Prince William and Kate Middleton ‘drop’ the BBC for their Christmas carol concert after the broadcaster aired ‘overblown and unfounded claims’ in documentary about rift between William and Harry
- Prince William and Kate Middleton have dropped the BBC for Christmas special
- The carol concert, hosted by the Duchess at Westminster Abbey, will be on ITV
- Sudden change comes amid Royal anger at the BBC over two-part documentary
- BBC series The Princes and The Press covers the rift between William and Harry
Prince William and Kate Middleton have reportedly dropped the BBC for their Christmas special after the broadcaster's two-part series The Princes and the Press aired on Monday night.
The Christmas charity fundraiser, hosted by the Duchess with William watching on at Westminster Abbey, will instead be aired by ITV.
An industry insider said: 'It was all arranged to be on BBC1 but it was switched in the last few days because of the terrible row over the documentary.
'And things are likely to get a lot worse between the Royal Family and the BBC before they get better as the second part of the documentary threatens to go further.'
MailOnline was not immediately able to confirm the Christmas special was meant to appear on the BBC or when ITV was offered the rights to air the concert.
The first episode of the two-part BBC2 series The Princes and The Press aired on Monday night and detailed media coverage of the young royals from 2012 to 2018, when Harry and Meghan became engaged.

Prince William and Kate Middleton have reportedly dropped the BBC for their Christmas special days after the Royal Family blasted the broadcaster for airing 'overblown and unfounded claims' in a documentary about the rift between William and Harry

The first episode of the two-part BBC2 series The Princes and The Press aired on Monday night and detailed media coverage of the young royals from 2012 to 2018, when Harry and Meghan (pictured in 2018) became engaged
Speaking about the decision to drop the BBC for the Christmas concert, a TV industry source told the Sun: 'This is a real coup for ITV. It is a brand new format — the royals have never hosted a televised TV concert before. And to have the Duchess leading on it is a big deal.
'Naturally most royal programming goes automatically to the BBC as the national broadcaster. Now it looks like they will work more with ITV in the future.'
The source said ITV was 'surprised but delighted' by the sudden change of plan, adding, 'it will be a fantastic Christmas carol concert that will be TV gold for viewers at home.'
They added Princes George and Louis and Princess Charlotte may join their parents for filming at Westminster Abbey.
Buckingham Palace, Kensington Palace and Clarence House last night issued an extraordinary joint statement over the documentary.
It said it was 'disappointing' that the BBC had chosen to air allegations surrounding Harry and Meghan's departure from Britain and accused the broadcaster of giving credibility to 'overblown and unfounded claims' about the Royal Family.
Buckingham Palace earlier reportedly threatened a boycott on future projects with the BBC after courtiers were not allowed to view the controversial documentary before the first episode was aired last night.

In the strongly-worded joint statement given to the BBC ahead of last night's programme, representatives for the Queen (pictured), Prince Charles and Prince William said: 'A free, responsible and open Press is of vital importance to a healthy democracy
Though the Palace only provided a written statement, the episode featured an appearance from Jenny Afia, a lawyer from Schillings who represents Meghan.
The show's presenter, BBC media editor and Radio 4 presenter Amol Rajan, said Ms Afia was speaking with the Duchess' permission.
In a rare on-camera interview, she insisted bullying claims printed about the Duchess were 'false' and said she rejected the 'narrative' that the former Suits actress was 'difficult to work with'.
Meanwhile, in a strongly worded joint statement, given to the BBC ahead of last night's broadcast, the three royal households representing the Queen, Charles and William said: 'A free, responsible and open Press is of vital importance to a healthy democracy.
'However, too often overblown and unfounded claims from unnamed sources are presented as facts and it is disappointing when anyone, including the BBC, gives them credibility.'

Insiders said the rift between William and Harry (pictured here with Meghan and Kate in 2020) will be examined in even greater detail in next week's instalment. Royal advisers believe the Queen, Charles and William have not been offered a proper right to reply
It is understood that the BBC provided a written memo, outlining relevant allegations, but refused requests to provide an advance copy of the two hour-long episodes.
Royal advisers believe the Queen, Charles and William have not been offered a proper right to reply.
They fear the BBC's decision to include them in a documentary, fronted by self-declared republican Amol Rajan, will give its claims a level of legitimacy.
Mr Rajan said before last night's broadcast: 'We won't shy away from any controversies, whether racism, sexism (in the media's reporting of Meghan), briefing or counter-briefing.'
The second installment of the controversial documentary will include claims by Omid Scobie - a royal journalist dubbed 'Meghan's mouthpiece' - that insiders from other royal households had briefed against the Sussexes.
MailOnline has approached the BBC and ITV for comment.