That brutal South Park episode The "dumb prince and his stupid wife" moved into the South Park neighbourhood, as introduced by Ken...
That brutal South Park episode
The "dumb prince and his stupid wife" moved into the South Park neighbourhood, as introduced by Kenny from the show. Many watched as the cartoon made scathing comments about the Duke and Duchess. In a column for Fox News, royal expert Neil Sean wrote that the couple were 'royally laughed at' by the satirical show.
Should be 'concerned' about how they are viewed in America
"It shows how far they have really fallen", the royal expert said. Then, focusing on their status in the states, he wrote, "Harry and Meghan should and will be very concerned about their celebrity status in America."
Harsh criticism for the couple
"It is seriously driving me crazy," the character, Kyle, says in the cartoon. "I'm sick of hearing about them, but I can't get away from them." Neither can a list of critics who also didn't speak too kindly about the couple. We give you the harshest criticisms of Harry and Meghan since their tell-all media campaign began.
Photo: Comedy Central
Reveal-all tv shows and books
Harry and Meghan have opened up to the world via books, series and interviews to explain their side of the story.
Photo: Netflix
Washing dirty linen’
There are some shocking revelations within Harry’s memoir, 'Spare' that the public and press didn't take too kindly to. In fact, Gaby Hinsliff, writer for The Guardian, scathingly said that the book moved beyond issues of "awkward public interest" into the "washing of dirty linen” in public.
The longest angry drunk text ever sent
Prince Harry's memoir, Spare, was colourfully described by the BBC: it is "part confession, part rant, and part love letter. In places, it feels like the longest angry drunk text ever sent." Criticism has come in far and wide from the public, the palace, and the papers.
What did the public say?
Before its release, the Mirror created a poll, asking its readers to vote. The question was ‘Will you be reading Prince Harry’s memoir?’ The results were, without doubt, clear - No.
91% will not read the book
The poll at the time showed that only 9% of the public would be reading Prince Harry’s memoir, ‘Spare’; whilst 91% were outright refusing. Perhaps it’s not a true representation of the British public in general but the statistics here left a clear message.
50% off
The book was already on half-price sale pre-release. Not a good sign for the future of the sales for this memoir. Perhaps this was why the book swiftly became the biggest selling memoir in the first week of sales in the UK.
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