I think the institution will continue to play a critical part of the British nation beyond right really with enormous now coronation coming in May not an ideal start for a new king very painful personally. I'm sure there are other problems coming up and I think the damage to the air to the throne to William is quite significant well on that note you want to comment on that I disagree because I think people see it as brothers who've fallen out rather than something more profound than that. The Epstein scandal being obviously paramount and what she alerted us to is that the gag order of the alleged the junior job freezes up at the end of February so we should be careful.
He was King Charles’s Communications Chief for almost a decade. She wrote the book on Charles (literally). Our guests today – Patrick Harverson and Catherine Mayer – are two insiders who take us beyond the media spectacle and into the inner workings of both the Crown and the British media. They consider whether the revelations inside Prince Harry’s best-selling book “Spare” will shake-up a stodgy palace. They discuss the unquenching hunger of the tabloid machine, debate the resilience of the monarchy – and examine whether the response to this royal controversy hints at a deeper culture war brewing in Britain. Finally, they unpack an emotion that permeates Harry’s pages: grief.
Kara and Nayeema taped this episode in London where they were joined by Brooke Hammerling, a strategic communications expert and Kara’s go-to source for all things royal. Before and after the interview, the trio looks at how people on both sides of the pond are responding to the book’s many revelations. And Brooke shares why a tell-all … may not have been the best strategy for Harry and Meghan.
You can find Kara and Nayeema on Twitter at @karaswisher and @nayeema.
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