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Meghan and Harry face Oprah Winfrey: the royal family "worried"

 Meghan and Harry face Oprah Winfrey: the royal family "worried"

Meghan and Harry face Oprah Winfrey: the royal family "worried"


Next March, Meghan Markle and Prince Harry will give a 90-minute interview to Oprah Winfrey, on CBS.


It will mark the great media comeback of Prince Harry and Meghan Markle. On March 7, interview popesse Oprah Winfrey will speak with the Duke and Duchess of Sussex on a TV show airing on US channel CBS. A first since the announcement of Megxit a year ago. During an interview of 90 minutes, the two spouses will confide on their new life in Los Angeles but will also return on their marriage, the arrival of the ex-star of “Suits” in the royal family, the maternity, media pressure and their future professional projects. A lively and intimate interview, a real "source of concern" for the royal family and Prince William in particular, reveal several sources to the "Page Six" media. Indeed, it is reminiscent of a famous shocking interview with Princess Diana in 1995.


At the time, Lady Di recorded an interview for "Panorama", broadcast on the BBC. Faced with journalist Martin Bashir, she opens up many confidences on her isolation within the royal family but also on her marriage with Prince Charles, making particular reference to the latter's infidelities with Camilla Parker Bowles. "There were three of us in this marriage," she will eventually drop, creating a real scandal across the Channel. Will the interview with Meghan Markle and Harry rekindle those heated memories?


THE "NERVOUS" BUCKINGHAM PALACE

According to the indiscretions of several foreign media, including the "Daily Mail", Meghan Markle and Prince Harry have not informed Buckingham Palace of their intention to participate in the Oprah Winfrey show. As a non-active member of the Royal Family, the Duke and Duchess are under no obligation to inform Queen Elizabeth II of their speaking in the press, however, they should have had "the courtesy" to do so, according to the royal expert of the British newspaper, Russell Myers. "If you want to detonate a nuclear bomb like this, doing a huge interview that will undoubtedly attract the attention of the world media, the decent thing to do would be to tell the Queen that you are going to do it," says he does.


If this interview worries the royal family, it could also have irreversible consequences for the couple. Also according to the "Daily Mail", the two spouses would be on the verge of losing royal patronage, while the queen could ask them to give up their links with all organizations handed down by the royal family.

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