When Colbert asked Harry how it felt like to outlive his mother, it reminded me of how Colbert's father died in a plane crash at age 53 along with two of Colbert's brothers when Colbert was 10 years old. Colbert is now 58. He was definitely asking that question from a place of having gone through it before himself.
He wasn't questioned about his inconsistencies. Harry and Stephen appealed to the emotions of the viewers to distract them from the lack of logic in Harry's narrative.
Thankyou for this wonderful interview with Prince Harry It was so heart warming .He has such a wonderful sense of humour as well as being serious in the right context. Have a wonderful Happy life Harry.
So many comments about the interview but I'll keep them to myself and comment on how beautiful it is to see so many people sharing their stories grief and supporting for eachother. My love to you all. ❤️
well said, the only good thing cause the interview is an embarrassment and colbert a paid actor. is no one going to challenge this liar? of course not he would not dare go to an actual person that can really interview him, Shapiro wants a piece, megyn Kelly too among others
I'm reading a lot of comments here from people who lost their parents at a young age. I cannot imagine that kind of loss. My parents made it to their mid eighties before passing within five weeks of each other. When my sister and I were going through our parents' effects, she asked me what I'd like to have. I chose a bookmark of mother's and a favourite sweater of dad's. Now, when I settle back on the sofa, wearing my dad's sweater and opening my latest book, it is as if both mum and dad are there, quietly enjoying the day with me.
Dad Died when I was 2!, it was Easier?, for Me!, to Talk About Him!, IF I WAS 10?, I really couldn't Comment!, but, my Brother Andrew died last Year!, HITS YA!, Never gonna See him Again!, DIFFERENT?.
I'm so happy you were able to have that. That's every kids dream. I was 8 when I lost my dad, also have thankfully a big brother. We're forever damaged, but it doesn't give someone the right to do this. Not to mention, "Willie" was 10000xs nicer then my big brother was to me
@David Anderson, Cherish those memories and those articles you have to remember your parents by, they are precious. I always find it bazaar when I hear people pass comments assuming it is somehow easier when parents pass away either before you are old enough to remember, or when you are an adult, be it 22 like I was or very much older. At the end of the day they are you pr parents, so I don’t think it matters how old you, it can still be just as devastating can’t it? I think we saw that at the queens funeral, with how wrecked her children looked. There is never a ‘good’ age for you to lose your parent, especially if you are close to them. I had just turned 22 when I lost my dad and it was the January after Princess Dianna died, when my daughter was just 13 days old. He died in a house fire which was all over the news so I understand a little about the press intrusion too. I think that’s why I feel a bit of a connection to Prince Harry and understand him a little. It’s so painful losing a parent, and you don’t get over it, you learn to accept they are never coming back at some stage but I understand a lot of what he has said about the shock. I only cried when I saw my dads coffin. The next time I cried was about 10 years later. It was the 25 anniversary of his death on the 6th and I was just very quiet all day because it still hurts, even now. My daughter who has the sam humour as him said she is sorry. She hasn’t t had the chance to know him as she figured they would get along well, and I started to say you would like a house…. I then stopped as I still can’t say sentences like a house on fire. I still struggle to watch tv shows if they show burnt corpses because my dads death certificate says he died from burns which is unusual as most fires tend to say smoke inhalation. People don’t think either , as I discovered when my dad died, when we were at the funeral home, they asked if we had a favourite outfit we would like him to be dressed in. She clearly hadn’t bothered to see cause of death, we were like he died in a house fire. I don’t think any of his clothes would of survived. Then to make matters worse, she said would you like to see him? We were like are you serious? Did you bother to look up any details about my dad before you walked in here? They had to identify him from his dental records, so no, I don’t think we we want to be left with that as our last memory of our dad Thank you very much! It was crazy, it was bad enough when a neighbour asked what he looked like! At least she had the excuse of old age.
When my brother passed at 24 from a car accident, I was in college. I really thought I lost my mind becuase I could not wrap my mind around him being gone forever, for a very very long time. My mind would tell me other things. Like he went away to my grandparents house, he went on a trip. That he was fine and would come back. Before this interview, I have never heard anyone else speak about "magical thinking" I just thought I was crazy. It is a good feeling to know that I am not the only one with this experience.
@ Natasha B of all the people don’t trust Stacie to help you!!! You had a tragic situation that both you and Harry went through…that’s why you can relate and understand what he is speaking about!!! So sorry for your lost. I pray that you find comfort in you memories and the times that you shared with your brother…just know that he will always live in your heart forever!!!❤
I personally have outlived my brother who died of lupus at 29, he was 7 years older than me. I have now recently outlived my mother who died of cancer at 33, im turning 34 this year. It's quite a different feeling knowing they died so young and here i am living through the days they never got. I wear my mothers ring permanently and my brother's chain. They're with me everyday, sharing with them the life they never got to see. Until we meet again.
So sorry for your losses. Grief is just unbearable. I still wear my fathers wedding ring too and I will not take off my wedding rings. A friend told me I won’t move on unless I take them off. This is not going to happen. We were married for 50 years, I still feel married to my husband. I don’t think anyone understands unless it happens to them.
@TajEbrahim Losing siblings and parents so young is a pain noone should experience and my heart goes out to you. When I was a teenager my dad 46 and brother15 died young too as did Mums family ..I dont pretend to have great wisdom but mum and I were really close and when she died I experienced the strangest of moments during the darkest of times. As I mourned I suddenly felt a tidal wave of joy engulf me.... and I knew.. right at that moment...that she was reuniting with her son husband siblings parents.. Mums message that day was clear....life is but a blink of an eye.. A necessary passage.. like childhood.. its not home.. ..Mum closed her eyes and when she opened them again she was back home..surrounded by family.. . Love that strong cannot die... it transforms as we transform ... I still talk to her.. wear her cross and .. sense her .. just around the corner......I miss my family terribly but know that one day ..in the blink of an eye... Ill be back home too. In the meanwhile Ill carry their love forward and do my best to share it as its been shared with me.
The fact that so many of these comments are about people's own personal experiences, and the way that this interview touched them, really speaks a lot to both the interviewee and the interviewer. Exceptionally well done gentlemen. Much respect.
Stephen did a really good job interviewing the prince. I haven't seen the 60 Minutes interview. I look forward to reading Harry's book. I read his mother's biography Diana: Her True Story years ago.
@@liviavallendenez Colbert's interview is better than Anderson Cooper's, and I like Cooper. On some level Colbert relates to him I think. His father and two of his older brothers died in a plane crash when he was ten and he has described things similarly to Harry.
I soooo enjoyed see & hearing this lovely man again ❤ He has always been and will continue to be my favourite "Royal" Im extremely happy that he & Meaghan are happy.
😆🤣 ok yup, we all know these late shows don't have a spine. Harry will tell his lies as best as possible, he dare say he didn't say that, it's in the book and in the audio mr. liar. everything is someone else fault never yours. narcissistic at it's finest.
The comments I'm seeing here made me tear up. I'm 38 and my parents are alive and well but I think often, "what will happen in their passing"? I can't cope with the thought. It was astonishing to hear Harry thought his mother was alive and was going to come back to get him and his brother. And to see comment after comment similar to Harry's about a parent passing but expecting letters and appearances has made me infinitely more knowledgeable about grief, human connections and coping. Reading such accounts has broken my heart into a million pieces and I feel for every child who's lost a parent too soon. Harry also talking about revealing 'that' number for the sake of other veterans was an eye-opener. This interview is a masterclass on the complexity of the human mind. I found it to be so insightful, like a revelation to a new perspective I just didn't think existed. As a viewer and knowledge seeker, I appreciated these uncharted perspectives so much.
I used to send myself into anxiety attacks thinking what it would be like if I lost my parents. Asking myself how I would react? How I would feel? All I can say is, whatever you imagine you think it might be like, multiply that by 20. My mom had a terminal disease and I thought I had come to terms by the time she passed, and I was so wrong. It was nothing like I thought it would be or feel like. It was worse than I could have ever imagined. Then 4 months later I lost my dad. 7 years later I still can’t find any appropriate words in the English language that comes close to describing what that Loss and void feels like. No words
The one piece of advice I can offer is to ask now for stories and answers. Even if they decide to put that information in a place where it's not accessible until after they pass, those stories are part of your family's history. They helped shape the people you are. Toward the end of his life, the grandkids asked dad about his military service, and he was finally ready to share. It helped us understand him so much better, and to breach some gaps. We were lucky enough to have time. When I lost my partner unexpectedly, I realized that I and the kids weren't going to get that chance, and it makes a big difference in finding closure.
@@bjdefilippo447this is such good advice! My parents have both passed and I’m grateful for the stories they told me about their own childhoods and experiences before getting married and becoming parents. They were real people before we kids came along 😊
@@bjdefilippo447 I agree with the other poster, it's such great advice. I started to do that in the last 2 years after my dad got Covid. I've emailed myself little blurbs to remember so I can share these with my children. My dad particularly is an inspiration but you'd never know it. I always knew he was an avid sportsman (from tennis to squash to chess) but I never knew more details than that. I learned that in his 20s, he strolled into a chess club in Marlebone, applied for membership and won the next tournament. And how he would randomly ask any people playing badmindon in Hyde Park if he could play too, only to be scoffed at as a 'weirdo' (understandable!) but when he would be given the chance, he'd amaze people with his skills and some would in turn ask to have a go with him or join in for a double game. Such stories are meaningless to others but priceless to me.
Trust me the pain of losing a parent is unbearable special if you were close to them. Treasure yours. I lost 50% of myself when I lost my dad and I know no one can fill the void neither my kids or partner..it's just to painful
As a military spouse, Harry is 100% when it comes to how veterans deal with the question that civilians ask (some with geniune curiousity...some more malice) "have you killed anyone?" Most who have, don't want to talk about it because that normally means they were in the true thicket of war and seen or experienced so much that normal people shouldn't. The ones that brag about it either are lying or should be behind bars for public safety
I've heard people say that before. I always figured that anybody who has been in the military during a war has either killed someone or acted as support services for those who have. That is what military is for. It is for killing and combat. They don't spend all day shooting at paper targets for grins and giggles. To ask if military members kill people is one of those questions that answers itself.
Our whole family has served. I was the first female in a Green Beret battalion. My husband is a retired Green Beret. I say this for context because I don't think my son when he was in Iraq would have been able to share what was happening to him if I'd not had military experience in a combat unit. I listened and advised when he called me to tell me he'd killed someone and didn't know if God would forgive him. We walked through the details, and I assured him God would forgive him. There are many more stories like that from my son and others. I'm so glad Harry is working with war vets. That means the world to me.
I lost my mother at age 21. She was 48 at the time of her death. When I eventually reached 50, it became crystal clear that I had not expected to live past 48. I was stunned and amazed that I’d “made it”. All those years I’d had the niggling thought in the back of my mind that I would follow in her footsteps and die at 48. 😮 My father died at age 65 two months to the day after his retirement. When I retired at 66 and got past that 2-month-post-retirement mark, I breathed a sigh of relief. Loss and grief really messes with our heads!
I had exactly the same experience. I sympathise with anyone who goes through grief and loss. It is so confusing and there is no right way to deal with it. Best wishes to you.
my dad and all 7 of his siblings died around 54yrs old - plus or minus 3 months. almost exactly half of my cousins on that side that have reached 54 (23 total so far) have died at age 54 - plus or minus 3 months:12 in total (so far ... another 9 to yet reach 54). all died from "Sudden Death Syndrome" - which is as shitty as it sounds: you just drop over dead. I have two siblings still alive (part of the 11 that survived being 54). I turned 54 two months ago. I don't know what your mom died of at 48 (you don't say) or your dad but ... MAYBE you spent 27 years fretting about nothing real besides "feels." what a waste.
Oh wow...😔 It's okay to still grieve regardless of how long or how old you are. These are extremely serious, life threatening circumstances that only you experienced. No-one else has the right to judge you. Your life matters, your trauma is acknowledged. I see you. I feel for your pain. You matter. All souls matter. You are a fighter. *Be* *proud* *of* *that* *every* *day* , and know *you* *are* *not* *alone* in how you feel.
Oh my God me too I was 14 and she was 48 and even though she was my adoptive mum I spent the whole of my 4th year waiting subconsciously to die too. I am 55 now.
Wow. It never hit me that Diana was only 36 years old when she lost her life. I somehow didn't process how young she actually was, and how more life she should have had.
Wow. Yeah, that didn't really occur to me either. I was just 16 when she got married. We all watched that, and my best friend was there in London at the time it happened.
You can always come past the ship Maria and see your old Admiral Boom. I have good tequila and Mexican tapas! I know how much you like those fresh strawberry margaritas. Enough said. Saturday at noon Cherry Tree Lane!
Maybe because your “worldview” is largely “informed” by trash tabloids who have a close relationship with the Palace/s. Good for Harry and Meghan for having the courage and conviction to leave that dung heap and make a real life for themselves on their own terms.
Going through the comments and I just realized how therapeutic this this interview is. To see everyone sharing their various experiences with loss and grief and also how they relate to what Harry is saying is very heartwarming. May God confort the grieving hearts of all those bereaved.
I don't think his family ,even his brother, understand how losing his mom at 12 marked him. William was 16, the age difference is important. You need your mom much more when you are 12. Even if they were the same age, loss impacts siblings differently.
His father lost his mother three months ago, and Harry and his wife have been mocking his grandmother, and disrespecting her life's work, on international media. Harry speaks a lot, but cares little.
I've never enjoyed an interview by Stephen more than this one with Prince Harry. Two truly lovely men speaking together. You'd think they were best friends, or should be, anyway.
Yes @lauranebro1111 , I too believe this to be true 🙏🏻👼🙏🏻 I know my 18yr old son is constantly with me all the time 🥲🥲 it’s such a pity that we CANNOT SEE them 🙏🏻💚 blessings from Ireland 🇮🇪☘️💔💔
Lmao he's an idiot and you are contributing to his wealth by buying the book. He does absolutely nothing but cry about everything and demands money for security from yoir government
in the darkest times of my life, I have only made it through by the skin of my teeth and the repetition of this simple phrase: “this is not how my story ends.” I refused to let anyone else tell my story for me, and I wish that you, Harry, could have had the same view of things. But your story was always being told by someone else: the British press. I am so glad that you have finally had the opportunity to put your own story out there. From one scapegoat to another…thank you for living to tell the tale and thank you for narrating the audiobook. It has given your words more weight and poignancy, in my opinion. I can’t imagine this book being narrated by anyone else and having the ability to touch my heart as effectively. I’m sure you won’t see this comment in the ocean of others, but Harry, I am proud of you! I am rooting for you and your family! Thank you for being the real whistleblower of the royal family, and thank you for your activism.
Harry, I applaud you for your comments around 08:30 ish. As a British veteran (who never personally served alongside or met Prince Harry, although I know people who have - as veterans and serving officers), when the leak about his "kill score" came out, I knew it had to have been taken out of context. Say what you like about him, but he's a better officer and human being than that. All the people I knew who had met him didn't believe it, either. At all. Harry started the Invictus Games, he has worked tirelessly with and for veterans, and he is the only living member of the Royal Family who has served in the military in any *REAL* capacity (the only other one to go to a warzone was Andrew, and other Falklands vets do not have good things to say about him... He never served like Harry did). All of the others didn't even complete proper basic training, making the top brass uniforms they like strutting round in a joke... They never earned them... They just got a pass because of who they were (especially his father... Ask any RAF officer about how seriously Cranwell takes Charles and his time spent there...). Harry did everything the rest of us did and made it clear he didn't want special favours. He earned his uniform. He "gets it". Having lost friends to suicide, as a result of PTSD from their service, I thank him for his efforts in reducing the number of brothers and sisters in arms that we lose every year (not to war, but in the battle against PTSD). He's done (& is still doing) far more than our current Commander in Chief... Good on you, Harry.
Which is why I found it ridiculous he was not allowed to wear his uniform at the Queen's funeral. Working royal or not, he went to war and earned it. Absurd rule.
@@crochetingcanuck In fairness, his apparel followed the standard veteran rules (suit and medals - we don't wear uniform as veterans here). However... Because the royal family wore their "honorary" uniforms, it created a very stark contrast that grated many of us. Charles, who never bothered completing Cranwell because he was off cavorting with his girlfriend (now wife), parked on the parade ground (a massively disrespectful no-no), and flew directly over the college building (a court martial offence for anyone else), wore full regalia. Anne, who has never attended any military training whatsoever, wore full regalia. Edward, who struggled through the entire first 4 weeks of Royal Marine training (the intro part...) before he quit to become a tea boy for Andrew Lloyd Webber, wore full regalia. William, who completed a mini course at Sandhurst (the Army officer's college, and not the full officer training by any stretch of the imagination...), then transferred to the RAF (which is unheard of - he's the only "RAF officer" who never went to the RAF officer's college, Cranwell) & "flew search and rescue" for all of a couple of hours a week (yes, that was his "service"), wore full RAF regalia. Harry, who completed the full Sandhurst course, served two tours of Afghanistan and was the only one to not see himself as "above" his colleagues because of the title he was born with (he queued for mess like everyone else, told those on duty to go ahead of him in the queue, so they'd get the chance to eat before the next call, etc)... Was treated as lesser because he's "just" a veteran, not a "working" royal (as if they work...). That contrast made the uniforms & ranks that the rest of us spent blood, sweat, tears, and years earning feel utterly meaningless, because they used ones they'd never earned to denigrate the only person there who had served like the rest of us and earned his rank. It was as if they used the opportunity to crap on his service, which was abhorrent. To date, Harry is the only living member of that family to fully complete the same training as any other Army officer. No special favours, no shortcuts. It's why he's the only one now that many of us respect.
I love Stephen Colbert He’s a really good interviewer I’m a big fan I’ve been watching for this show long time and he’s the only one who can get serious, witty and make fun of it
Agreed; he made it very easy to watch and handled a delicate and as he said, at times quite 'surreal' situation very well. Years ago, such an interview was unthinkable (by British standards at least). BTW, Is he (Stephen) a descendant of past screen actress Claudette Colbert?
He is a good interviewer, but he also lost his father and two of his older brothers in a plane crash when he was 10-Harry was so relaxed because he knew he was speaking with someone who could empathize 100%.
Great interview. One of the few I’ve seen where the interviewer didn’t preconceive or lead the responses of a royal. Colbert truly is interested in what Harry has to say, as shown in how conversant they are. Well done.
I totally agree… halfway through the interview I took a pause, to relate to his fight for equal and fair Justice. As a fellow veteran and exiled military whistleblower, I can relate to how the media and superior forces can try to silence you… but in the end… Divine Truth Prevails 💖 He would make a Great Ambassador for the American Veteran Community. #NoMoreSuicides 🇺🇸❤️🩹🇺🇸
Very well said. But remember that the trauma of repeated rejection in your most intimate relationship is something Diana experienced for the majority of her life, being rejected by her own mother and left behind when her mother got together with a new man, being rejected by her father for being the third daughter instead of a son and heir... And How would you explain the incident that Diana was mistreated from the start, that her husband Charles spent the night before their wedding in front of the eyes of the world, with his long-term mistress Camilla?! Camilla never wanted to give Diana any chance to survive emotionally in this marriage, she made sure Diana had absolutely no chance of winning Charles' heart and body, explicitly, and that shows that Camilla is very dangerous and manipulated Charles all along. Charles had many other sexual relationships but Camilla made it look like a friendship plus sex thing even discussing his other experiences with other women with him... As Diana said Charles is weak and open to sly manipulation. Camilla did everything to ride out any other woman's influence on Charles, even his mother's the queen. Camilla did everything, in order to use Charles to become queen Camilla one day....
There is a book by Joan Didion called The Year of Magical Thinking. It is about the sudden loss of her husband, the trauma, grief, and temporary psychosis she experienced. I lost my father and brother last summer and I speak to both of them and they speak to me. If you told me that before they died, it would sound crazy. It’s actually comforting. My dad completed his life but I feel like my brother did not. The pain is raw at times and other times the memories bring peace.
He is very charismatic and likeable. I commend him for leaving with her. Watching The Crown (while loosely based on true events) you get to see how suffocating it must be to be apart of that family.
Fair play to Stephen Colbert for this interview, really gave a level platform to what Harry is trying to do. I also appreciate that it's uploaded in full and not in snippets.
Yes Cobert was awesome 👏. And Harry ! Oh Gosh he is incredibly honest ! Yes I am giving up on mainstream y media. Never again will I read or hear mainstream media.
"I'm convinced that 99.9% of the world's population are walking around with some form of grief, trauma or loss and with that comes these filters that sort of acts as a fog, and every opportunity we have to be able to clean the windscreen, take the filters away and actually see life as it is. To be able to live a truly authentic life, that to me has been the freedom that I have been looking, that I didn't even know I had been looking for my whole life" I commend Harry on his strength, sensitivity, integrity and honesty here. It's hard to generalise with "the British press" as a whole as there is diversity within it. But a lot of our mainstream media is brutally focused on prioritising profit and personal gain at the expense of humanity, sensitivity and the lives of individual human beings. Personally I am so sick of reading about Harry in our News papers and social media. It's almost thrust upon us against our Will (pun intended.) Context is everything. The world needs more people of influence to take Harry's approach to help pave the way to us being better to ourselves and each other as a species.
Let’s be logical. This man, Harry, declared himself as “A Spare.” Whether it was faulted unto him during the line of succession, or, through the various reporting (news of 20, 30, 40, and 50 years ago) which was much more orchestrated by the government and news circuits as a type of hush hush. Therefore, unless Harry overheard all these conversations when he was 1 minute to 3 months old… how would he know? Who spoke out more of their concerns of “the boys?” The children? Diana, or Charles? Ahem, Diana. Of note, King Charles is NOT off the hook. Between him & Camilla - I’m positive they were arrogant, ruthless, selfish, evil, and impossible to compete with. A couple of a-holes! However…. Having myself suffered in silence, self-sabotaged, risen from the ashes as a Phoenix… I’ve learned the hard way… A few things I know about business - the bottom line, in general, at the level of such prestige, not many: the stockholders, taxpayers, the bottom of the pyramid…. want to hear the complaining & obsessive details of someone who seemingly has it all. I’m not saying people do not have stuff to complain about… but this is a guy, kid, prince, professional who sought therapy. Most ppl who lose their accolades are “lost” because they have NO ONE to turn to. It’s NOT the fault of the person who reached stardom and popularity - in this case, millionaire Prince Henry (Harold, Harry, H, Haz, etc). At the end of the day, they/we are all still “just ppl.” However, WE put these people on pedestals - and they allowed us to do so. There is ALWAYS a price to pay with ever choice and decision we make. Therefore. Mr. Prince Harry KNOWS this. If I know this, then I know HE knows this. Therefore, I have little sympathy of patience for him anymore. As an empath, I had “wishful thinking” Harry went from one pressure to another. Meaning from the Palace to the pants 👖 of Meghan. However, that is not the case. Harry, who is not so hairy in his scalp (heck, neither am I! As we age, hair thins) is not a phoenix, or anyone whose been so oppressed, meek, abused, illiterate, or lived in poverty that he can state his truth as something SO terrible, he can and SHOULD financially profit from it. I’ve read so many comments. Hundreds, if not thousands. There’s a saying, a penny for your thoughts. This liar, faker, fraud is “R” wording millions!!! Walking away with millions of dollars for his supposed mental and emotional anguishes! That he himself invents! Fans the flames to! Has very little to NO specifics. No evidence. No direct correlation. If anything, he and his wife constantly contradict themselves. Why are you people so blind to their game? They are hustlers. Grifters. Users. Manipulators. Haters. Posers. So much so, his claims go against a monarch of so many generations and centuries… 😂 nah bro. You’re not there! From various reports (e.g., The Independent, author James Patterson, the coining phrase from Consuelo Vanderbilt Balsan - apparently relative to ((cousin to) Winston Churchill & Diana Spencer)). These people are bred, groomed. No different than our US government. Look at the historical details of the monarchy. For Harry to step out, as if he’s some type of saint or martyr, why would Harry discuss the most trivial aspects of the background? Circumcisions. Drugs. Loss of virginity. Balding. Paparazzi. Photos. Sounds of clicking of lenses. Life cycles. Protocols. Mottos. What does any of that have to do with racism? Fleeing? Needing 24/7 security? Okay. So. Who doesn’t have those problems? What society, demographics, fraternity, or environment have similar types of behavior? What has Harry really said? Or taught any of us something we should know? Did he validate us? I hope not. Mostly because mental health is about empowerment in validating oneself. NOT through blame, but through accountability - as in one who finds a steady balance. Which can take years to achieve. One doesn’t confuse guilt, arrogance, selfishness, insecurities, distress tolerances, emotional regulations, mindfulness, coping skills, and other cognitive behavioral issues that have to do with blame or martyrdom as a hallway pass. Or a fast track to solving lifes problems, as if the Harkles are suddenly the saviors of the day. Getting past the confusions Harry obviously has - and UNFORTUNATELY had had to deal with… for that, I TRULY sympathize with Harry, but, I can NOT co-sign nor enable the whole idea Harry is trying to sell. In my opinion, there is still a long road that needs to be traveled. I’m not sure whose driving Harry’s bus these days… but I do know: life is a journey. A journey full of lessons for us to either learn, or repeat. Spanish philosopher George Santayana is credited for, “Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.” Churchill paraphrased the statement with “those who fail to learn.” So what is it then, Harry is hoping to teach his children? If he himself, after all his supposed therapy, can’t get past the most trivial aspects of life? Let’s face it. No family, relationship, environment, person, situation, job, day, is perfect. What makes Harry so special? When he himself admits to how confused he’s been? All he says is he has a faulty memory. Duh. Who doesn’t? But, maybe that’s a red flag 🚩- as NOT to write a memoir(??) Even after 2 short years while he’s deflecting … fleeing, escaping, from a country he’s basically denounced. Why should we listen to him? Since he’s even sued his own country for what he claims as a lack of security… I mean really. This man is beyond gross and pathetic.
Well THAT explains the sychophancy and soft balls!! 🙄 Anderson Cooper too. Curating their interviewers based on personal emotional triggers, nothing suspicious about THAT at ALL 🙄
I remember when Stephens’s father died. So many friends were lost in that plane crash. It was awful. He and Harry have that shocking type of death in common, but Harry’s family did not take care of him.
My father passed away when I was 14, when I was 16 I went into a Cafe during my lunch break from work, the man who owned the Cafe, was the spitting image of my dad..could've been identical twins, I spent my lunch every day at that Cafe. I'm 60 now and still feel my dad's presence every now and then. It still saddens me all the things he has missed , he was a wonderful father . I'm sure Harry and William both feel the same, their mom has missed so much too , there's nothing wrong in missing a parent , thinking about that parent...it keeps them with you.
My mom died of a brain aneurysm when I was 4 in 1972. Nobody talked about it. My dad remarried 3 months later to a wicked step monster. She would only say things like the worms were eating her and gross things you don’t say to anyone. It wasn’t until I had my own 4 kids when they reached certain ages, like my first trauma at 4 that it saddened me. They wouldn’t remember me. My voice, my love, my smell and how we cuddled and laughed. I wish we had the technology back then that we have now. My dad died in 2016 and I kept his voice mails. So when I miss him I can listen to his messages” Just callin to see how you and the kids are, gimme a call back lis , I love you, this is dad!” I find comfort in those treasures. 😊
True. But to the point (especially the prolonged willy conversation) his guest got embarrassed and awkward. Stephen went to long on that but otherwise it was pretty deep.
If ever I did something in life that I would get a national interview for I would want Stephen to do the interview I think he might be the best interviewer on TV now
It wasn’t deep and not really introspective because everyone besides them is just bad, mean and it’s never their fault. That’s the opposite of introspection.
I hope you’re being sarcastic. Harry is known to be a huge liar. Much of Spare and his interviews have been fact checked and proven to be wrong. He even lied to the British Law Courts. In his own words, the real truth doesnt matter, only his version.
Lost my darling sister (also my best friend) 6 years ago to cancer and my "inside" is still "screaming". Some days it gets very "loud". My heart goes out to you. Hugs from Sputh Africa🤗🤗
But if we accept that everything is on “loan” to us from the Creator, God Almighty, and that everything belongs to Him alone, we can be grateful for what He chose for us the time we had with loved ones and be patient as one day we will meet them in the hereafter. If we don’t believe in this then life is hard. I am speaking with experience of having 5 brothers and 1 sister and my parents having returned to God. For sure we all belong to Him, nothing belongs to us, and we will, and everything will return to Him. So Glory be to Him alone.
I found this interview much more engaging, informative and relatable than the one with 60 Minutes and ITV. Colbert did a great job with drawing out the side of Harry that we all fell in love with. Excellent interview!
Here in the UK, I find it misleading about why there is a huge negative response in Britain. Speaking about his time as a soldier. He didn't need to write the specific number 25. That was the unacceptable line that he crossed. That veterans do not speak of. Least it sound like boasting. And he threw his brother under the bus and revealed his brothers private thoughts. People in this audience also haven't lived all the stories that he has misrepresented. He is a lovely guy but a idiot.
@@barnespond1549 I think since going through therapy he wants to be more honest. Maybe even radically honest. I can see where that would be a problem for the institution...but I don't think it's malicious.
Barnes Pond - Sounds like you didn’t watch the entire Colbert interview where he touched on that, even Colbert gave his opinion on it and didn’t think he was being boastful. Maybe your perception will not be influenced by the British press once you’ve read his book.
I believe Veterans never talk about how many people they have killed in any context. Also why did Megan & Harry accept the Kennedy award for their heroic stand against "structural racism" in the monarchy' if they are now saying the RF isn't racist? Was it because the tickets sold at 1 million dollars per seat. This is just 1 of 4 books written by MM - how much dirty money do they need - someone needs to do welfare check on poor Harry.
Stephen is such a wonderful listener and interviewer. And Harry has such a great personality. I never watched his interviews or anything. So much fun listening to this!
How would you explain the incident that Diana was mistreated from the start, that her husband Charles spent the night before their wedding in front of the eyes of the world, with his long-term mistress Camilla?! Camilla never wanted to give Diana any chance to survive emotionally in this marriage, she made sure Diana had absolutely no chance of winning Charles' heart and body, explicitly, and that shows that Camilla is very dangerous and manipulated Charles all along. Charles had many other sexual relationships but Camilla made it look like a friendship plus sex thing even discussing his other experiences with other women with him... As Diana said Charles is weak and open to sly manipulation. Camilla did everything to ride out any other woman's influence on Charles, even his mother's the queen. Camilla did everything, in order to use Charles to become queen Camilla one day....
I'm in year 3 1/2 with mine. I was kind of broken and my life was almost entirely abuse. I am proactive and I don't even feel halfway done. I was a truck driver driving all across the country and I was tired of burying it anymore and became actually severely angry and was having PTSD days where I couldn't function so I left that industry and haven't worked since and that was the end of 2018. I suffered more sexual abuse where I moved to and after almost ending my life, I felt myself wanting to get help and not do this because I did not do this to me and I wasn't going to help abusers victimize me anymore. I had to go through a little bout of homicidal ideation when my wall was coming down but I could not help that. I had to become solid for myself and going through the process of my own will was hard enough. Having to be someone who didn't let myself be angry was just not going to happen. I settled back into the me I was wanting to be but I still have the ability to scare people lol. I just don't scare myself or cry about reacting that way anymore. I am saying I was upset by being angry when I had every right to be and that made me even more angry because of the control implanted on me for so long. I feel good. I hope you do too. Congratulations on finding you again. I'm glad you were blessed with angels and that you helped saved yourself too. Don't forget that you did it too.
@@TheOneAndOnlyMichelleAngelique you will make it Michelle! I’m in year 13... has’t been easy, but therapy has changed my life in all possible ways and making a commitment with yourself as you are doing it.. will continue giving the power to continue. Healing is everything but linear... remember that in times of distress. I’m proud of you! Love from Costa Rica ❤
You're right. But those hateful TH-cam analysts DO have a reason for being hateful toward Harry and their favorite target Meghan. Hateful headlines attract more viewers, and more viewers mean greater earnings for one's site via commercials. People create and click on hateful sites for the same reason people stop to see a car accident or stopped to watch a lynching: unhappy people are always looking for others whose life is a little worse than their own so they can feel less bad about themselves, Then there also people who are paid by "the Palace handlers" to attack this couple.
@@Azulakayes That wasn't the point Dr. Grande made. He wouldn't deny this. What Harry writes about (although this wasn't even him) is just ridiculous and what we already believe normal people go through. What he describes as "scandalous" is the problem.
Prince Harry is an absolute fool. Despite his distinguished military service. Absolute fool who will rue the day he married his wife. Just wait for them to divorce, it'll happen. He's destroyed every other relationship he ever had. Oh but "wooh he and Meghan are such a strong powercouple".
I have been the person who refused to pass judgment on Prince Harry and Meghan Markle because I didn't know them personally. Having seen this interview and seeing him relaxed and having fun makes me see he is charming, funny, kind, and genuinely decent. I think I might read his book.
Avoid the negative people. They are verified to be a part of a group with multiple accounts spamming hate about Harry and his wife. Use your own judgement on them.
My father died when I was 13. I waited for some magical letter to arrive when I was 18... and then 21... and then 37 (the age he was when he died.) For more than two decades, I waited for a note which was never written. It's shameful to admit, but clearly, I'm not the only one who has felt this way.
It’s not shame, it’s hope! You keep hoping he’s alive somewhere, hope is keeping you from facing something that’s too painful to your heart and mind. May God bless you.
As a therapist, as someone who lost my mom suddenly when I was 30, and as someone who has struggled to heal from my own trauma and grief - man, do I appreciate what Harry said about the importance of sharing our grief and losses with others to let them know they're not alone. So grateful for his courage in sharing this and helping others know they are not alone, and that it's okay (and very healthy) to seek help.
@@Isond-ox3ye True in some ways but also No! It’s because a Prince and his mixed-race wife decided that the harassment from the press and frosty treatment from the rest of the 'toxic' Royal Family had become so bad that it was no longer worth being part of it. The dude has a lot of money anyway and it's payback time now. He's doing the right thing.
My maternal grandfather never came back from the war. There was word from another man, who claimed he had seen my grandfather in Auschwitz; that man died 2 weeks after the war. My mom was 13 at the time. The Red Cross search produced no information whatsover, Auschwitz had no documents. My mom never believed, that her father had died; she imagined, that her father was living somewhere abroad. She would rather blame him for abandoning her than accept his obvious death. This continued until she was 75, when I found a record of my grandfather's death at Mauthausen-Gusen death camp. At that point the Austrian Ministry of Internal Affairs and also the Auschwitz Museum confirmed my grandfather was a prisoner in both camps. Only then was she able to find closure and relief. At 75, for the first time, she framed the only photograph of her father and hung it on the wall.
Great vivid interview, THANKS. His strong personality with the inner will to free himself and find himself now presents him with a clarity and sincerity that makes his confident charisma.Very well done.
I lost my sister when I was 17, suddenly and tragically to suicide. For many years, I would "see" her in the beautiful hair of a young woman on a subway, the familiar turn of a stranger's head. I would often allow myself to believe she was in hiding somewhere, that one day I'd discover she was alive. I think this "magical thinking" is more common than we realize in cases of extreme grief with young people especially.
Sending you love and healing. Grief is such a strange thing and the brain does things to help us cope. May those we lost rest in love until we are all reunited.
I lost my partner to suicide, and my eldest son thinks that he's faked his death. Its so reassuring to know that he's not the only one to think this... thank you for saying this. I also so sorry that you have suffered the loss of your sister in this way.. its an awful path to walk down xx
Sorry about your father. RIP. Do you feel like it brought you and your brother closer? Or like the glue that held you together was gone? Really curious about that because I honestly don't know how my sister and I's relationship would change in that situation.
@@schatz1876 he is making money with that but many people gone the experience and survived. My mother was orphan but mother and father at about 5 years old.
I lost my Mom a few days before my 15th birthday. She was 42. My whole life I never thought I’d make it to 42. Last year when I turned 43, I sobbed. Unless you’ve been thru the loss of a parent, especially when your young it’s really hard to understand.
9 months ago I'm reading a lot of comments here from people who lost their parents at a young age. I cannot imagine that kind of loss. My parents made it to their mid eighties before passing within five weeks of each other. When my sister and I were going through our parents' effects, she asked me what I'd like to have. I chose a bookmark of mother's and a favourite sweater of dad's. Now, when I settle back on the sofa, wearing my dad's sweater and opening my latest book, it is as if both mum and dad are there, quietly
Princess Di's death really shocked me. I vividly remember seeing you, Harry ,and your brother walking right behind her coffin... My heart sank. It was unbelievable. Please accept my humble hug, Harry. Everybody should be allowed to grieve.
Like Harry, I couldn't cry for a long time after my parents died. It took months for it to sink in that they were never coming back before I cried. I sympathize with Harry.
His brother lost a mother . I think you people forget that. The trouble was he was a spoilt brat always was as. Child . His mother admitted that and he has grown in to a useless piece of 💩💩💩💩. His mother wasn't a saint , she had many lovers four of whom were married. He conveniently forgets all that
Exactly, Pryam. We should always be grateful, first to God for giving us good parents, and next to our parents and other family members. The fifth of the 10 commandments is to honor our parents, and all will go well with us and we will have a long life.
@@Harmonic2010 yeah well not all of us get "good parents" so it would be great if y'all who did have loving parents would stop acting like the rest of us did. If you had a mother who was physically and verbally abusive thru your entire childhood then you probably would feel completely different. BTW there is NO God that gave you good parents, god is an imaginary sky being created by human males to control the masses, congratulations on buying the lies! 🙄
As one who has grieved the loss of most of my family I disagree. "In our society" the help, empathy and understanding even mere acquaintances have shown can not be surpassed. This from every age, nationality, race and religion, soon after and even years later.
In England we have stiff upper lips, far less messy than that huggy weepy nonsense. Our fathers came back from the horrors of WWII never complained or told about it. Got on with their lives. American psychobabble is killing masculinity.
@Spareme. Being masculine doesnt mean ignoring trauma. Thats why so many of these veterans are committing suicide, or are alcoholics. Because of the whole, "men don't cry," shaming our culture pushes on them. If you want an example of healty masculinity, check out LOTR and pay attention to Arragorn. Unless you're not MAN enough to do so.
When my mommy passed away I convinced myself she was in a trip and will soon call to say she was having a good time. It's been 2 years and I still hold hope. I know she is gone but the hope it's still there 😭
I lost my father at 10 to cancer. I convinced myself he was on a long business trip. My mother reminded me this week that my brother and I often dreamt he'd be coming back. My older brother is scarred by the loss of our father with resentment and stoic behavior. I was placed at a disadvantage because I required less attention. Childhood trauma is looks different for everyone. I wish Harry love and healing.
Stephen lost his father and brother, who died in a plane crash. Stephen understands Harry's grief. Beautiful that Stephen didn't have to bring up his loss to demonstrate his humanity. We saw it.
Condolences for your loss. My eldest son is 12 and I don't think he could mentally handle that. Well said. Love and light to you and family, from Scotland 💎
Thank you for releasing the full interview (instead of the segments) so soon after airing (same night!) This was a fabulous interview, so much rawness and honesty.
Did you say honesty….like calling the RF racists and accepting an award for it and then denying they ever said it! You have a strange idea of what honesty is!!!
@@jenniferbailey5914 honesty as in during this interview, like he said everything in the book came from him, etc. The stuff outside of the interview? Not part of my comment on it.
It's been 28 years and sometimes my heart still breaks for my mother. I'm her age now and some days I feel like I've turned into her because I don't know know what she'd be like next year. I too thought she'd show up even though my father and I were holding her when she passed. I can speak for Americans, our hearts went out to you because you were so young.
I just finished Harry's book and it's amazing. I had no idea all that him and Meg went through and it breaks my heart. I'm so glad he wrote this book & that they have their documentary.
@@VS-vx5hi While he is obviously very charming, there is a feeling like there is something missing with him, possibly self awareness or possibly awareness of what is happening around him / the affects of his words and actions on other people. I don't know how much therapy he has had however he still seems to exhibit signs of ptsd and a persecution complex, the way he talked about his late mother made it sound like he is still struggling with grief / past trauma which may have sadly stunted a small part of his emotional development. Then again I am wasting my time to type this which says nothing good about me.
Oh, come on! Why don't all of you realize that this show is just show business, I believe the audience was told before the show to give him a standing ovation! And I heard or read that the audience was hand picked.
On September 11, 1974, when Colbert was ten years old, his father and his two brothers nearest in age, Peter and Paul, died in the crash of Eastern Air Lines Flight 212 while it was attempting to land in Charlotte, North Carolina.They were en route to enroll the two boys at Canterbury School in New Milford, Connecticut.He has discussed the impact on him and his philosophy of grief and suffering.
@@debrajohnson6129 you mean a studio audience who got to sit near a British royal wasn't just pulled from off the streets without being vetted by security? 😲. behave!
That’s what the British media does - one sibling is dutiful, perfect, and wise. The other is lost, immature, and scandalous. It’s why the two brothers could do the same thing and the media report it two different ways.
they didnt though, they literally didn't. this is all absolute whitewashing the history - for years and years he was the favourite prince and the press played a huge part in that. He directly began attacking the press so they immediately turned on him. they ARE vile, but theres literally no evidence william was protected over him when william and kate have been under a microscope
I lost my father at age 2 in tragic circumstances. He was 26 and my mom 24. It's a wound one doesn't ever get over. It didn't make me angry and bitter. It just taught me to be strong and resilient, and grateful for the love I received.
Sorry you had that experience. I lost my loved ones at young age too. My older brother was murdered, shot to death when he was 28. Our father died at 46 of cancer and I was 14. They would not have wanted me whining on the rest of my life using their misfortune to make my money. I would be ashamed of having a relative like this Wenger
@@Swameh He’s a 38 year old man that was upset because he wasn’t getting as much money as he wanted from his dad so he “fled” to America and is getting paid over 150 million for his interviews acting like a victim.
@@lindajohnson7276 Because his family are part of the problem. Imagine your brother telling you to pretend not to know him when in school, or your dad can't even bring himself to give you a hug when telling you your mum has passed away, or your family leaking stories about you to the press that killed your mum. I'm with Harry!
@@barbaraaraujo7700 As honest as he can probably be. Why? Do you know different? Do you know him and the family personally? Are you part of the British press? If so, please enlighten. Me, I’ll watch. I’ll read the book. I’ll listen and come up with my own thoughts. But thanks!
There are several people who knew Harry and Meghan in private and who have demonstrated the countless L1es told by the couple in recent years. (I suggest Tom Bower's book: "Meghan and Harry and The War Between the Windsors". This book is here on youtube and was done through interviews with eyewitnesses, such as Harry's friends, Meghan's childhood friends, former palace officials, etc.) One of the first proven lies, even before the release of the book and documentary, was the story that they would have been married privately before the official ceremony, which was denied by the Archbishop of the Anglican Church who married them. (This claim made by Meghan in Oprah's interview was not even commented on in the book and documentary, which shows that it was really a L1e).
Meghan L!ed about not knowing much about the Royal Family. But she read every book and magazine she could find. Even blogged about the Royal Family, and visited the royal palace before she met Harry. (Ninaki Priddy, her childhood friend confirmed this information). Meghan knew exactly who they were. Meghan also lied about Archie not being given a "royal title" because of "r....." when in fact, it’s the LAW from 1917 that decides that. They claim to want "private lives" while attempt to grab as much attention as they possibly can from the media. She also L!ed about the Royal Family treating her like a "prisoner" by taking away her passports and keys. She took no less than 13 luxury vacations while in the Royal Family. How did she leave the country, if she never had her passport? She L!ed about the Royal Family being “the family she never had” but only one year earlier she had gave a speech about her father “being the best father in the world”. Meghan l!ed about her husbands divorce. They divorced because she cheated on him, but she L!ed to cover it up. She lyyed about identifying as a "black" woman. For years, she wrote that she “identified as white” and she L!ed about paying for college. Her family paid for it all. She L!ed about the Royal Family cutting them off financially, while prince Charles had been funding those freeloaders long after they wanted to go "financially independent" from those Royals. Meghan L1ed about the Royal Family not teaching her how to be a duchess. When, in fact, she got some of the best advisors from day one. (Samanta Cohen, Queen Elizabeth's trusted adviser, prepared Meghan for royal duties). She L!ed about wanting to be "financially independent" and make her own money. Then they was bitching and moaning about the Royals not “financially supporting them” and its utter bullshit to demand financial independence, while also demanding being paid. Meghan L!ed about not being able to meet the Queen at Balmoral because “Archie could not fly on planes” while Meghan had flown with Archie on several planes to exotic vacations. She just diddnt want the Queen to see the Queen`s own great-grandson. Meghan L1ed about not abusing her staff. While several eye-witnesses said she bullied them and was “emotionally cruel” And she L1ed about “not seeing her sister Samantha in 20 years” while there is photographic evidence that was not true. Meghan also L1ed about “having nothing to do” with the book Finding Freedom. Later, she admitted in court that she had L1ed, and helped write it. The whole book was about trashing all the Royals, and proclaim how "great" Meghan was in every way possible. Meghan l!ed about “not planning ahead” to leave the Royal Family. More than a year before leaving the family, she had set up plans, and even copyrighted "SussexRoyal" in order to make money from the moment they left. Meghan l!ed about abandoning her dogs when she met "just call me Harry" when she got married, and because her dogs would clash with her new lifestyle. But she changed her story two years later to “it was the dogs fault” but that was utter bullshit. She abandoned her dogs, plain and simple.
Meghan even said on Oprah interview that the possible brown colour of the baby would be a problem to the Royal Family and now Harry said in a recent interview that was not true and that it was the media that distorted things. 😮💨😒😒😒😒 😡 Most of these untrue allegations were included in Harry's book. By the way, most of his book is just ridiculous complaints, self-pitty and supposed trauma coming from silly things like: “When Will and I were a child he used to say 'The last one home stinks, then he sped off home immediately, giving me no time to catch up. I grew up with constant shame thinking I smelled awful” 😒🙄Oh, "poor" rich prince who never knew what it was like to have real problems in life.
I lost my dad when I was 19. That means I already knew what was right and wrong. And losing my father who I talked to every single day just felt so wrong. I’m 35 now and I still long for him. So, I hope you cherish your parents. It will never be the same when they’re gone.
@@katarzynamuszynska5426 and Charles is Harry’s father. I couldn’t ever do that to my father, even though Harry doesn’t name Charles specifically he implies it through his comments about his stepmother. He has the typical broken marriage syndrome.
@@Cooking_Through_Time your situation is better tho. You never knew him, so, you aren't missing lived experiences. Just the thought of what they could have been. Much easier trauma to navigate.
I clicked on this 100% certain that I would watch a bit to see how it went, and then watch something else. I mean… almost 40 minutes… that’s forever in TH-cam time. But here I am 40 mins later to say that this was an excellent interview. 👍👍👍
Shannon Flaherty, so sorry your mom transitioned from this life at such a young age for her--and you. I hope loved ones gathered around you and built you up and helped you grow resilient and strong.
My father died 12 years ago. I still can’t accept his passing. I remembered that after he passed, I will feel him when I walk on the street or passed a tree when the wind is blowing. I feel him when I go on my runs. Miss his voice. I wish, I had a recording of his voice. I wish my kids have met him. I always miss you, Hanno.
I was 12 years old when my father committed suicide. My life was fractured from that moment on. I sometimes wonder who I would be if my father had lived. When Harry talked about “magic thinking” surrounding his mother… when he so candidly spoke about pretending she was “in hiding” and would “come and save him and his brother.” Jesus, that really brought me to my knees. I KNOW what that feels like. Growing up, I thought I was the only one who felt that way. As an adult now- I know that I’m not. Sometimes just knowing you’re not alone can make all the difference. I was lucky enough to also “find my purpose.” I have worked in the field of mental health for over a decade. Most importantly, I work with children who have experienced trauma and profound loss. I try to be the person I wish that I had after my father committed suicide. It’s important everyone find their voice and share their stories. There is so much potential for true, meaningful change and growth when we feel strong enough to tell our truth. I know what I shared was long winded; I’m sorry for that. However, I hope someone found something inspiring in it. Even if this speaks to just one person- it’s totally worth it. You are so much stronger than you think…
Sounds like you have some but peace be with you sister. I was twice your age when my dad killed himself but there's never a good age to enter the club we are in. When your father leaves...like THAT, it fundamentally and forever changes you. Props to you for making lemonade out of those sour ass lemons & using your pain to heal others.
My Grandma died when I was nearly 8 and I used to pretend she was in Australia and one day she was coming back for me…We lived near a church with a huge cross and I used to pray for her to come back…Did that for years…as an adult I understand why but it’s soothing to know someone else did the same thing…🥰🥰
My dear, you have no idea how your words resonated! I lost both parents in my childhood. I think about them everyday and the sense of loss is great. I don't have lots of memories for I was very young. Yet I remember and feel their parental authentic love. I sympathize with Prince Harry and with everyone who lost their parents at such young age. You're lucky you have a job that helps people who went through same trauma that you went through. It's true, as you give you can heal. Continue being strong ❤️
Way to go Harry and Stephen. I hate how the press and others attack Harry and his family daily. All the love and protection to you. Stay away from the press
It's the British press that is so vicious. That's why they sought refuge in America. Originally they wanted to go to British Columbia and Canadians would have loved him as Governor General. But the Palace put the kibosh on that so they wound up in California.
He's lying through his fake teeth dear - honestly I cannot believe any American is silly enough to fall for it - she just never intended staying bc she only wanted to take that Title to LA to milk it for Fame/ Money & the Pseudo A Lister Cewebrity she's never managed to get even after Marrying a Producer. She sacked the ghost writer & it is ALL her made up nonsense - if you'd grown up with the RF & lived in the UK you'd know he's lying & Those NEWSPAPERS she showed were 🇺🇸 newspapers! We DON'T even get them here, get a clue! H's life has been well documented, he was TWELVE when his mother died, he CANNOT rlly remember anything; it's made up nonsense sorry - & much of it is deliberate lies. (& In the UK H says⚠️ there WAS NO⚠️ rac**m.) 🙏💜🇬🇧💜🌏💜
Really super fascinating interview. I was 15 when my mother passed at 44. Had so many dreams of her showing up on our doorstep. I am now 59. I am absolutely addicted to shows that reunite adult children with a parent separated at a young age. There is so much I want to share and say, and just catch-up. I cannot imagine the pain adopted people experience - not knowing what happened to a parent or why they left, but the ache and desire to be reunited is the same.
I think I sense of resentment in Harry against MSM. I feel like he blames his family (The Firm) and MSM for the death of his mother. I think he feels that his family pushed his mother away ‘cause she was too influential in regards to her public persona that she’d overshadow the Firm and take over. He blames MSM for pushing his mother into the drama that ended with his parents getting a divorce, playing them against one another in public
There were so many times that Stephen could’ve related his pain of losing his brother and dad at such a young age, but he instead listened and didn’t make it about him.
@@annevetter6864 That's pretty cold. I think any human being who lost their parent so tragically at such a young age would naturally be so effected by it that it becomes a big part of their life - moreso when the parent is a worldwide beloved figure.
that family is far from beautiful. there's 3 sides of the story and his is making him money. plus he wasn't the only one who lost a mother, bit surely knows how to mention her every second for profit.
@Indigo565 starve, I'll give you a little trip In the bronx neighborhoods, the shelters. Africa, Haiti ect those ppl are starving. he doesn't want a job he wants money, doesn't matter who gets dragged.
@Indigo565 btw do you think he should mentioned how his brother is bold in a mock manner or how his brother looked like Diana but harry said his looks are fading. yup that's def the things nice ppl say. The lord sees ugly.
I lost my father in an car accident when I was barely 11 and he was just 41. It was in 1992. His loss definitely continues to impact me to this day. The way he describes filters is spot-on. Therapy definitely helps. 💖🦋
Grief doesn't excuse hate, for his family. He is mentally ill. I'm older and I miss my sweet mother every day, but I don't blame the world or my family for everything that is wrong. He needs to grow up.
Why? There is a saying in UK and out of respect for family, "you don't air your dirty laundry in public" meaning what happens in a family stays in the family!! That why he's lost all the fans he used to have, spilling the beans on your own family is so disrespecful!! Would you?
A little hard to do when he British tabloids are pumping out nothing but sewage about you. They have been relentless since the day Diana died. It's time to fight back and the RF should have led the way but instead they were complicit, just like they were with Diana. They will never learn.
Hey Sarah , Apologies for dropping this here I came across your you Tube channel and I would love to know more better if you don't mind, I'm guessing you must be an honest person, because I always found your comments to be a nice and respectful person.if it's okay with you, I'd love to be friend with you, but if it sounds odd or embarrassing in any way please don't embarrass me by replying.hope you're having a wonderful day with your family may God bless you all..
Two men with such undeniably different lives (from most people and from one another) seeming to relate and take one another so seriously is just a truly good thing to see.
Its because Harry is grounded. Unfortunately a few people here in the UK, included the papers, don't seem to understand he was bored into the family. He didn't choose that life and when he decided he didn't enjoy it and wanted out, just like his mum, they set to destroy him. I don't mind the Royal Family, but they've treated him like shit. And after his and Meghan's Netflix documentary, the British press just proved him and Meghan right by carrying on with the shit. Sadly, a lot of idiot British people believe it. For example in the documentary he talked about the cottage they were gifted by the Queen, Nottingham Cottage. The press and some idiots got annoyed about this claiming "They'd been gifted a cottage and they are moaning. That's bigger than my flat". That wasn't the point of that piece. They are very well aware they are privileged. The point of that was, the arsehole UK press were pretty much making out they were gifted Kensington Palace, that they were living in a mansion. They were trying to show, yes, it was a nice gift, but it wasn't a massive mansion that the press made it out to be.
I agree & think this will be THE interview that has the most impact so far, & will definitely bring the public to his side. Finally, we learn the truth over the narrative.
The sense that the loved one that just passed is not gone but somewhere else and will come back seems to be a natural feeling and I’m so glad to hear that. I thought me and my daughter were the only ones to feel that way. When her father died she was 12 and she had the feeling that daddy wasn’t gone but would come back. Never told her I felt that way too so I wouldn’t give her false expectations. How incredibly helpful can be to share your thoughts and feelings about losing someone.
Imagine Colbert, who was only 10 when his father and twin brothers died in a plan crash, covering this topic without falling apart or making it about himself. Respect.
I was 10 when my abuela (grandmother) suddenly and unexpectedly died. I was convinced she was just playing an elaborate prank and that before long she'd reveal it was all a joke. Even after the funeral I was expecting her to show up. I don't remember when or how specifically I stopped believing that. You're definitely not alone in that!
When Colbert asked Harry how it felt like to outlive his mother, it reminded me of how Colbert's father died in a plane crash at age 53 along with two of Colbert's brothers when Colbert was 10 years old. Colbert is now 58. He was definitely asking that question from a place of having gone through it before himself.
Most people out live parent’s..
@@Margret-Anne Yes the true tragedy is if your children die before you
@@Margret-Anne you know what he meant..
I'm not a Colbert fan, but this piece was simply brilliant, and your observation is spot on to this experience.
@@Margret-Anne that's definitely how it's supposed to play out
This interview was 1000 times better than the one on 60 minutes.
Absolutely agree. Harry does well on talk shows it would appear. I loved seeing the fun side of him we always used to see
He wasn't questioned about his inconsistencies. Harry and Stephen appealed to the emotions of the viewers to distract them from the lack of logic in Harry's narrative.
TOTALLY!!! Anderson (the journalist) could use some tips from Stephen (the comedian)..LOL
maybe a glass of Tequila helped
@@sk-2106 He wasn't so happy when Anderson Cooper asked why he hasn't given up his titles. Lol.
Thankyou for this wonderful interview with Prince Harry It was so heart warming .He has such a wonderful sense of humour as well as being serious in the right context. Have a wonderful Happy life Harry.
Colbert is a master interviewer! Very thoughtful, humble and incisive without being pushy. Excellent conversationalist.
What part was incisive?
Very American for Colbert. Direct to the points and diplomatic at the same time. I really liked his approach.
Plu Colber Does have beautiful wife,
He has beautiful wife. He is very incisive and funny.
Or was he being nice because he doesn't want to be in his next book?
So many comments about the interview but I'll keep them to myself and comment on how beautiful it is to see so many people sharing their stories grief and supporting for eachother. My love to you all. ❤️
We have to cheer up each other
So well said ❤
well said, the only good thing cause the interview is an embarrassment and colbert a paid actor. is no one going to challenge this liar? of course not he would not dare go to an actual person that can really interview him, Shapiro wants a piece, megyn Kelly too among others
Very classy comment
💜💜💜
I'm reading a lot of comments here from people who lost their parents at a young age. I cannot imagine that kind of loss. My parents made it to their mid eighties before passing within five weeks of each other.
When my sister and I were going through our parents' effects, she asked me what I'd like to have. I chose a bookmark of mother's and a favourite sweater of dad's. Now, when I settle back on the sofa, wearing my dad's sweater and opening my latest book, it is as if both mum and dad are there, quietly enjoying the day with me.
I have a very similar story💕
Aww, that's lovely... I ❤ this x
Dad Died when I was 2!, it was Easier?, for Me!, to Talk About Him!, IF I WAS 10?, I really couldn't Comment!, but, my Brother Andrew died last Year!, HITS YA!, Never gonna See him Again!, DIFFERENT?.
I'm so happy you were able to have that. That's every kids dream. I was 8 when I lost my dad, also have thankfully a big brother. We're forever damaged, but it doesn't give someone the right to do this. Not to mention, "Willie" was 10000xs nicer then my big brother was to me
@David Anderson, Cherish those memories and those articles you have to remember your parents by, they are precious. I always find it bazaar when I hear people pass comments assuming it is somehow easier when parents pass away either before you are old enough to remember, or when you are an adult, be it 22 like I was or very much older. At the end of the day they are you pr parents, so I don’t think it matters how old you, it can still be just as devastating can’t it? I think we saw that at the queens funeral, with how wrecked her children looked. There is never a ‘good’ age for you to lose your parent, especially if you are close to them.
I had just turned 22 when I lost my dad and it was the January after Princess Dianna died, when my daughter was just 13 days old. He died in a house fire which was all over the news so I understand a little about the press intrusion too. I think that’s why I feel a bit of a connection to Prince Harry and understand him a little. It’s so painful losing a parent, and you don’t get over it, you learn to accept they are never coming back at some stage but I understand a lot of what he has said about the shock. I only cried when I saw my dads coffin. The next time I cried was about 10 years later. It was the 25 anniversary of his death on the 6th and I was just very quiet all day because it still hurts, even now. My daughter who has the sam humour as him said she is sorry. She hasn’t t had the chance to know him as she figured they would get along well, and I started to say you would like a house…. I then stopped as I still can’t say sentences like a house on fire. I still struggle to watch tv shows if they show burnt corpses because my dads death certificate says he died from burns which is unusual as most fires tend to say smoke inhalation.
People don’t think either , as I discovered when my dad died, when we were at the funeral home, they asked if we had a favourite outfit we would like him to be dressed in. She clearly hadn’t bothered to see cause of death, we were like he died in a house fire. I don’t think any of his clothes would of survived.
Then to make matters worse, she said would you like to see him? We were like are you serious? Did you bother to look up any details about my dad before you walked in here? They had to identify him from his dental records, so no, I don’t think we we want to be left with that as our last memory of our dad Thank you very much!
It was crazy, it was bad enough when a neighbour asked what he looked like! At least she had the excuse of old age.
I've been a secret Colbert fan for quite a while, now, and seen dozens of interviews with lots of people. This is possibly the best he's ever done.
Hey
When my brother passed at 24 from a car accident, I was in college. I really thought I lost my mind becuase I could not wrap my mind around him being gone forever, for a very very long time. My mind would tell me other things. Like he went away to my grandparents house, he went on a trip. That he was fine and would come back. Before this interview, I have never heard anyone else speak about "magical thinking" I just thought I was crazy. It is a good feeling to know that I am not the only one with this experience.
Out of all the people don’t trust Harry to help you
@@ButterflyAmbienceVideos Harry already helped him... it's too late Stacie... the gig's up - people are realising Harry's actually a *gulp* nice guy 🙀
@ Natasha B of all the people don’t trust Stacie to help you!!! You had a tragic situation that both you and Harry went through…that’s why you can relate and understand what he is speaking about!!! So sorry for your lost. I pray that you find comfort in you memories and the times that you shared with your brother…just know that he will always live in your heart forever!!!❤
@@sandaramoore9660 I was helping him by saying don’t trust Harry in general. You’re being a creep putting on the nice act after clearly targeting me.
@@jangles8061 nice guy? Sounds like your easily fooled and manipulated
I personally have outlived my brother who died of lupus at 29, he was 7 years older than me. I have now recently outlived my mother who died of cancer at 33, im turning 34 this year. It's quite a different feeling knowing they died so young and here i am living through the days they never got. I wear my mothers ring permanently and my brother's chain. They're with me everyday, sharing with them the life they never got to see. Until we meet again.
I wear my mother's ring always too. She passed at 33 when I was 7. I'm turning 36 this year. 🤗
So sorry for your losses. Grief is just unbearable. I still wear my fathers wedding ring too and I will not take off my wedding rings. A friend told me I won’t move on unless I take them off. This is not going to happen. We were married for 50 years, I still feel married to my husband. I don’t think anyone understands unless it happens to them.
Ahh , sorry for your loss .
Oh wow. Bless you for sharing 🙏
@TajEbrahim
Losing siblings and parents so young is a pain noone should experience and my heart goes out to you. When I was a teenager my dad 46 and brother15 died young too as did Mums family ..I dont pretend to have great wisdom but mum and I were really close and when she died I experienced the strangest of moments during the darkest of times. As I mourned I suddenly felt a tidal wave of joy engulf me.... and I knew.. right at that moment...that she was reuniting with her son husband siblings parents.. Mums message that day was clear....life is but a blink of an eye.. A necessary passage.. like childhood.. its not home.. ..Mum closed her eyes and when she opened them again she was back home..surrounded by family.. . Love that strong cannot die... it transforms as we transform ... I still talk to her.. wear her cross and .. sense her .. just around the corner......I miss my family terribly but know that one day ..in the blink of an eye... Ill be back home too. In the meanwhile Ill carry their love forward and do my best to share it as its been shared with me.
The fact that so many of these comments are about people's own personal experiences, and the way that this interview touched them, really speaks a lot to both the interviewee and the interviewer. Exceptionally well done gentlemen. Much respect.
Indeed!
Very very true. Nice to see connection
Stephen did a really good job interviewing the prince. I haven't seen the 60 Minutes interview. I look forward to reading Harry's book. I read his mother's biography Diana: Her True Story years ago.
@@liviavallendenez Colbert's interview is better than Anderson Cooper's, and I like Cooper. On some level Colbert relates to him I think. His father and two of his older brothers died in a plane crash when he was ten and he has described things similarly to Harry.
I so agree!
I soooo enjoyed see & hearing this lovely man again ❤ He has always been and will continue to be my favourite "Royal" Im extremely happy that he & Meaghan are happy.
Loved this. Stephen was not interested in using Harry for a scoop. He was genuinely interested. That’s why it went well.
That was in the contract.
@@beatabeata2905 again…get a life, this is pathetic…really
@@Bexinja Yes, you are right. They are pathetic. Jeez.
😆🤣 ok yup, we all know these late shows don't have a spine. Harry will tell his lies as best as possible, he dare say he didn't say that, it's in the book and in the audio mr. liar. everything is someone else fault never yours. narcissistic at it's finest.
@@ellysarmiento5001 happy with yourself now? Leave the man alone. We love Harry ❤️
The comments I'm seeing here made me tear up. I'm 38 and my parents are alive and well but I think often, "what will happen in their passing"? I can't cope with the thought. It was astonishing to hear Harry thought his mother was alive and was going to come back to get him and his brother. And to see comment after comment similar to Harry's about a parent passing but expecting letters and appearances has made me infinitely more knowledgeable about grief, human connections and coping. Reading such accounts has broken my heart into a million pieces and I feel for every child who's lost a parent too soon. Harry also talking about revealing 'that' number for the sake of other veterans was an eye-opener. This interview is a masterclass on the complexity of the human mind. I found it to be so insightful, like a revelation to a new perspective I just didn't think existed. As a viewer and knowledge seeker, I appreciated these uncharted perspectives so much.
I used to send myself into anxiety attacks thinking what it would be like if I lost my parents. Asking myself how I would react? How I would feel? All I can say is, whatever you imagine you think it might be like, multiply that by 20. My mom had a terminal disease and I thought I had come to terms by the time she passed, and I was so wrong. It was nothing like I thought it would be or feel like. It was worse than I could have ever imagined. Then 4 months later I lost my dad. 7 years later I still can’t find any appropriate words in the English language that comes close to describing what that Loss and void feels like. No words
The one piece of advice I can offer is to ask now for stories and answers. Even if they decide to put that information in a place where it's not accessible until after they pass, those stories are part of your family's history. They helped shape the people you are. Toward the end of his life, the grandkids asked dad about his military service, and he was finally ready to share. It helped us understand him so much better, and to breach some gaps. We were lucky enough to have time. When I lost my partner unexpectedly, I realized that I and the kids weren't going to get that chance, and it makes a big difference in finding closure.
@@bjdefilippo447this is such good advice! My parents have both passed and I’m grateful for the stories they told me about their own childhoods and experiences before getting married and becoming parents. They were real people before we kids came along 😊
@@bjdefilippo447 I agree with the other poster, it's such great advice. I started to do that in the last 2 years after my dad got Covid. I've emailed myself little blurbs to remember so I can share these with my children. My dad particularly is an inspiration but you'd never know it. I always knew he was an avid sportsman (from tennis to squash to chess) but I never knew more details than that. I learned that in his 20s, he strolled into a chess club in Marlebone, applied for membership and won the next tournament. And how he would randomly ask any people playing badmindon in Hyde Park if he could play too, only to be scoffed at as a 'weirdo' (understandable!) but when he would be given the chance, he'd amaze people with his skills and some would in turn ask to have a go with him or join in for a double game. Such stories are meaningless to others but priceless to me.
Trust me the pain of losing a parent is unbearable special if you were close to them. Treasure yours. I lost 50% of myself when I lost my dad and I know no one can fill the void neither my kids or partner..it's just to painful
As a military spouse, Harry is 100% when it comes to how veterans deal with the question that civilians ask (some with geniune curiousity...some more malice) "have you killed anyone?" Most who have, don't want to talk about it because that normally means they were in the true thicket of war and seen or experienced so much that normal people shouldn't. The ones that brag about it either are lying or should be behind bars for public safety
I've heard people say that before. I always figured that anybody who has been in the military during a war has either killed someone or acted as support services for those who have. That is what military is for. It is for killing and combat. They don't spend all day shooting at paper targets for grins and giggles. To ask if military members kill people is one of those questions that answers itself.
Our whole family has served. I was the first female in a Green Beret battalion. My husband is a retired Green Beret. I say this for context because I don't think my son when he was in Iraq would have been able to share what was happening to him if I'd not had military experience in a combat unit. I listened and advised when he called me to tell me he'd killed someone and didn't know if God would forgive him. We walked through the details, and I assured him God would forgive him. There are many more stories like that from my son and others. I'm so glad Harry is working with war vets. That means the world to me.
I’ll choose lying, as I don’t think he is smart enough to be deviant.
@@majebrennan5668 I have to say, I find that utterly abhorrent.
I agree with you 100% considering he said the was worried about his safety and then he says things that could bite him in the back side.
Amazing chappie, so down-to-earth and humble. All the best to you Harry
I lost my mother at age 21. She was 48 at the time of her death. When I eventually reached 50, it became crystal clear that I had not expected to live past 48. I was stunned and amazed that I’d “made it”. All those years I’d had the niggling thought in the back of my mind that I would follow in her footsteps and die at 48. 😮
My father died at age 65 two months to the day after his retirement. When I retired at 66 and got past that 2-month-post-retirement mark, I breathed a sigh of relief. Loss and grief really messes with our heads!
I had exactly the same experience. I sympathise with anyone who goes through grief and loss. It is so confusing and there is no right way to deal with it. Best wishes to you.
my dad and all 7 of his siblings died around 54yrs old - plus or minus 3 months.
almost exactly half of my cousins on that side that have reached 54 (23 total so far) have died at age 54 - plus or minus 3 months:12 in total (so far ... another 9 to yet reach 54).
all died from "Sudden Death Syndrome" - which is as shitty as it sounds: you just drop over dead.
I have two siblings still alive (part of the 11 that survived being 54).
I turned 54 two months ago.
I don't know what your mom died of at 48 (you don't say) or your dad but ... MAYBE you spent 27 years fretting about nothing real besides "feels."
what a waste.
Oh wow...😔 It's okay to still grieve regardless of how long or how old you are. These are extremely serious, life threatening circumstances that only you experienced. No-one else has the right to judge you.
Your life matters, your trauma is acknowledged. I see you. I feel for your pain. You matter. All souls matter. You are a fighter. *Be* *proud* *of* *that* *every* *day* , and know *you* *are* *not* *alone* in how you feel.
Ditto
Oh my God me too I was 14 and she was 48 and even though she was my adoptive mum I spent the whole of my 4th year waiting subconsciously to die too. I am 55
now.
Wow. It never hit me that Diana was only 36 years old when she lost her life. I somehow didn't process how young she actually was, and how more life she should have had.
Wow. Yeah, that didn't really occur to me either. I was just 16 when she got married. We all watched that, and my best friend was there in London at the time it happened.
She would only be 60-ish
Yes, she died younger than Meghan was when Meghan entered the Royal circles. Remarkable and tragic for all.
She was a lovely person. Love Harry he has his Grandmother's sense of humor..
@@adhanetkidane But this video isn't about them.
I didn't want it to end...I could have watched these two for another hour.
But that is just paid promotion.
@@beatabeata2905 omg!! Get a life! Jeez
You can always come past the ship Maria and see your old Admiral Boom. I have good tequila and Mexican tapas! I know how much you like those fresh strawberry margaritas. Enough said. Saturday at noon Cherry Tree Lane!
Love Harry>he’s gullible. William encouraged Harry to wear Nazi. Uniform. Liked making you laugh
I enjoyed it also
He has an amazing sense of humor, you can't not love him. the media tries to make him out to be this bad guy when he's really not.
He's a loser.
I came in to comment about how amazing his sense of humour is! I hope we get to hear more from him.
he is a liar and a traitor even if you think hes funny
Maybe because your “worldview” is largely “informed” by trash tabloids who have a close relationship with the Palace/s. Good for Harry and Meghan for having the courage and conviction to leave that dung heap and make a real life for themselves on their own terms.
@@castlequay2327take a chill pill.. no one is perfect... That's if he really lied, not the press twist!
Going through the comments and I just realized how therapeutic this this interview is. To see everyone sharing their various experiences with loss and grief and also how they relate to what Harry is saying is very heartwarming. May God confort the grieving hearts of all those bereaved.
I don't think his family ,even his brother, understand how losing his mom at 12 marked him. William was 16, the age difference is important. You need your mom much more when you are 12. Even if they were the same age, loss impacts siblings differently.
🙏💔🌹🕊️
Giving race baiter a platform.... not done Mr. Colbert
Thanks for your insight Derrick. I feel the same way.
His father lost his mother three months ago, and Harry and his wife have been mocking his grandmother, and disrespecting her life's work, on international media. Harry speaks a lot, but cares little.
I've never enjoyed an interview by Stephen more than this one with Prince Harry. Two truly lovely men speaking together. You'd think they were best friends, or should be, anyway.
one of the best Stephen has ever done
Your sad!
Get a life!!!
I could do without Stephen's classness penis jokes and comments. What a turn off.
Ha two users
@@ButterflyAmbienceVideos 👈😆🤡
As an indigenous woman from the south west of WA, we believe our lost loved ones still walk with us everyday. Their spirit never leaves us.
They do trust me
My experience is that that is true, Laura. The past is not irretrievably behind us. it is here, now. Love from a white woman in SA.
Yep👍 I’m also part Indian & many of us have these gifts of dreams & visitations. It is absolutely true, runs in my family…and yes they are with us.
Yes @lauranebro1111 , I too believe this to be true 🙏🏻👼🙏🏻 I know my 18yr old son is constantly with me all the time 🥲🥲 it’s such a pity that we CANNOT SEE them 🙏🏻💚 blessings from Ireland 🇮🇪☘️💔💔
Yes I believe it very strongly as I had been directed in the right path when I was totally lost in my life.
Fascinating interview, so glad this showed up in my list again. Going to buy the book now. I’d like to hear or read his take on “The Crown”.
Lmao he's an idiot and you are contributing to his wealth by buying the book. He does absolutely nothing but cry about everything and demands money for security from yoir government
Oh Harry Loved his grandparents! Especially The Queen!
Looking for the audible 😂
I think she manipulated him wisely!
in the darkest times of my life, I have only made it through by the skin of my teeth and the repetition of this simple phrase: “this is not how my story ends.”
I refused to let anyone else tell my story for me, and I wish that you, Harry, could have had the same view of things. But your story was always being told by someone else: the British press. I am so glad that you have finally had the opportunity to put your own story out there. From one scapegoat to another…thank you for living to tell the tale and thank you for narrating the audiobook. It has given your words more weight and poignancy, in my opinion. I can’t imagine this book being narrated by anyone else and having the ability to touch my heart as effectively.
I’m sure you won’t see this comment in the ocean of others, but Harry, I am proud of you! I am rooting for you and your family! Thank you for being the real whistleblower of the royal family, and thank you for your activism.
So well said
Hi! This fellow scapegoat also agrees with you. Sending you love: Yasmine ❤️
With a surname like yours I would expect nothing less. ❤️
Could not agree more Rebecca!!
Yes!!! Absolutely. Great message, Great words. Perfect ending . Spot on xxxx
Harry, I applaud you for your comments around 08:30 ish.
As a British veteran (who never personally served alongside or met Prince Harry, although I know people who have - as veterans and serving officers), when the leak about his "kill score" came out, I knew it had to have been taken out of context. Say what you like about him, but he's a better officer and human being than that. All the people I knew who had met him didn't believe it, either. At all. Harry started the Invictus Games, he has worked tirelessly with and for veterans, and he is the only living member of the Royal Family who has served in the military in any *REAL* capacity (the only other one to go to a warzone was Andrew, and other Falklands vets do not have good things to say about him... He never served like Harry did). All of the others didn't even complete proper basic training, making the top brass uniforms they like strutting round in a joke... They never earned them... They just got a pass because of who they were (especially his father... Ask any RAF officer about how seriously Cranwell takes Charles and his time spent there...). Harry did everything the rest of us did and made it clear he didn't want special favours. He earned his uniform. He "gets it".
Having lost friends to suicide, as a result of PTSD from their service, I thank him for his efforts in reducing the number of brothers and sisters in arms that we lose every year (not to war, but in the battle against PTSD). He's done (& is still doing) far more than our current Commander in Chief... Good on you, Harry.
Great comment. You understand better than all other commentators with their nose out of joint over his comment.
@@jckung3914 Thank you for your kind reply 👍
TP, I totally agree!
Which is why I found it ridiculous he was not allowed to wear his uniform at the Queen's funeral. Working royal or not, he went to war and earned it. Absurd rule.
@@crochetingcanuck In fairness, his apparel followed the standard veteran rules (suit and medals - we don't wear uniform as veterans here).
However... Because the royal family wore their "honorary" uniforms, it created a very stark contrast that grated many of us. Charles, who never bothered completing Cranwell because he was off cavorting with his girlfriend (now wife), parked on the parade ground (a massively disrespectful no-no), and flew directly over the college building (a court martial offence for anyone else), wore full regalia. Anne, who has never attended any military training whatsoever, wore full regalia. Edward, who struggled through the entire first 4 weeks of Royal Marine training (the intro part...) before he quit to become a tea boy for Andrew Lloyd Webber, wore full regalia. William, who completed a mini course at Sandhurst (the Army officer's college, and not the full officer training by any stretch of the imagination...), then transferred to the RAF (which is unheard of - he's the only "RAF officer" who never went to the RAF officer's college, Cranwell) & "flew search and rescue" for all of a couple of hours a week (yes, that was his "service"), wore full RAF regalia. Harry, who completed the full Sandhurst course, served two tours of Afghanistan and was the only one to not see himself as "above" his colleagues because of the title he was born with (he queued for mess like everyone else, told those on duty to go ahead of him in the queue, so they'd get the chance to eat before the next call, etc)... Was treated as lesser because he's "just" a veteran, not a "working" royal (as if they work...).
That contrast made the uniforms & ranks that the rest of us spent blood, sweat, tears, and years earning feel utterly meaningless, because they used ones they'd never earned to denigrate the only person there who had served like the rest of us and earned his rank. It was as if they used the opportunity to crap on his service, which was abhorrent.
To date, Harry is the only living member of that family to fully complete the same training as any other Army officer. No special favours, no shortcuts. It's why he's the only one now that many of us respect.
I love Stephen Colbert He’s a really good interviewer I’m a big fan I’ve been watching for this show long time and he’s the only one who can get serious, witty and make fun of it
Agreed; he made it very easy to watch and handled a delicate and as he said, at times quite 'surreal' situation very well. Years ago, such an interview was unthinkable (by British standards at least). BTW, Is he (Stephen) a descendant of past screen actress Claudette Colbert?
He is a good interviewer, but he also lost his father and two of his older brothers in a plane crash when he was 10-Harry was so relaxed because he knew he was speaking with someone who could empathize 100%.
@@oliviastar3812 No, he's not related to Claudette Colbert. She used Colbert as a stage name, her real name was Claudette Chauchoin.
Did you know that Harry wasn't actually in front of that audience? It's all fake.
@@ronakio He was in front of Stephen Colbert, that’s all that matters
Mr.Colbert....you certainly 💯 need an award-winning Oscar for this interview...
Oscars are for movies.
You mean an Emmy
My mum passed when I was 37. I'm now 53 and I miss her more than ever.
I’m 74 , my mom died in 2000. Now I understand her more than ever. I know what Harry is feeling.
It happened to me too at that age and my only son was 5 months old. I think of her everyday of my life, she was my soulmate
Good for them for capitalizing what so many people have done for centuries out of your lives. Brave, brave, brave in every way.
Same ! I really miss her love, even though I am a mother of a grown up son myself.
Sorry for your loss.
Great interview. One of the few I’ve seen where the interviewer didn’t preconceive or lead the responses of a royal. Colbert truly is interested in what Harry has to say, as shown in how conversant they are. Well done.
I am totally 💯 with you on this one well said ❤
I totally agree… halfway through the interview I took a pause, to relate to his fight for equal and fair Justice. As a fellow veteran and exiled military whistleblower, I can relate to how the media and superior forces can try to silence you… but in the end… Divine Truth Prevails 💖
He would make a Great Ambassador for the American Veteran Community.
#NoMoreSuicides 🇺🇸❤️🩹🇺🇸
Yeah. An authentic interview. Well don Stephen Colbert
Very well said.
But remember that the trauma of repeated rejection in your most intimate relationship is something Diana experienced for the majority of her life, being rejected by her own mother and left behind when her mother got together with a new man, being rejected by her father for being the third daughter instead of a son and heir...
And
How would you explain the incident that Diana was mistreated from the start, that her husband Charles spent the night before their wedding in front of the eyes of the world, with his long-term mistress Camilla?!
Camilla never wanted to give Diana any chance to survive emotionally in this marriage, she made sure Diana had absolutely no chance of winning Charles' heart and body, explicitly, and that shows that Camilla is very dangerous and manipulated Charles all along.
Charles had many other sexual relationships but Camilla made it look like a friendship plus sex thing even discussing his other experiences with other women with him...
As Diana said Charles is weak and open to sly manipulation.
Camilla did everything to ride out any other woman's influence on Charles, even his mother's the queen.
Camilla did everything,
in order to use Charles to become queen Camilla one day....
For god sake you Americans are so gullible.
There is a book by Joan Didion called The Year of Magical Thinking. It is about the sudden loss of her husband, the trauma, grief, and temporary psychosis she experienced. I lost my father and brother last summer and I speak to both of them and they speak to me. If you told me that before they died, it would sound crazy. It’s actually comforting. My dad completed his life but I feel like my brother did not. The pain is raw at times and other times the memories bring peace.
Yes, to the pain is raw at times, and other times I smile remembering one whom I loved very much, a son who committed suicide at age 15, 12 years ago.
So very sorry to hear of such a loss.❤
LOVED that book ❤
So sorry for your loss, and thank you for sharing it with us 🌹
He is very charismatic and likeable. I commend him for leaving with her. Watching The Crown (while loosely based on true events) you get to see how suffocating it must be to be apart of that family.
I lost my Dad when I was 15 ,I still miss both my parents,I know they are looking out for me.
Yes I still talk to them.knowing they are with me.
Hi Eileen 👋🏻
Fair play to Stephen Colbert for this interview, really gave a level platform to what Harry is trying to do. I also appreciate that it's uploaded in full and not in snippets.
Yes Cobert was awesome 👏. And Harry ! Oh Gosh he is incredibly honest ! Yes I am giving up on mainstream y media. Never again will I read or hear mainstream media.
Yes! I appreciate that as well. ❤
Harry is trying to destroy his family because of jealously and childish behavior. He's a horrible man who sold his family for money.
@@starlove7043 lol he has been shown to lie many times , but americans love wealthy entitled people playing the victim.
Wish I could like this twice
"I'm convinced that 99.9% of the world's population are walking around with some form of grief, trauma or loss and with that comes these filters that sort of acts as a fog, and every opportunity we have to be able to clean the windscreen, take the filters away and actually see life as it is. To be able to live a truly authentic life, that to me has been the freedom that I have been looking, that I didn't even know I had been looking for my whole life"
I commend Harry on his strength, sensitivity, integrity and honesty here. It's hard to generalise with "the British press" as a whole as there is diversity within it. But a lot of our mainstream media is brutally focused on prioritising profit and personal gain at the expense of humanity, sensitivity and the lives of individual human beings.
Personally I am so sick of reading about Harry in our News papers and social media. It's almost thrust upon us against our Will (pun intended.)
Context is everything. The world needs more people of influence to take Harry's approach to help pave the way to us being better to ourselves and each other as a species.
Very well said!
Seriously!!!!!
Let’s be logical. This man, Harry, declared himself as “A Spare.”
Whether it was faulted unto him during the line of succession, or, through the various reporting (news of 20, 30, 40, and 50 years ago) which was much more orchestrated by the government and news circuits as a type of hush hush.
Therefore, unless Harry overheard all these conversations when he was 1 minute to 3 months old… how would he know?
Who spoke out more of their concerns of “the boys?” The children? Diana, or Charles? Ahem, Diana.
Of note, King Charles is NOT off the hook. Between him & Camilla - I’m positive they were arrogant, ruthless, selfish, evil, and impossible to compete with. A couple of a-holes!
However…. Having myself suffered in silence, self-sabotaged, risen from the ashes as a Phoenix… I’ve learned the hard way…
A few things I know about business - the bottom line, in general, at the level of such prestige, not many: the stockholders, taxpayers, the bottom of the pyramid…. want to hear the complaining & obsessive details of someone who seemingly has it all. I’m not saying people do not have stuff to complain about… but this is a guy, kid, prince, professional who sought therapy. Most ppl who lose their accolades are “lost” because they have NO ONE to turn to.
It’s NOT the fault of the person who reached stardom and popularity - in this case, millionaire Prince Henry (Harold, Harry, H, Haz, etc). At the end of the day, they/we are all still “just ppl.” However, WE put these people on pedestals - and they allowed us to do so.
There is ALWAYS a price to pay with ever choice and decision we make. Therefore. Mr. Prince Harry KNOWS this. If I know this, then I know HE knows this.
Therefore, I have little sympathy of patience for him anymore. As an empath, I had “wishful thinking” Harry went from one pressure to another. Meaning from the Palace to the pants 👖 of Meghan. However, that is not the case. Harry, who is not so hairy in his scalp (heck, neither am I! As we age, hair thins) is not a phoenix, or anyone whose been so oppressed, meek, abused, illiterate, or lived in poverty that he can state his truth as something SO terrible, he can and SHOULD financially profit from it.
I’ve read so many comments. Hundreds, if not thousands. There’s a saying, a penny for your thoughts. This liar, faker, fraud is “R” wording millions!!! Walking away with millions of dollars for his supposed mental and emotional anguishes! That he himself invents! Fans the flames to! Has very little to NO specifics. No evidence. No direct correlation. If anything, he and his wife constantly contradict themselves. Why are you people so blind to their game?
They are hustlers. Grifters. Users. Manipulators. Haters. Posers.
So much so, his claims go against a monarch of so many generations and centuries… 😂 nah bro. You’re not there!
From various reports (e.g., The Independent, author James Patterson, the coining phrase from Consuelo Vanderbilt Balsan - apparently relative to ((cousin to) Winston Churchill & Diana Spencer)).
These people are bred, groomed. No different than our US government. Look at the historical details of the monarchy.
For Harry to step out, as if he’s some type of saint or martyr, why would Harry discuss the most trivial aspects of the background? Circumcisions. Drugs. Loss of virginity. Balding. Paparazzi. Photos. Sounds of clicking of lenses. Life cycles. Protocols. Mottos. What does any of that have to do with racism? Fleeing? Needing 24/7 security?
Okay. So. Who doesn’t have those problems? What society, demographics, fraternity, or environment have similar types of behavior? What has Harry really said? Or taught any of us something we should know? Did he validate us? I hope not. Mostly because mental health is about empowerment in validating oneself. NOT through blame, but through accountability - as in one who finds a steady balance. Which can take years to achieve.
One doesn’t confuse guilt, arrogance, selfishness, insecurities, distress tolerances, emotional regulations, mindfulness, coping skills, and other cognitive behavioral issues that have to do with blame or martyrdom as a hallway pass. Or a fast track to solving lifes problems, as if the Harkles are suddenly the saviors of the day.
Getting past the confusions Harry obviously has - and UNFORTUNATELY had had to deal with… for that, I TRULY sympathize with Harry, but, I can NOT co-sign nor enable the whole idea Harry is trying to sell.
In my opinion, there is still a long road that needs to be traveled.
I’m not sure whose driving Harry’s bus these days… but I do know: life is a journey. A journey full of lessons for us to either learn, or repeat.
Spanish philosopher George Santayana is credited for, “Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.” Churchill paraphrased the statement with “those who fail to learn.”
So what is it then, Harry is hoping to teach his children? If he himself, after all his supposed therapy, can’t get past the most trivial aspects of life?
Let’s face it. No family, relationship, environment, person, situation, job, day, is perfect. What makes Harry so special? When he himself admits to how confused he’s been? All he says is he has a faulty memory. Duh. Who doesn’t? But, maybe that’s a red flag 🚩- as NOT to write a memoir(??)
Even after 2 short years while he’s deflecting … fleeing, escaping, from a country he’s basically denounced. Why should we listen to him? Since he’s even sued his own country for what he claims as a lack of security… I mean really. This man is beyond gross and pathetic.
Totally agree, you commented on the good genuine parts of the interview and I applaud you for it.
100% I would watch these two do a talk show together
This is really a remarkable Interview of two men who have lost a parent when still a child.
@ mark mitterhuber … exactly, it’s life …. Grow up… it’s so hard 😢
I assume you are talking about Prince Harry and Stephen Colbert. If you haven't walked in someone's shoes, you should judge one's actions otherwise.
Well THAT explains the sychophancy and soft balls!! 🙄
Anderson Cooper too.
Curating their interviewers based on personal emotional triggers, nothing suspicious about THAT at ALL 🙄
@@blacksunshine1661 no need to be such a dick
I remember when Stephens’s father died. So many friends were lost in that plane crash. It was awful. He and Harry have that shocking type of death in common, but Harry’s family did not take care of him.
My father passed away when I was 14, when I was 16 I went into a Cafe during my lunch break from work, the man who owned the Cafe, was the spitting image of my dad..could've been identical twins, I spent my lunch every day at that Cafe. I'm 60 now and still feel my dad's presence every now and then. It still saddens me all the things he has missed , he was a wonderful father . I'm sure Harry and William both feel the same, their mom has missed so much too , there's nothing wrong in missing a parent , thinking about that parent...it keeps them with you.
Awww. Did you ever let the man know?
@@beverleyreid563 OO
My father worked for NASA died when i I was 12
@@beverleyreid563 yes Beverley I did, and he was very sweet about it .
My mom died of a brain aneurysm when I was 4 in 1972. Nobody talked about it. My dad remarried 3 months later to a wicked step monster. She would only say things like the worms were eating her and gross things you don’t say to anyone. It wasn’t until I had my own 4 kids when they reached certain ages, like my first trauma at 4 that it saddened me. They wouldn’t remember me. My voice, my love, my smell and how we cuddled and laughed. I wish we had the technology back then that we have now. My dad died in 2016 and I kept his voice mails. So when I miss him I can listen to his messages” Just callin to see how you and the kids are, gimme a call back lis , I love you, this is dad!” I find comfort in those treasures. 😊
Wow I did not expect this interview to be so deep and introspective. Stephen did a good job!
True. But to the point (especially the prolonged willy conversation) his guest got embarrassed and awkward. Stephen went to long on that but otherwise it was pretty deep.
If ever I did something in life that I would get a national interview for I would want Stephen to do the interview I think he might be the best interviewer on TV now
It wasn’t deep and not really introspective because everyone besides them is just bad, mean and it’s never their fault. That’s the opposite of introspection.
he justy kissed his ass and they did what they rehearsed - Naive
@@Laura-kl7vi It was absolutely good that they pushed that to end on a lighter note.
I really appreciate him he is deadly honest like his mother❤
I hope you’re being sarcastic. Harry is known to be a huge liar. Much of Spare and his interviews have been fact checked and proven to be wrong. He even lied to the British Law Courts. In his own words, the real truth doesnt matter, only his version.
An honest traitor 😂
Grief never ends. It’s like a scream inside you that no one can hear. Lost my husband after 50 years and miss him everyday.
Horrible that Harry and William lost their Mum so young.
5.5 years now since I said goodbye to love of my life. Every day is correct.
Lost my darling sister (also my best friend) 6 years ago to cancer and my "inside" is still "screaming". Some days it gets very "loud". My heart goes out to you. Hugs from Sputh Africa🤗🤗
But if we accept that everything is on “loan” to us from the Creator, God Almighty, and that everything belongs to Him alone, we can be grateful for what He chose for us the time we had with loved ones and be patient as one day we will meet them in the hereafter.
If we don’t believe in this then life is hard.
I am speaking with experience of having 5 brothers and 1 sister and my parents having returned to God. For sure we all belong to Him, nothing belongs to us, and we will, and everything will return to Him. So Glory be to Him alone.
It's soooooooo true😢😢😢 I sympathize with you God Bless🙏🙏🙏
That did not feel like 38 minutes. Really heartwarning, sad and interesting. Thank you Stephen and Harry.
I found this interview much more engaging, informative and relatable than the one with 60 Minutes and ITV. Colbert did a great job with drawing out the side of Harry that we all fell in love with. Excellent interview!
It really was such a great interview and we actually saw HARRY
Here in the UK, I find it misleading about why there is a huge negative response in Britain. Speaking about his time as a soldier. He didn't need to write the specific number 25. That was the unacceptable line that he crossed. That veterans do not speak of. Least it sound like boasting. And he threw his brother under the bus and revealed his brothers private thoughts. People in this audience also haven't lived all the stories that he has misrepresented. He is a lovely guy but a idiot.
@@barnespond1549 I think since going through therapy he wants to be more honest. Maybe even radically honest. I can see where that would be a problem for the institution...but I don't think it's malicious.
Barnes Pond - Sounds like you didn’t watch the entire Colbert interview where he touched on that, even Colbert gave his opinion on it and didn’t think he was being boastful. Maybe your perception will not be influenced by the British press once you’ve read his book.
I believe Veterans never talk about how many people they have killed in any context. Also why did Megan & Harry accept the Kennedy award for their heroic stand against "structural racism" in the monarchy' if they are now saying the RF isn't racist? Was it because the tickets sold at 1 million dollars per seat. This is just 1 of 4 books written by MM - how much dirty money do they need - someone needs to do welfare check on poor Harry.
Stephen is such a wonderful listener and interviewer. And Harry has such a great personality. I never watched his interviews or anything. So much fun listening to this!
Same. First time listening to Harry. I’m fascinated!
I went thru 9 years of therapy during the early 90’s. My psychotherapist saved my life. And the man who sent me to him saved me also. Wonderful!
How would you explain the incident that Diana was mistreated from the start, that her husband Charles spent the night before their wedding in front of the eyes of the world, with his long-term mistress Camilla?!
Camilla never wanted to give Diana any chance to survive emotionally in this marriage, she made sure Diana had absolutely no chance of winning Charles' heart and body, explicitly, and that shows that Camilla is very dangerous and manipulated Charles all along.
Charles had many other sexual relationships but Camilla made it look like a friendship plus sex thing even discussing his other experiences with other women with him...
As Diana said Charles is weak and open to sly manipulation.
Camilla did everything to ride out any other woman's influence on Charles, even his mother's the queen.
Camilla did everything,
in order to use Charles to become queen Camilla one day....
Too much therapy is bad
I'm in year 3 1/2 with mine. I was kind of broken and my life was almost entirely abuse. I am proactive and I don't even feel halfway done. I was a truck driver driving all across the country and I was tired of burying it anymore and became actually severely angry and was having PTSD days where I couldn't function so I left that industry and haven't worked since and that was the end of 2018. I suffered more sexual abuse where I moved to and after almost ending my life, I felt myself wanting to get help and not do this because I did not do this to me and I wasn't going to help abusers victimize me anymore. I had to go through a little bout of homicidal ideation when my wall was coming down but I could not help that. I had to become solid for myself and going through the process of my own will was hard enough. Having to be someone who didn't let myself be angry was just not going to happen. I settled back into the me I was wanting to be but I still have the ability to scare people lol. I just don't scare myself or cry about reacting that way anymore. I am saying I was upset by being angry when I had every right to be and that made me even more angry because of the control implanted on me for so long. I feel good. I hope you do too. Congratulations on finding you again. I'm glad you were blessed with angels and that you helped saved yourself too. Don't forget that you did it too.
@@TheOneAndOnlyMichelleAngelique you will make it Michelle! I’m in year 13... has’t been easy, but therapy has changed my life in all possible ways and making a commitment with yourself as you are doing it.. will continue giving the power to continue. Healing is everything but linear... remember that in times of distress. I’m proud of you!
Love from Costa Rica ❤
@@albamonn1924 I agree. They should have let Charles marry who he wanted to marry. It’s sad how he treated her.
Guys- this interview is SO SO different than other TH-cam analysts- which I’ve found incredibly hateful without the need for it. Big difference!! 🙌🏼
You're right. But those hateful TH-cam analysts DO have a reason for being hateful toward Harry and their favorite target Meghan. Hateful headlines attract more viewers, and more viewers mean greater earnings for one's site via commercials. People create and click on hateful sites for the same reason people stop to see a car accident or stopped to watch a lynching: unhappy people are always looking for others whose life is a little worse than their own so they can feel less bad about themselves, Then there also people who are paid by "the Palace handlers" to attack this couple.
The book remains really bad. He hasn’t even written it. What he describes is the most normal experience and hardships people have in life.
Especially Dr.Grande really disappointed me with his analysis. Just because someone grew up in privilege doesn't mean they don't hurt.
@@Azulakayes That wasn't the point Dr. Grande made. He wouldn't deny this. What Harry writes about (although this wasn't even him) is just ridiculous and what we already believe normal people go through. What he describes as "scandalous" is the problem.
Prince Harry is an absolute fool. Despite his distinguished military service. Absolute fool who will rue the day he married his wife. Just wait for them to divorce, it'll happen. He's destroyed every other relationship he ever had. Oh but "wooh he and Meghan are such a strong powercouple".
I have been the person who refused to pass judgment on Prince Harry and Meghan Markle because I didn't know them personally. Having seen this interview and seeing him relaxed and having fun makes me see he is charming, funny, kind, and genuinely decent. I think I might read his book.
Well, if you enjoy knowing which royals are circumcised and that Harry wet himself before his first date with Meghan, then you will enjoy his book.
watch the documentary too!!!
Avoid the negative people. They are verified to be a part of a group with multiple accounts spamming hate about Harry and his wife. Use your own judgement on them.
It's very interesting for sure. I recommend it!
@@jenniferr9144 where can it be seen?
My goodness you prince harry is as charming as your mom. I love your sharp wit & great humor. I got this interview on repeat.❤❤❤
When his wife isn't around
I'm watching it again as well!!! To hope: wow... Just wow. Crawl back to your bridge.
@@hopebullard460even when his wife is around. Don't seek opportunities to speak negatively about his dear wife
My father died when I was 13. I waited for some magical letter to arrive when I was 18... and then 21... and then 37 (the age he was when he died.) For more than two decades, I waited for a note which was never written. It's shameful to admit, but clearly, I'm not the only one who has felt this way.
There is no shame. Death is painful. I hope you at least find comfort in knowing you aren't alone in your feelings.
It’s not shameful, stay strong 🤗
It’s not shame, it’s hope! You keep hoping he’s alive somewhere, hope is keeping you from facing something that’s too painful to your heart and mind. May God bless you.
Stay strong bro 💪🏼
I feel your pain, I've been there, take care. 💖💖
As a therapist, as someone who lost my mom suddenly when I was 30, and as someone who has struggled to heal from my own trauma and grief - man, do I appreciate what Harry said about the importance of sharing our grief and losses with others to let them know they're not alone. So grateful for his courage in sharing this and helping others know they are not alone, and that it's okay (and very healthy) to seek help.
Your comment is the best one here.
Your insight, I believe is the ***only***
thing we are discussing here.
@@Isond-ox3ye you’re deleted. Bye
@@Isond-ox3ye True in some ways but also No! It’s because a Prince and his mixed-race wife decided that the harassment from the press and frosty treatment from the rest of the 'toxic' Royal Family had become so bad that it was no longer worth being part of it. The dude has a lot of money anyway and it's payback time now. He's doing the right thing.
@@Isond-ox3ye how you know this do you have proof? Don’t bother it was a rhetorical question YOU only know about YOU.
My maternal grandfather never came back from the war. There was word from another man, who claimed he had seen my grandfather in Auschwitz; that man died 2 weeks after the war. My mom was 13 at the time. The Red Cross search produced no information whatsover, Auschwitz had no documents. My mom never believed, that her father had died; she imagined, that her father was living somewhere abroad. She would rather blame him for abandoning her than accept his obvious death. This continued until she was 75, when I found a record of my grandfather's death at Mauthausen-Gusen death camp. At that point the Austrian Ministry of Internal Affairs and also the Auschwitz Museum confirmed my grandfather was a prisoner in both camps. Only then was she able to find closure and relief. At 75, for the first time, she framed the only photograph of her father and hung it on the wall.
I wanted this to be longer, I loved every minute of this interview
Mee tooooo! 🌹
You like listening to an interview where nothing is questioned Interesting.
Me too!!!
Me too!, ❤
Same!
Great vivid interview, THANKS. His strong personality with the inner will to free himself and find himself now presents him with a clarity and sincerity that makes his confident charisma.Very well done.
I lost my sister when I was 17, suddenly and tragically to suicide. For many years, I would "see" her in the beautiful hair of a young woman on a subway, the familiar turn of a stranger's head. I would often allow myself to believe she was in hiding somewhere, that one day I'd discover she was alive. I think this "magical thinking" is more common than we realize in cases of extreme grief with young people especially.
May her soul keep resting in heaven along with the soul of my Mom and all the faithful departed 😢, Amen 🙏
Thank you and God bless you and your family, Harry.
Sending you love and healing. Grief is such a strange thing and the brain does things to help us cope. May those we lost rest in love until we are all reunited.
I am so sorry for your loss. Thank you for your insight. I truly believe he is sincere.
I lost my partner to suicide, and my eldest son thinks that he's faked his death. Its so reassuring to know that he's not the only one to think this... thank you for saying this.
I also so sorry that you have suffered the loss of your sister in this way.. its an awful path to walk down xx
My brother and I were also 15 and 12 when we lost our dad- it’s an awful experience! Can’t imagine grieving infront of the entire world
Sorry about your father. RIP. Do you feel like it brought you and your brother closer? Or like the glue that held you together was gone? Really curious about that because I honestly don't know how my sister and I's relationship would change in that situation.
Catheighm Rizzo he has been grieving in front of the entire world for almost 30 years
@@schatz1876 he is making money with that but many people gone the experience and survived. My mother was orphan but mother and father at about 5 years old.
Then like most humans you grieve in private Remember William lost a parent to and he not using his grief to make money
@taysing yes we could all tell a sad story and do you think everyone would throw a pity party 30 years down the road like they are with H& M ?
I lost my Mom a few days before my 15th birthday. She was 42. My whole life I never thought I’d make it to 42. Last year when I turned 43, I sobbed. Unless you’ve been thru the loss of a parent, especially when your young it’s really hard to understand.
9 months ago
I'm reading a lot of comments here from people who lost their parents at a young age. I cannot imagine that kind of loss. My parents made it to their mid eighties before passing within five weeks of each other.
When my sister and I were going through our parents' effects, she asked me what I'd like to have. I chose a bookmark of mother's and a favourite sweater of dad's. Now, when I settle back on the sofa, wearing my dad's sweater and opening my latest book, it is as if both mum and dad are there, quietly
That's so beautiful xx
It's My crazy man rai segurity
Man. Your story make me feel so emotional. Merry Christmas.
Harry l love your confidence thanks for always open mind all the best
Why does your post read word for word identical to a post written 11 months ago from @davidanderson2357. Strange.
Princess Di's death really shocked me. I vividly remember seeing you, Harry ,and your brother walking right behind her coffin... My heart sank. It was unbelievable. Please accept my humble hug, Harry. Everybody should be allowed to grieve.
John Caroline Kennedy?
Like Harry, I couldn't cry for a long time after my parents died. It took months for it to sink in that they were never coming back before I cried. I sympathize with Harry.
🙏
His brother lost a mother . I think you people forget that. The trouble was he was a spoilt brat always was as. Child . His mother admitted that and he has grown in to a useless piece of 💩💩💩💩. His mother wasn't a saint , she had many lovers four of whom were married. He conveniently forgets all that
Same with me
Hope you're all in better spaces right now.
@@patriciaclarke260 Oh eff off.
My mom died at the age of 43. I am now 70 and every day I live a life of gratitude and purpose💜
Exactly, Pryam. We should always be grateful, first to God for giving us good parents, and next to our parents and other family members. The fifth of the 10 commandments is to honor our parents, and all will go well with us and we will have a long life.
@@Harmonic2010 yeah well not all of us get "good parents" so it would be great if y'all who did have loving parents would stop acting like the rest of us did. If you had a mother who was physically and verbally abusive thru your entire childhood then you probably would feel completely different.
BTW there is NO God that gave you good parents, god is an imaginary sky being created by human males to control the masses, congratulations on buying the lies! 🙄
my mom had my dad whip me like a dog i dont miss her.
@@Harmonic2010what if your parents are shit people? How is someone to be grateful for that or follow the commandments?
Get real, god is BS
Lost my mum fairly young too. But I didn’t spend the rest of my life trying to destroy my father like Harry.
I really enjoyed this interview.
"In our society, we are not encouraged to grieve." This is so true. We don't know how to die well, and we don't know how to grieve well.
Yeah but America isn't any different from that.
Oh. I was referring to the U.S.
As one who has grieved the loss of most of my family I disagree. "In our society" the help, empathy and understanding even mere acquaintances have shown can not be surpassed. This from every age, nationality, race and religion, soon after and even years later.
In England we have stiff upper lips, far less messy than that huggy weepy nonsense.
Our fathers came back from the horrors of WWII never complained or told about it.
Got on with their lives.
American psychobabble is killing masculinity.
@Spareme. Being masculine doesnt mean ignoring trauma. Thats why so many of these veterans are committing suicide, or are alcoholics. Because of the whole, "men don't cry," shaming our culture pushes on them. If you want an example of healty masculinity, check out LOTR and pay attention to Arragorn. Unless you're not MAN enough to do so.
When my mommy passed away I convinced myself she was in a trip and will soon call to say she was having a good time. It's been 2 years and I still hold hope. I know she is gone but the hope it's still there 😭
Sometimes denial is a friend. Whatever gets you through the night regarding grief. Take good care.
Hug
Hug
❤❤❤
Sorry for your loss. Sending you hugs
I lost my father at 10 to cancer. I convinced myself he was on a long business trip. My mother reminded me this week that my brother and I often dreamt he'd be coming back. My older brother is scarred by the loss of our father with resentment and stoic behavior. I was placed at a disadvantage because I required less attention. Childhood trauma is looks different for everyone. I wish Harry love and healing.
Stephen lost his father and brother, who died in a plane crash. Stephen understands Harry's grief. Beautiful that Stephen didn't have to bring up his loss to demonstrate his humanity. We saw it.
People lose parents, I've lost both of mine but I didn't trash the rest of my family, open your eyes dumb yanks, he's playing you .
Condolences for your loss. My eldest son is 12 and I don't think he could mentally handle that. Well said. Love and light to you and family, from Scotland 💎
❤
Childhood trauma is different for every child 🤍🦅🤍
Excellent interview- thank you, Stephen and Harry! Tequila shots all around!
Thank you for releasing the full interview (instead of the segments) so soon after airing (same night!)
This was a fabulous interview, so much rawness and honesty.
Exactly 😂😂😂
Others are mincing with it
Did you say honesty….like calling the RF racists and accepting an award for it and then denying they ever said it! You have a strange idea of what honesty is!!!
@@jenniferbailey5914
Beautifully said..👍🏿😊
Harry talking abt sharing his Afghan kill count is to help reduce suicide rate. Is Harry the new Liver King??! How dumb can he be 🙄
@@jenniferbailey5914 honesty as in during this interview, like he said everything in the book came from him, etc. The stuff outside of the interview? Not part of my comment on it.
It's been 28 years and sometimes my heart still breaks for my mother. I'm her age now and some days I feel like I've turned into her because I don't know know what she'd be like next year. I too thought she'd show up even though my father and I were holding her when she passed. I can speak for Americans, our hearts went out to you because you were so young.
Very interesting comment
You can speak for all who has hearth. ♥️
No one is truly gone until they are forgotten.
I just finished Harry's book and it's amazing. I had no idea all that him and Meg went through and it breaks my heart. I'm so glad he wrote this book & that they have their documentary.
His comments about therapy leading to lack of communication with the family are spot on.
Everyone handles grief and trauma differently. Something that works for him, may not help her.
@@VS-vx5hi While he is obviously very charming, there is a feeling like there is something missing with him, possibly self awareness or possibly awareness of what is happening around him / the affects of his words and actions on other people. I don't know how much therapy he has had however he still seems to exhibit signs of ptsd and a persecution complex, the way he talked about his late mother made it sound like he is still struggling with grief / past trauma which may have sadly stunted a small part of his emotional development. Then again I am wasting my time to type this which says nothing good about me.
@@Mithril_Antimarr he is a dangerous entitled narcissistic. He never takes any accountability
Yesssss!
@@VS-vx5hi hmmm seems to me he's done everything to help his wife, what's wrong with you troll?
I loved this interview. Harry seems so down to earth.
You’ve been gaslighted 😂
You’re a fool
@@HGCUPCAKES It’s you not him.
He's the most precious ponce there is. I don't know what you've been told?
One thing that DOES come across in this interview is the high amount of EMPATHY that both Harry and Colbert have.
Oh, come on! Why don't all of you realize that this show is just show business, I believe the audience was told before the show to give him a standing ovation! And I heard or read that the audience was hand picked.
On September 11, 1974, when Colbert was ten years old, his father and his two brothers nearest in age, Peter and Paul, died in the crash of Eastern Air Lines Flight 212 while it was attempting to land in Charlotte, North Carolina.They were en route to enroll the two boys at Canterbury School in New Milford, Connecticut.He has discussed the impact on him and his philosophy of grief and suffering.
@@debrajohnson6129 you mean a studio audience who got to sit near a British royal wasn't just pulled from off the streets without being vetted by security? 😲. behave!
@@debrajohnson6129 Well, I''m not hand picked and I would have done it on my own
I have always LOVED Harry, he loved him mama, and still🥰
@@debrajohnson6129 I would not do that fir his brother, never really liked him for some reason
I love Harry ❤
To build his brother's image, they shouldn't have hurt his. Well done Harry!! Keep going ❤
That’s what the British media does - one sibling is dutiful, perfect, and wise. The other is lost, immature, and scandalous. It’s why the two brothers could do the same thing and the media report it two different ways.
Well said! That's exactly what happened and you have worded it perfectly.
they didnt though, they literally didn't. this is all absolute whitewashing the history - for years and years he was the favourite prince and the press played a huge part in that. He directly began attacking the press so they immediately turned on him. they ARE vile, but theres literally no evidence william was protected over him when william and kate have been under a microscope
I lost my father at age 2 in tragic circumstances. He was 26 and my mom 24. It's a wound one doesn't ever get over. It didn't make me angry and bitter. It just taught me to be strong and resilient, and grateful for the love I received.
Sorry you had that experience. I lost my loved ones at young age too. My older brother was murdered, shot to death when he was 28. Our father died at 46 of cancer and I was 14. They would not have wanted me whining on the rest of my life using their misfortune to make my money. I would be ashamed of having a relative like this Wenger
@@Altered4n892t well said !!!
👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻🫶🏼
@dominionphilosophy3698 I was truly loved as a child. That's where I found my strength for the rest of my life! Money was never my priority.
@@Altered4n892t That's so sad!
I like how he acknowledges and talks to the audience :)
Gotta get his lies out
It’s a good coping strategy. Just trying to feel comfortable in the room.
There was no audience, Harry did not want it. All you hear is canned sounds. Love the way Muricans are fooled.
@@suzanneparadis922 what makes you say he's lying? I haven't read the book so I don't know
@@Swameh He’s a 38 year old man that was upset because he wasn’t getting as much money as he wanted from his dad so he “fled” to America and is getting paid over 150 million for his interviews acting like a victim.
It’s worth noting that Stephen lost his dad and two brothers in a plane crash when he was just 10 years old. So the bond here is heavy.
I do not hear Stephen trashing his family for therapy
@@lindajohnson7276there is serioysly something wrong with you.
@@lindajohnson7276 Because his family are part of the problem. Imagine your brother telling you to pretend not to know him when in school, or your dad can't even bring himself to give you a hug when telling you your mum has passed away, or your family leaking stories about you to the press that killed your mum. I'm with Harry!
@@lindajohnson7276 we don’t see them throwing him under the bus every chance they get through “sources”
@@bellaalberts7927 What a weird response to that comment?
Awwww 🥰... Prince Harry is such a precious darling! I wish him all the best that this life has to offer ❤.
At the base of it….he’s just like the rest of us. And for someone at his level to be so completely honest….i give him props.
Completely honest ???🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
@@barbaraaraujo7700 As honest as he can probably be. Why? Do you know different? Do you know him and the family personally? Are you part of the British press? If so, please enlighten.
Me, I’ll watch. I’ll read the book. I’ll listen and come up with my own thoughts. But thanks!
There are several people who knew Harry and Meghan in private and who have demonstrated the countless L1es told by the couple in recent years. (I suggest Tom Bower's book: "Meghan and Harry and The War Between the Windsors". This book is here on youtube and was done through interviews with eyewitnesses, such as Harry's friends, Meghan's childhood friends, former palace officials, etc.)
One of the first proven lies, even before the release of the book and documentary, was the story that they would have been married privately before the official ceremony, which was denied by the Archbishop of the Anglican Church who married them. (This claim made by Meghan in Oprah's interview was not even commented on in the book and documentary, which shows that it was really a L1e).
Meghan L!ed about not knowing much about the Royal Family. But she read every book and magazine she could find. Even blogged about the Royal Family, and visited the royal palace before she met Harry. (Ninaki Priddy, her childhood friend confirmed this information). Meghan knew exactly who they were. Meghan also lied about Archie not being given a "royal title" because of "r....." when in fact, it’s the LAW from 1917 that decides that. They claim to want "private lives" while attempt to grab as much attention as they possibly can from the media.
She also L!ed about the Royal Family treating her like a "prisoner" by taking away her passports and keys. She took no less than 13 luxury vacations while in the Royal Family. How did she leave the country, if she never had her passport?
She L!ed about the Royal Family being “the family she never had” but only one year earlier she had gave a speech about her father “being the best father in the world”.
Meghan l!ed about her husbands divorce. They divorced because she cheated on him, but she L!ed to cover it up. She lyyed about identifying as a "black" woman. For years, she wrote that she “identified as white” and she L!ed about paying for college. Her family paid for it all.
She L!ed about the Royal Family cutting them off financially, while prince Charles had been funding those freeloaders long after they wanted to go "financially independent" from those Royals.
Meghan L1ed about the Royal Family not teaching her how to be a duchess. When, in fact, she got some of the best advisors from day one. (Samanta Cohen, Queen Elizabeth's trusted adviser, prepared Meghan for royal duties).
She L!ed about wanting to be "financially independent" and make her own money. Then they was bitching and moaning about the Royals not “financially supporting them” and its utter bullshit to demand financial independence, while also demanding being paid.
Meghan L!ed about not being able to meet the Queen at Balmoral because “Archie could not fly on planes” while Meghan had flown with Archie on several planes to exotic vacations. She just diddnt want the Queen to see the Queen`s own great-grandson.
Meghan L1ed about not abusing her staff. While several eye-witnesses said she bullied them and was “emotionally cruel” And she L1ed about “not seeing her sister Samantha in 20 years” while there is photographic evidence that was not true.
Meghan also L1ed about “having nothing to do” with the book Finding Freedom. Later, she admitted in court that she had L1ed, and helped write it. The whole book was about trashing all the Royals, and proclaim how "great" Meghan was in every way possible.
Meghan l!ed about “not planning ahead” to leave the Royal Family. More than a year before leaving the family, she had set up plans, and even copyrighted "SussexRoyal" in order to make money from the moment they left.
Meghan l!ed about abandoning her dogs when she met "just call me Harry" when she got married, and because her dogs would clash with her new lifestyle. But she changed her story two years later to “it was the dogs fault” but that was utter bullshit. She abandoned her dogs, plain and simple.
Meghan even said on Oprah interview that the possible brown colour of the baby would be a problem to the Royal Family and now Harry said in a recent interview that was not true and that it was the media that distorted things. 😮💨😒😒😒😒 😡
Most of these untrue allegations were included in Harry's book. By the way, most of his book is just ridiculous complaints, self-pitty and supposed trauma coming from silly things like: “When Will and I were a child he used to say 'The last one home stinks, then he sped off home immediately, giving me no time to catch up. I grew up with constant shame thinking I smelled awful” 😒🙄Oh, "poor" rich prince who never knew what it was like to have real problems in life.
I lost my dad when I was 19. That means I already knew what was right and wrong. And losing my father who I talked to every single day just felt so wrong. I’m 35 now and I still long for him. So, I hope you cherish your parents. It will never be the same when they’re gone.
At least u have memories of ur dad. My dad died 2 weeks before I was born. I'm now 60. I don't even have a pic of my dad holding me.
My dad started dying when I was 16. He died when I was 24. I still wasn’t ready. I cherish a pictures of him holding me and think of him everyday.
His Brother William lost his Mother as well but dont go to Press talk about this
@@katarzynamuszynska5426 and Charles is Harry’s father. I couldn’t ever do that to my father, even though Harry doesn’t name Charles specifically he implies it through his comments about his stepmother. He has the typical broken marriage syndrome.
@@Cooking_Through_Time your situation is better tho. You never knew him, so, you aren't missing lived experiences. Just the thought of what they could have been. Much easier trauma to navigate.
I clicked on this 100% certain that I would watch a bit to see how it went, and then watch something else. I mean… almost 40 minutes… that’s forever in TH-cam time.
But here I am 40 mins later to say that this was an excellent interview. 👍👍👍
💯
I will always be in Harry's camp! I wish him all the best.
Same here, always in Harry's camp! Wishing him and his family the Joy and life they deserve to thrive.
My mom died at 36 6 months after princess diana passed away. I was 10. I have always felt for harry and what happened to him.
Shannon Flaherty, so sorry your mom transitioned from this life at such a young age for her--and you. I hope loved ones gathered around you and built you up and helped you grow resilient and strong.
My father died 12 years ago. I still can’t accept his passing. I remembered that after he passed, I will feel him when I walk on the street or passed a tree when the wind is blowing. I feel him when I go on my runs. Miss his voice. I wish, I had a recording of his voice. I wish my kids have met him. I always miss you, Hanno.
The audience is sooo gullible and irritating
@@perfectly22smith38 You’re a Harry Hater! Lol! Calm down, Sparky! The audience is directed to react, clap, laugh, cry… etc.
@@perfectly22smith38 I am sorry you feel so empty and bitter.
@@perfectly22smith38 , for sure.
I am Princess Jessica Carol White. I will never my father he is a real Prince. And will continue to remember him in some way.
I was 12 years old when my father committed suicide. My life was fractured from that moment on. I sometimes wonder who I would be if my father had lived. When Harry talked about “magic thinking” surrounding his mother… when he so candidly spoke about pretending she was “in hiding” and would “come and save him and his brother.” Jesus, that really brought me to my knees. I KNOW what that feels like. Growing up, I thought I was the only one who felt that way. As an adult now- I know that I’m not. Sometimes just knowing you’re not alone can make all the difference. I was lucky enough to also “find my purpose.” I have worked in the field of mental health for over a decade. Most importantly, I work with children who have experienced trauma and profound loss. I try to be the person I wish that I had after my father committed suicide. It’s important everyone find their voice and share their stories. There is so much potential for true, meaningful change and growth when we feel strong enough to tell our truth. I know what I shared was long winded; I’m sorry for that. However, I hope someone found something inspiring in it. Even if this speaks to just one person- it’s totally worth it. You are so much stronger than you think…
Sounds like you have some but peace be with you sister. I was twice your age when my dad killed himself but there's never a good age to enter the club we are in. When your father leaves...like THAT, it fundamentally and forever changes you. Props to you for making lemonade out of those sour ass lemons & using your pain to heal others.
My Grandma died when I was nearly 8 and I used to pretend she was in Australia and one day she was coming back for me…We lived near a church with a huge cross and I used to pray for her to come back…Did that for years…as an adult I understand why but it’s soothing to know someone else did the same thing…🥰🥰
I’m sorry for your loss….
Thank you for your comment, it meant a lot to me.
My dear, you have no idea how your words resonated! I lost both parents in my childhood. I think about them everyday and the sense of loss is great. I don't have lots of memories for I was very young. Yet I remember and feel their parental authentic love. I sympathize with Prince Harry and with everyone who lost their parents at such young age. You're lucky you have a job that helps people who went through same trauma that you went through. It's true, as you give you can heal. Continue being strong ❤️
What a beautiful message. I was touched. Thank you for sharing! ❤
Way to go Harry and Stephen. I hate how the press and others attack Harry and his family daily.
All the love and protection to you. Stay away from the press
It's the British press that is so vicious.
That's why they sought refuge in America.
Originally they wanted to go to British Columbia and Canadians would have loved him as Governor General.
But the Palace put the kibosh on that so they wound up in California.
Was such a sport, giving Stephen the absolute dish! And Stephen deserves that. He has just made the last few years make a little more sense.
He's lying through his fake teeth dear - honestly I cannot believe any American is silly enough to fall for it - she just never intended staying bc she only wanted to take that Title to LA to milk it for Fame/ Money & the Pseudo A Lister Cewebrity she's never managed to get even after Marrying a Producer.
She sacked the ghost writer & it is ALL her made up nonsense - if you'd grown up with the RF & lived in the UK you'd know he's lying
& Those NEWSPAPERS she showed were 🇺🇸 newspapers! We DON'T even get them here, get a clue!
H's life has been well documented, he was TWELVE when his mother died, he CANNOT rlly remember anything; it's made up nonsense sorry - & much of it is deliberate lies. (& In the UK H says⚠️ there WAS NO⚠️ rac**m.)
🙏💜🇬🇧💜🌏💜
My thoughts exactly! 💯
Really super fascinating interview. I was 15 when my mother passed at 44. Had so many dreams of her showing up on our doorstep. I am now 59. I am absolutely addicted to shows that reunite adult children with a parent separated at a young age. There is so much I want to share and say, and just catch-up. I cannot imagine the pain adopted people experience - not knowing what happened to a parent or why they left, but the ache and desire to be reunited is the same.
I think I sense of resentment in Harry against MSM. I feel like he blames his family (The Firm) and MSM for the death of his mother. I think he feels that his family pushed his mother away ‘cause she was too influential in regards to her public persona that she’d overshadow the Firm and take over. He blames MSM for pushing his mother into the drama that ended with his parents getting a divorce, playing them against one another in public
@@kaudsiz worse than that. the media literally killed his mother. and harry has every right to feel the way he does about it.
There were so many times that Stephen could’ve related his pain of losing his brother and dad at such a young age, but he instead listened and didn’t make it about him.
You could see Harry get almost choked up about the shared trauma between them
Pity Stephen didn’t share. Harry seems to think he’s the only one who’s had tragedy in his life. He talks about poor Diana so much. Let her rest.
@@annevetter6864 that’s his MOTHER. He’s allowed to speak about her every second of the day if he chooses.
@@annevetter6864 That's pretty cold. I think any human being who lost their parent so tragically at such a young age would naturally be so effected by it that it becomes a big part of their life - moreso when the parent is a worldwide beloved figure.
@@annevetter6864 oh shut up
Thank You for sharing, Sir, friend, brother. I adore you and your family. Shine!
Unfortunately I'm going thru the same thing. It's horrible what some people will do to hurt you. I feel for you and your beautiful family.❣️
I send you light so that you can make it thru this.💚
that family is far from beautiful. there's 3 sides of the story and his is making him money. plus he wasn't the only one who lost a mother, bit surely knows how to mention her every second for profit.
@@ellysarmiento5001 did you want him to starve?
@Indigo565 starve, I'll give you a little trip In the bronx neighborhoods, the shelters. Africa, Haiti ect those ppl are starving. he doesn't want a job he wants money, doesn't matter who gets dragged.
@Indigo565 btw do you think he should mentioned how his brother is bold in a mock manner or how his brother looked like Diana but harry said his looks are fading. yup that's def the things nice ppl say. The lord sees ugly.
I lost my father in an car accident when I was barely 11 and he was just 41. It was in 1992.
His loss definitely continues to impact me to this day. The way he describes filters is spot-on. Therapy definitely helps. 💖🦋
Is that why he threw his family under the bus? Was it for the money? This man is pathetic
I lost my dad in 1993 in a car accident also
Me too, I was 10 dad was 48. I'm 34 now and I just started to understand how much it all impacted me. Sending love to everyone who can relate 💕
Grief doesn't excuse hate, for his family. He is mentally ill. I'm older and I miss my sweet mother every day, but I don't blame the world or my family for everything that is wrong. He needs to grow up.
@@14ariel77 ariel S is a paid troll.
What a moving interview 💜.
Did you know that Harry wasn't actually in front of that audience? It's all fake.
Total respect for Harry
Why? There is a saying in UK and out of respect for family, "you don't air your dirty laundry in public" meaning what happens in a family stays in the family!! That why he's lost all the fans he used to have, spilling the beans on your own family is so disrespecful!! Would you?
@@Ann-VorolYes, I would if that meant that I would expose the royal dirt that killed my mom and now go and touch the grass little andrew
A little hard to do when he British tabloids are pumping out nothing but sewage about you. They have been relentless since the day Diana died. It's time to fight back and the RF should have led the way but instead they were complicit, just like they were with Diana. They will never learn.
Nice to see some positive response for speaking up for himself. Keep going Harry.
Not many.
Did you know that Harry wasn't actually in front of that audience? It's all fake.
He’s a Traitor
@@Marth281 no he's not he got out while he could,,,, lucky escape 💯
@@i.jflavahenry007 lucky escape from what?
What a fabulous interview wishing Harry all the best❤️❤️❤️
I can’t imagine being brought up in that institution and still retaining your sanity. Kudos, Harry for finding your way back.
Now I can watch the whole thing, vs. just a short while! 👏😊Harry!
Lovely conversation between the two and of course an amazing audience
Hey Sarah , Apologies for dropping this here I came across your you Tube channel and I would love to know more better if you don't mind, I'm guessing you must be an honest person, because I always found your comments to be a nice and respectful person.if it's okay with you, I'd love to be friend with you, but if it sounds odd or embarrassing in any way please don't embarrass me by replying.hope you're having a wonderful day with your family may God bless you all..
The audience are a bunch of morons
As I understand the audience was not there, it was filmed one day before the show
Two men with such undeniably different lives (from most people and from one another) seeming to relate and take one another so seriously is just a truly good thing to see.
Its because Harry is grounded. Unfortunately a few people here in the UK, included the papers, don't seem to understand he was bored into the family. He didn't choose that life and when he decided he didn't enjoy it and wanted out, just like his mum, they set to destroy him. I don't mind the Royal Family, but they've treated him like shit. And after his and Meghan's Netflix documentary, the British press just proved him and Meghan right by carrying on with the shit. Sadly, a lot of idiot British people believe it.
For example in the documentary he talked about the cottage they were gifted by the Queen, Nottingham Cottage. The press and some idiots got annoyed about this claiming "They'd been gifted a cottage and they are moaning. That's bigger than my flat". That wasn't the point of that piece. They are very well aware they are privileged. The point of that was, the arsehole UK press were pretty much making out they were gifted Kensington Palace, that they were living in a mansion. They were trying to show, yes, it was a nice gift, but it wasn't a massive mansion that the press made it out to be.
Its a sign of intelligence in both of them, and neither having so much ego to be constantly trying to snuff the other out.
🇬🇧 Which two men are you talking about? William and Harry? If so, you have the completely wrong end of the stick.
@@dannesys She was clearly talking about Harry and Stephen.
@@dannesys Uh the two men talking in the video
After all the interviews Harry has done in the past week, he clearly saved the best for last.
Is there best in this sh*tshow?
Healthy envirement? With 2 narcistic idiots and no family to fell back on. Very healthy
I agree & think this will be THE interview that has the most impact so far, & will definitely bring the public to his side. Finally, we learn the truth over the narrative.
How do you know it's the truth
@@sandraboyle2152 Do you ever know if people are telling the truth, he is no different from any other person, even you !
I’m glad that he did what he felt he had to do for his family. That takes courage.
🤡
The sense that the loved one that just passed is not gone but somewhere else and will come back seems to be a natural feeling and I’m so glad to hear that. I thought me and my daughter were the only ones to feel that way. When her father died she was 12 and she had the feeling that daddy wasn’t gone but would come back. Never told her I felt that way too so I wouldn’t give her false expectations. How incredibly helpful can be to share your thoughts and feelings about losing someone.
Fools come in all shapes and sizes I hope your daughter got some help at some point in her life by her not having decent support in her time of need
Imagine Colbert, who was only 10 when his father and twin brothers died in a plan crash, covering this topic without falling apart or making it about himself. Respect.
I bet she's a wee beauty, glad she shared how she felt with you.♥️
@@blackblake3658 That's tragic... Huge respect to him.
I was 10 when my abuela (grandmother) suddenly and unexpectedly died. I was convinced she was just playing an elaborate prank and that before long she'd reveal it was all a joke. Even after the funeral I was expecting her to show up. I don't remember when or how specifically I stopped believing that.
You're definitely not alone in that!