My wife and I watched the entire final journey from Westminster Hall till St.Georges Chapel ceremony at Windsor. Almost a full day.
Pretty orderly and well covered. No commentary....which was good.
Where were you watching Sriram and on which broadcaster - I'd be interested to know whether different broadcasters in differing parts of the world took a different approach to the coverage.
BBC in UK was as expected - the big names all there - Huw Edwards lead in the morning then passing onto the elder statement of them all, David Dimbleby, later on.
Impressed by Charles at 73 walking....in step....quite a long distance.
I think he's pretty fit but suspect he'd be exhausted by the end. Funerals, particularly when you are one of the people near the top of the tree, are exhausting in my experience and this was a very very long one.
Lots of people present on the way.
Rather fewer than I imagine many expected - crowds, even in the best spots, seemed only three or so deep.
Very few people seemed to have attended the big screen screenings around the country. I was at one, the only for a considerable distance - perhaps 100 or so people there. When they ran round the county to equivalent screenings in Edinburgh, Cardiff etc, etc they seemed pretty sparely populated. Even Hyde Park was quiet - nothing like the huge crowd that was there in 1997 for Diana (I know I was there).
So I suspect most people were saddened by the Queen's death and thought she did a good job, but after 10 days of astonishingly one sided mourn-fest, almost expecting/requiring people to be distraught, perhaps people had just had enough by Monday. I don't think anyone predicted that the viewing figures would place it just 3rd in the 2020s and just crept into the top ten for most viewed events in the UK overall.
Monarchy may not be on the way out quite yet.
I never claimed it was.
However it will be diminished - once we get back to a semblance of normality I think we will find that the respect and affection for Charles will be way lower than for the Queen, and that will impact the overall support for the monarchy, much of which was actually for the Queen as monarch, rather than for the monarchy er se.