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Prince Harry Turns 'Stay-At-Home Dad Without Much To Do' In New Bombshell Documentary
Prince Harry Turns 'Stay-At-Home Dad Without Much To Do' In New Bombshell Documentary

Time of India

time25-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Time of India

Prince Harry Turns 'Stay-At-Home Dad Without Much To Do' In New Bombshell Documentary

/ May 25, 2025, 03:45PM IST A new documentary after Prince Harry's bombshell BBC interview has put him into a difficult position. 'Harry: Can He Ever Be Forgiven?' reduces the duke to a 'stay-at-home dad without much to do'. The prince must first find his new identity before a royal reunion, according to critics. Experts are of the view that Harry has no role in the royal family and no defined role in the USA either. Watch-

'Prince Harry could be forgiven but he'd have to do four things'
'Prince Harry could be forgiven but he'd have to do four things'

Daily Mirror

time24-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Daily Mirror

'Prince Harry could be forgiven but he'd have to do four things'

Following Prince Harry's 'distressed' and 'broken' appearance in a bombshell BBC interview, a new documentary delves into whether he can ever be forgiven and if he'd be prepared to take the necessary steps A new Channel 5 documentary examines whether Prince Harry will ever be forgiven by the Royal family, while revealing exactly what he needs to do to win back the hearts of a nation - but are these things he'd even consider? Once upon a time, Prince Harry was one of the most popular members of the Royal family, but fast forward to today, and it's a whole different story. But could the fairytale have a happy ending? Mirror journalist Kevin Maguire certainly thinks so.. ‌ In an interview with Channel 5 documentary makers for tonight's Harry: Can He Ever Be Forgiven?, the Mirror's Associate Editor says he needs to do four things. ‌ 'As a journalist, it would potentially be a fantastic good news story if Harry came back and reconciled with his brother, reconciled with his father, retook up public duties and recovered the popularity he had and then lost. That would be a great tale of redemption, it would be absolutely fantastic," he says. And he's not the only reporter to believe Harry could come back and win back the nation's hearts. Broadcaster Emily Andrews reflected: 'I'd like to see Harry back. If I'm being honest "I think it would be good for him, it would be good for the UK. If he came back and did some really good public service, I think we'd all be reminded what a great bloke he is and how much we do really like him.' Some people think that in order for Harry to be forgiven by his family and win back public affection, he would need to make up with the press. But with so much bad blood on either side, a truce with the press seems a long way off. Politician and journalist Ann Widdecombe says he'd have to do one thing to mend his relationship with the media. ‌ "I think the only way Harry and the press would have a warm relationship again is if he actually finds something useful to do. If he finds a direction to his life that commands respect, that could cause the press and Harry to reconcile." And Royal commentator and the Countess of Sandwich, Julie Montagu, says the rift can be healed if Harry wants to reconcile. 'The public wants to forgive, but it needs to start with Harry," she explains. "Number one, stop any time of interview where you're mentioning any member of your family - end of story. ‌ "And then number two, if you really want to make that reconciliation, whether that's private or public, start that. Once that reconciliation begins, then the public can be made aware of that.' Meanwhile, Psychotherapist and author Emma Reed Turrell said Harry has lost his identity. 'I think Harry is up against a universal challenge, which is one of identity. Who am I? Who was I? Who am I becoming? Who am I allowed to be? What will be acceptable? 'We can all relate to that - when people leave any kind of institution, there is a huge transition that happens for someone as they re-enter the atmosphere and look for purpose again and look for identity.'

'Prince Harry is 'stay-at-home dad without much to do' says new documentary
'Prince Harry is 'stay-at-home dad without much to do' says new documentary

Daily Mirror

time24-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Daily Mirror

'Prince Harry is 'stay-at-home dad without much to do' says new documentary

After Prince Harry appeared 'distressed' and 'broken' in his latest bombshell BBC interview, a new documentary delves into whether he can ever be forgiven and what he needs to do to win back hearts Prince Harry has made it clear that despite his differences with his family, he would like to end the drama, especially because of his father's ill health. In a bombshell interview with the BBC earlier this month, the Duke of Sussex revealed he would love to make it up with his father as life's too short. 'Life is precious,' he reflected. ‌ 'I don't know how much longer my father has... but it would be nice to reconcile. I would love reconciliation with my family, there's no point in continuing to fight anymore." ‌ But the prince, who was once one of our favourite Royals, must first find his new identity according to experts. In the new Channel 5 documentary Harry: Can He Ever Be Forgiven?, commentators asserted that Prince Harry has found himself in a difficult position because he has no role in the Royal family and no defined role in the USA either. 'How is he spending his life?' Politician and author Ann Widdecombe asks. 'What is the aim? I've heard people say that he's a stay-at-home dad without much to do… possibly? Even Harry must occasionally ask himself, 'Where is all this going?'' And the British politician isn't the only one who believes the Duke of Sussex is struggling with his identity after leaving the Royal family and the UK. Psychotherapist and author Emma Reed Turrell said, 'I think Harry is up against a universal challenge, which is one of identity. Who am I? Who was I? Who am I becoming? Who am I allowed to be? What will be acceptable? ‌ 'We can all relate to that - when people leave any kind of institution, there is a huge transition that happens for someone as they re-enter the atmosphere and look for purpose again and look for identity.' The comments come after Prince Harry received a backlash of criticism after his bombshell BBC interview, in which he clearly expressed distress after losing his legal battle over taxpayer-funded security. ‌ During the interview, dad-of-two Harry insisted he couldn't bring his family to the UK because it wasn't safe after losing his legal battle. And he also made a startling claim in relation to the tragic death of his mother, Princess Diana. Referring to losing his legal challenge for taxpayer-funded security, he said: 'I don't want history to repeat itself - from the disclosure process I've discovered that some people want history to repeat itself, which is pretty dark.' He may not have named names, but there's little doubt that Harry was talking about the tragic death of his mother, Princess Diana, who died in a car crash in Paris in 1997 after being chased by paparazzi.

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