The reverberations of Harry and Meghan’s explosive and raw revelations about their struggles under the spotlight are still echoing in the palaces and castles of the royal family—not to mention among the public—a week after the documentary, Harry and Meghan: An African Journey, aired on British television.
A few days later, an unnamed source close to Harry and Meghan fought back, telling Max Foster of CNN that, as the journalist paraphrased, “the institution around the British royal family is full of people afraid of and inexperienced at how to best help harness and deploy the value of the royal couple who, they said, have single-handedly modernized the monarchy.”
Once so famously close that Harry called William “the perfect brother” during his toast at William and Kate’s wedding reception in 2011, they’ve been drifting apart in recent years. Part of the distancing is an inevitable aspect of growing older, getting married and starting families. Now that both siblings have their own spouses, and offspring, their priorities and focus are bound to change and evolve. “Inevitably, stuff happens,” Harry said to Tom Bradby, the documentary maker.
Harry doesn’t hide the fact that “he basically hates the press,” as one source told Vanity Fair, resenting that he has to co-operate with the media as they give enormous publicity to his causes and royal duties. Recently, he’s avoided the media altogether by releasing personal images via the Sussex Royal Instagram account.
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