in
Parliament Square, near where mourners left
Westminster Hall|alt= reporter watches
Yeoman Warders leaving Westminster Hall The main queue, often referred to as "The Queue", received extensive media coverage.
BBC News provided updates on progress and length, interviewing those waiting, and issuing breaking news alerts to inform the public of the queue's length. Continuous live coverage of the queue was shown on
BBC Parliament, and simultaneously livestreamed on the BBC News website and the
BBC iPlayer. The
Evening Standard noted jokes and memes on social media that found humour in people queueing to join the queue, journalists queueing to interview people in the queue; as well as frustrations expressed at those who
queue-jumped.
Vice described the queue as "an expression of respect", and the act of queueing as a concept making up part of the British national identity. The queue was humorously termed the
Elizabeth Line, a reference to the recently opened
Elizabeth line, a
National Rail suburban rail line named after Elizabeth II.
The Times noted that the queue included a number of women participating in groups as a type of social event, drawing comparisons with
brunch. They also observed that the queue had drawn the attention of "
crowd psychologists", consisting of researchers from the
Universities of St Andrews,
Edinburgh,
Dundee,
Sussex, and
Keele, examining the behaviour of the crowds. The
Daily Mirror reported on the accessible queue. The article author "used the accessible route to view the Queen lying-in-state and, while it was well organised, still came across issues for those with a disability wanting to pay their respects". According to
Google Trends, 'How long is the queue now?' was the highest trending search in the United Kingdom throughout the week. Appreciation for the queue on the internet became most apparent following a
Twitter thread, which described the queue as "a triumph of Britishness". A piece of short fiction by Will Dunn in the
New Statesman imagined a future where the maintenance of the queue over decades led to profound changes in the structure of British society.
Guinness World Records confirmed it was assessing the scale of the queue and crowds, and whether it constituted a global and historical record. The
British Film Institute (BFI) in South Bank displayed historical footage of mourners queueing to pay respects to
George VI. ==References==