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		As U.S. interview nears, Meghan and Harry won't tango with UK tabloids
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		 [March 03, 2021] 
		By Michael Holden and Sarah Mills 
 LONDON (Reuters) - Britain's Prince Harry 
		and American wife Meghan decided long ago they would not play the 
		traditional royal media "game", and on Sunday they depart from the norms 
		of engagement again with an in-depth interview with U.S. chat show host 
		Oprah Winfrey.
 
 Smarting from sometimes critical tabloid headlines and press intrusion 
		in Britain, they have already announced they will step down from 
		official duties, move to California with young son Archie and cut off 
		contact with Britain's biggest tabloids.
 
 Last month, Meghan successfully sued the Mail on Sunday for breaching 
		her privacy by publishing parts of a letter she wrote to her father.
 
 And on Tuesday, the couple issued a statement saying Meghan was 
		"saddened" by a report in The Times broadsheet of a bullying complaint 
		against her, calling it an "attack on her character."
 
 To their supporters, Sunday's televised interview is a chance to set the 
		record straight and lay out their plans for the future. To detractors, 
		it's a sign of hypocrisy.
 
 
		
		 
		"They said they were leaving because they wanted privacy. And it seems 
		in the last year that they've done very little other than seek 
		publicity," said royal commentator Penny Junor.
 
 When Harry, 36, and former actress Meghan, 39, married in a glittering 
		ceremony in May 2018, they were feted as global celebrities, merging 
		British royal allure and Hollywood glamour and attracting millions of 
		followers on social media.
 
 But beneath the surface, trouble was brewing. The couple had already 
		complained that some reports about Meghan, whose father is white and 
		mother is African-American, were vindictive or even racist.
 
 VERY REAL SADNESS
 
 Meghan called some media's approach to the British monarchy a "game".
 
 "For these outlets, it's a game. For me and so many others, it's real 
		life, real relationships, and very real sadness," Meghan said after her 
		privacy claim victory. "The damage they have done and continue to do 
		runs deep."
 
 For Harry, it comes back to the death of his mother Princess Diana, who 
		was killed in a car crash in Paris in 1997 aged 36 when her limousine 
		crashed as it sped away from chasing paparazzi photographers. He was 12.
 
 "I will not be bullied into playing a game that's killed my mum," Harry 
		told a TV documentary in October 2019, shortly before the announcement 
		they were quitting royal duties. It is a theme he is set to return to in 
		the interview with Winfrey.
 
 "My biggest concern was history repeating itself," he said in a brief 
		excerpt released by CBS.
 
 Last week he told James Corden, British host of the U.S. TV programme 
		"The Late Late Show", that he had left his homeland to escape the 
		"toxic" press which he said was destroying his mental health.
 
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			Britain's Prince Charles, Prince William and Catherine, Duchess of 
			Cambridge, Prince Harry and Meghan, Duchess of Sussex attend the 
			annual Commonwealth Service at Westminster Abbey in London, Britain 
			March 9, 2020. Phil Harris/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo 
            
			 
            Michelle Tauber, Senior Editor for People magazine, said to be 
			successful in America, where the couple has settled, there needed to 
			be a public sharing of personal triumphs and struggles, while there 
			was also more understanding of their desire for privacy.
 "I think Americans in particular are sympathetic to this idea of, 
			it's theirs, it's done on their terms, it's their safe space to 
			share what they want to share with the public," she said of the 
			upcoming interview.
 
 INTENSE SCRUTINY
 
 Most senior members of the House of Windsor have at some stage been 
			criticised and put under intense scrutiny by the media.
 
 While newspapers want more pictures and personal access, the royals 
			seek greater privacy, but also attention for issues close to their 
			hearts. In return for a gilded life funded by the public, they 
			should play along with the press, some critics say.
 
 The tension can boil over. On an annual skiing trip in 2005, Harry's 
			father Prince Charles, the heir to the throne, was caught on a 
			microphone calling reporters "bloody people", and has previously 
			bemoaned being treated as a "performing monkey".
 
 "The royals need publicity and the newspapers, the media needs the 
			family to fill their pages and the programmes. So it's a symbiotic 
			relationship that has worked very well," said Junor.
 
 Harry and Meghan's decision to keep the media at arm's length and 
			try to get their message out directly through social media has led 
			some British papers to become more overtly hostile.
 
 Their recent announcement that Meghan was pregnant with their second 
			child, their final split with the royal family and the upcoming 
			interview have drawn criticism, especially at a time when Harry's 
			grandfather Prince Philip, the queen's 99-year-old husband, is in 
			hospital.
 
            
			 
            
 Veteran royal biographer Robert Jobson told MailOnline that it made 
			the couple look "heartless".
 
 Even some of those close to the royals suggest their public roles 
			meant they must accept the enormous press interest, however wearying 
			and frustrating.
 
 "If you step on the pitch, you can't start arguing with the 
			referee," one senior royal aide told Reuters.
 
 (Reporting by Michael Holden; Editing by Mike Collett-White)
 
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