, who has been quietly decomposing somewhere in Jamaica for some 24 years now.
 
Article below:
 
 
 
BBC asks long-dead Bob Marley for interview

1 hour, 19 minutes ago

LONDON (AFP) - A red-faced BBC apologised for requesting an interview with Bob Marley, the Jamaican reggae legend who died 24 years ago.

Photo
AFP/fILE Photo

 

BBC Three, one of the public broadcaster's digital TV channels, sent an e-mail to the Bob Marley Foundation saying it wanted to do a documentary about his hit song "No Woman No Cry".

It said the project would involve Marley -- who died of cancer in May 1981 at the age of 36 -- "spending one or two days with us", and that "it would only work with some participation from Bob Marley himself".

In a statement, the BBC said: "We are obviously very embarrassed that we didn't realise that the letter to the Marley Foundation did not acknowledge that Mr Marley is no longer with us."

Marley would have been 60 last February 6, a date that was celebrated with great fanfare by his legion of fans worldwide.

A BBC press officer, contacted by AFP in London on Friday, confirmed that the gaffe was not an April Fool's joke.


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