Platell: The Sussex soap opera is keeping the Windsors relatable & relevant

The root of so much of the British royal psychodrama of the past decade is a series of boneheaded miscalculations from the royal establishment, not the Duke and Duchess of Sussex. The royal establishment has miscalculated Harry and Meghan at every stage, and we see the result of those miscalculations every single day. The British media’s 24-7 obsession with all things Sussex, the fact that the Prince and Princess of Wales stalk Harry and Meghan’s every move, the fact that the left-behinds simply cannot shake off or ignore the Sussexes. But let’s hear the Mail’s Amanda Platell try to put a royalist spin on this phenomenon.

After weeks of speculation and fervid anticipation that his wife and children were coming to the UK to meet his ‘Pa’, Prince Harry landed in London alone yesterday without Meghan, Archie or Lilibet. Over the weekend, more headlines beamed across the world about the ongoing Sussex saga and their rift with the Royal Family, this time over their security. Their ‘will-they-won’t-they?’ drama has become a delicious, must-watch cross between Downton Abbey and EastEnders.

Which makes me wonder where would the Royal Family be today, how significant would it be globally, without Harry and Meghan’s capricious manoeuvrings? Is it possible that, through this seemingly endless family drama, the Sussexes have, in a strange twist, become the unlikely saviours of the Royal Family? For all the relentless headlines, the feud has also made the monarchy feel unexpectedly relatable. At its heart is an ageing, cancer-stricken King Charles longing to see his grandchildren, and Queen Camilla by his side – a deeply human tragedy that has helped make the Firm feel more relevant in the modern age.

And not just in Britain. The ‘can’t-miss-an-episode’ Harry and Meghan soap opera – which began with Megxit, followed by that Oprah interview, then Harry’s bombshell memoir Spare and the couple’s Netflix documentary – has become compulsive viewing across the world. Painful as it is to admit, especially for a loyal monarchist like me, the British Royal Family – for all of their worthy OBE ceremonies and event openings – can, at times, be rather dull.

Yet Harry and Meghan have unwittingly dragged Britain’s sedate monarchy into the centre of the global spotlight. I mean, come on, think about it. How often do you see Europe’s other royal families dominating the headlines in any comparable way? The Grimaldis of Monaco? Liechtenstein’s princely family? Luxembourg’s House of Nassau?

Yet since the psychodrama started by the Duke and Duchess of Sussex, the House of Windsor has rarely been out of the news. For six years, the saga has provided an endless stream of interviews, documentaries and memoirs, turning Britain’s monarchy into the closest thing the world has to a real-life soap opera. It is an irresistible story of fractured family relationships and sibling rivalry, one that makes even the billionaire Beckham family’s highly publicised rift with their eldest son Brooklyn seem almost understated.

[From The Daily Mail]

Don’t yell at me, but Platell is right in a narrow way – the Sussexes’ exit completely changed the game and it all became a soap opera. She’s also right that the Sussexes are basically the only reason why anyone pays attention to the Windsors, and that H&M give the pale-and-stale crowd some cultural relevancy. But Platell is wrong about where sympathies lie, and whether these family dramas make the Windsors look “relatable.” The Windsors look like short-sighted, racist colonizers who have thrown a decade-long tantrum over a prince marrying a Black woman. And no, it’s not good news for the Windsors that people are only paying attention to them because Harry and Meghan escaped their abuse. But it’s an interesting look into the royalist’s mind.

Photos courtesy of Avalon Red, Backgrid.

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6 Responses to “Platell: The Sussex soap opera is keeping the Windsors relatable & relevant”

  1. Chenni says:

    They gonna push david is billionaire ah ? Same way Kylie Jenner and many celebs in usa. Lol

  2. Shiela Kerr says:

    The more money shenanigans are uncovered re the Windsor/ wales the more unrelatible and unethical they come across. Long may they wallow in their ill gotten gains

  3. Lady Digby says:

    Father Charles making his own son negotiate a bed for a night with his flunkies, string him along and all the while brief to media chums about an olive branch, then let him announce he’s accepted dad’s offer at 9 am Monday only to immediately contact BBC and tell them time limited offer has elasped!? All this made Charles look like a cold, vengeful and nasty father. Not lifting a finger to help his son over security, evicting them from Frogmore? Before that putting every obstacle in Harry ‘s way before and after he married Meghan. Having CONCERNS about Archie ‘s skin colour before he was born but not being racist!? Despite his wealth and power not visiting his son privately in Montecito? Telling Harry , Meghan was not welcome to accompany him on Queen’s last day? As a parent of two much loved sons, I can’t relate to Charles as a man and father of two sons. He seems icy and unyielding and racist. None of Charles actions or briefing by cowardly anonymous sources make him relatable or human. I am very relieved not to be related to him and have to read on a daily basis how long suffering and patient he is coping with my endless dramas!!

  4. Eurydice says:

    If it weren’t for Harry and Meghan, I wouldn’t spend a second thinking about the RF. But the thoughts I’m thinking are that I can’t wait to see the RF’s downfall. They’re the opposite of relevant and relatable and the very worst mixture of entitlement, greed, malice and stupidity.

  5. Jais says:

    Well, it certainly makes the whole see just how awful the British royals are. The Windsors look horrible and unpleasant just all the time now. Not even tiaras can help.

  6. Magi7 says:

    At this point, all H&M are doing is giving a huge amount of distraction away from the royal family. They are making it far too easy for the family. I really hope Harry stops this immature need to be reacquainted with the family again. That appears to be a dead end street.

    Move on Harry! Let the show begin between the voracious press and the royal family. Time to get a front row seat for a different play now.

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