Prince Harry and Meghan Markle told they must do this to 'win back public affection'


He told Newsweek: “Looking ahead to 2024, one can anticipate a change in team working on better-thought-out projects that showcase a more relatable side to both Harry and Meghan, if they really want to make their lifestyle choice a permanent thing.

“The success of Prince Harry’s documentary Heart of Invictus serves as a model for what we might expect in the future.”

Boardman added: “A return to social media, more openness, and reaching out to their close friends and families for the mess they have caused is what they both need to get right first if they are to make amends and win back public affection.”

The advice from the entertainment expert comes with claims from a royal author that Meghan’s departure from the Royal Family was a “loss for the monarchy”.

Jane Marguerite Tippett told 9Honey: “The institution didn’t understand how to deal with a woman, not so much who was divorced, but who had had a very independent life, who had had an education, who had lived the first 35 years of her life as someone who called her own shots, called her own story, and they probably didn’t come to grips with that in perhaps the most pragmatic way.”

She acknowledged Harry and Meghan’s response to the system they broke out of was not calculated for long-term success.

But regardless of the reasons behind the royal departure, Tippett expressed her belief that Buckingham Palace is now poorer for it.

The royal author said: “It’s a loss for the monarchy to not have them because they worked on interesting charities, interesting projects.”

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