1 00:00:03,200 --> 00:00:15,520 Speaker 1: He shot. Hello, lower lower, lower, lower low. Welcome to 2 00:00:15,680 --> 00:00:19,120 Speaker 1: the Naughty but Night Show. I'm your host, Rob Shooter. 3 00:00:19,280 --> 00:00:23,000 Speaker 1: It's Friday, which means our dear friend, Corey. Andrew Joyant 4 00:00:23,040 --> 00:00:26,040 Speaker 1: says Corey, are you there? I am here everyone, Hello, 5 00:00:26,079 --> 00:00:30,120 Speaker 1: and happy Friday. Hello, my friend. So if I sound 6 00:00:30,160 --> 00:00:34,280 Speaker 1: like I've been up all night smoking Marlborough's and drinking whisker, 7 00:00:34,360 --> 00:00:36,680 Speaker 1: you're not that far off. I haven't been smoking and 8 00:00:36,720 --> 00:00:40,040 Speaker 1: I haven't been drinking. But we got hold of the 9 00:00:40,080 --> 00:00:43,919 Speaker 1: Harry book. Now, let me explain. The Harry book does 10 00:00:44,000 --> 00:00:49,879 Speaker 1: not come out until Tuesday worldwide. However, yesterday, for some 11 00:00:50,000 --> 00:00:54,040 Speaker 1: unknown reason, and I'm sure the publisher is furious about it, 12 00:00:54,240 --> 00:00:57,200 Speaker 1: Spain started to sell his book. So a friend of 13 00:00:57,240 --> 00:00:59,880 Speaker 1: mine is in Spain. They bought a copy of the book. 14 00:01:00,240 --> 00:01:04,800 Speaker 1: So every person, every journalist, every news organization is either 15 00:01:04,920 --> 00:01:07,560 Speaker 1: running to Spain and literally putting people on flights to 16 00:01:07,640 --> 00:01:10,800 Speaker 1: Spain to get this book, or they're trying to find 17 00:01:10,840 --> 00:01:12,760 Speaker 1: like people they know they went to college. If maybe, 18 00:01:13,000 --> 00:01:15,160 Speaker 1: if you're NBC News you have a bureau in Space, 19 00:01:15,200 --> 00:01:18,080 Speaker 1: that's okay. But Norty Gossip does not have a Spanish bureau. 20 00:01:18,200 --> 00:01:21,440 Speaker 1: That might surprise you. But I do have a friend 21 00:01:21,440 --> 00:01:24,319 Speaker 1: who lives in Spain, so I made her go and 22 00:01:24,400 --> 00:01:28,040 Speaker 1: get this book. And then it's in Spanish, so how 23 00:01:28,120 --> 00:01:31,640 Speaker 1: to translate it to me? I know the international phone 24 00:01:31,640 --> 00:01:33,600 Speaker 1: bill is going to be out of control, but it's 25 00:01:33,640 --> 00:01:36,759 Speaker 1: worth it. So after we got them translated, I sent 26 00:01:36,959 --> 00:01:40,319 Speaker 1: Corey the pages. I've been reading the pages we divided 27 00:01:40,360 --> 00:01:42,360 Speaker 1: and conquered Corey, which I think is the way to 28 00:01:42,680 --> 00:01:46,440 Speaker 1: always working in life. And today we're going to bring 29 00:01:46,440 --> 00:01:52,320 Speaker 1: you a special episode of all the juicy juicy scars 30 00:01:52,840 --> 00:01:56,360 Speaker 1: Let's gossip from Harry's new book, Corey. Just the big 31 00:01:56,400 --> 00:01:59,040 Speaker 1: picture here before we get into the details. I was 32 00:01:59,160 --> 00:02:04,440 Speaker 1: app resolutely flabbergasted. I couldn't believe my eyes when I 33 00:02:04,480 --> 00:02:07,880 Speaker 1: was reading Miss Yesterday. He went there. He certainly earned 34 00:02:07,920 --> 00:02:11,639 Speaker 1: his twenty million dollars. He told everything, yes, And of course, 35 00:02:11,639 --> 00:02:14,000 Speaker 1: you know people are going to clearly say that he's 36 00:02:14,040 --> 00:02:18,240 Speaker 1: fabricated some things, or that Megan he are just you know, conning, 37 00:02:18,400 --> 00:02:21,959 Speaker 1: But I don't believe. So it's I don't very genuine 38 00:02:21,840 --> 00:02:24,400 Speaker 1: and I was shocked as well. I was. He might 39 00:02:24,400 --> 00:02:26,040 Speaker 1: have got a few details wrong. We always do when 40 00:02:26,080 --> 00:02:28,400 Speaker 1: we retell stories in our lives. But this is how 41 00:02:28,440 --> 00:02:31,040 Speaker 1: he remembers it, and it is shocking. Let's jump into 42 00:02:31,080 --> 00:02:34,200 Speaker 1: the special edition of The Naughty but Nice Show. What 43 00:02:34,240 --> 00:02:38,160 Speaker 1: time is it, my friends? It's a royalty time. So 44 00:02:38,639 --> 00:02:41,680 Speaker 1: one of the biggest takeaways and the most shocking moment 45 00:02:41,720 --> 00:02:44,840 Speaker 1: for me in the book was Harry confessed he drove 46 00:02:44,919 --> 00:02:49,120 Speaker 1: through the tunnel where his mommy, Princess Diana died. He 47 00:02:49,200 --> 00:02:51,640 Speaker 1: did it deliberately, and he did it at the same 48 00:02:51,960 --> 00:02:56,560 Speaker 1: speed that Diana was going, saying, quote, I want to 49 00:02:56,639 --> 00:03:00,360 Speaker 1: go through it. So he recounts this in the book. 50 00:03:00,400 --> 00:03:03,360 Speaker 1: He was in Paris and it was some sort of 51 00:03:03,360 --> 00:03:05,560 Speaker 1: football thing. I think it was a Rugby World Cup 52 00:03:05,600 --> 00:03:08,640 Speaker 1: he was seeing two thousand and seven. He was twenty 53 00:03:08,680 --> 00:03:11,720 Speaker 1: three years old, and the World Cup people gave him 54 00:03:11,760 --> 00:03:15,320 Speaker 1: a driver. So when you travel, when you're somebody as 55 00:03:15,320 --> 00:03:17,320 Speaker 1: famous as Harry, they get you a driver. If you're 56 00:03:17,360 --> 00:03:19,080 Speaker 1: tailor or did they get you a driver. So we 57 00:03:19,080 --> 00:03:21,359 Speaker 1: had a driver, but the driver doesn't know him. It's 58 00:03:21,360 --> 00:03:24,000 Speaker 1: not his driver. They're meeting for the first time, and 59 00:03:24,080 --> 00:03:26,120 Speaker 1: he said to his driver, I want to go to 60 00:03:26,160 --> 00:03:28,840 Speaker 1: the tunnel where my mother died. And he said he 61 00:03:28,880 --> 00:03:34,200 Speaker 1: saw the driver's eyes in the rear view mirror grow large, 62 00:03:34,320 --> 00:03:36,880 Speaker 1: and he said, you know it, and he was like, yes, yes, 63 00:03:36,960 --> 00:03:40,760 Speaker 1: I know it. And so they went to the tunnel. 64 00:03:40,800 --> 00:03:44,560 Speaker 1: They went through the tunnel at precisely sixty five miles 65 00:03:44,560 --> 00:03:49,360 Speaker 1: per hour. That's the exact speed that the police reported 66 00:03:49,400 --> 00:03:53,120 Speaker 1: since thiss Diana was going when she had that fatal 67 00:03:53,360 --> 00:03:56,160 Speaker 1: fatal crash. It was not a hundred and twenty miles 68 00:03:56,200 --> 00:03:59,400 Speaker 1: per hour as originally was reported. It was sixty five. 69 00:03:59,640 --> 00:04:03,520 Speaker 1: He said they went over the lip and he barely 70 00:04:03,560 --> 00:04:06,760 Speaker 1: felt anything, and they went through the tunnel and he said, 71 00:04:06,760 --> 00:04:09,960 Speaker 1: I could count my heartbeats as we were going through it. 72 00:04:10,000 --> 00:04:13,040 Speaker 1: And we emerged from the other side, and he sat 73 00:04:13,120 --> 00:04:17,760 Speaker 1: back and quietly said, is that all of it? It's nothing. 74 00:04:18,400 --> 00:04:21,839 Speaker 1: It's just a tunnel, this tunnel that had been haunting 75 00:04:21,920 --> 00:04:25,280 Speaker 1: him for years. He suddenly figured out it was just 76 00:04:25,360 --> 00:04:28,240 Speaker 1: a tunnel. He added that he did it again. They 77 00:04:28,279 --> 00:04:31,360 Speaker 1: went through a second time, and he said he thought 78 00:04:31,520 --> 00:04:35,119 Speaker 1: driving through the tunnel would bring an end to the pain, 79 00:04:35,920 --> 00:04:40,400 Speaker 1: a decade of unrelated pain, but instead that didn't happen. 80 00:04:40,760 --> 00:04:45,279 Speaker 1: It brought him even more pain. That is so unbelievable. 81 00:04:45,279 --> 00:04:47,720 Speaker 1: And when you think about sixty five miles per hour. 82 00:04:47,800 --> 00:04:50,240 Speaker 1: For those of us who drive, that does not seem 83 00:04:50,320 --> 00:04:52,400 Speaker 1: like a sery high speed. But when you throw in 84 00:04:52,480 --> 00:04:55,080 Speaker 1: that you're being chased against your will and you're trying 85 00:04:55,080 --> 00:04:57,719 Speaker 1: to weave or dodge, perhaps to get away from people, 86 00:04:58,080 --> 00:05:00,200 Speaker 1: that makes all the difference in the world. So I 87 00:05:00,240 --> 00:05:05,080 Speaker 1: feel so bad reading this Heartbrecord. We had reports years 88 00:05:05,080 --> 00:05:08,080 Speaker 1: ago that he visited the place of his mother's death. 89 00:05:08,520 --> 00:05:11,960 Speaker 1: We knew he had been to that area. What we 90 00:05:12,040 --> 00:05:14,280 Speaker 1: didn't know is that he got in a car and 91 00:05:14,320 --> 00:05:20,920 Speaker 1: he recreated the evening of his mom's death onlievable. Hey 92 00:05:21,000 --> 00:05:22,520 Speaker 1: what did you pull out of the book, Corey? What 93 00:05:22,520 --> 00:05:25,000 Speaker 1: what caught your eye? Yeah? Well, you know, I think 94 00:05:25,000 --> 00:05:27,479 Speaker 1: this is a bit more of the brotherly brawling that's 95 00:05:27,520 --> 00:05:29,080 Speaker 1: going on between the two of them. So and in 96 00:05:29,120 --> 00:05:31,919 Speaker 1: the book of Course, Harry claims that his brother William 97 00:05:32,000 --> 00:05:36,800 Speaker 1: physically attacked him over Megan Marco. So he claims in 98 00:05:37,000 --> 00:05:39,720 Speaker 1: his new book Spare of Course, that his older brother, 99 00:05:39,760 --> 00:05:44,280 Speaker 1: Prince William physically attacked him and physically, yeah, physically attacked him. Yes, 100 00:05:44,279 --> 00:05:47,440 Speaker 1: Prince Harry claims that his brother William physically attacked him, 101 00:05:47,480 --> 00:05:51,640 Speaker 1: not mentally or verbally. Harry claims that William called Harry's wife, 102 00:05:51,720 --> 00:05:55,920 Speaker 1: Megan Marko, difficult, rude, and abrasive, which Harry goes on 103 00:05:55,960 --> 00:05:58,800 Speaker 1: to describe as parenting the press that was in the 104 00:05:58,839 --> 00:06:02,240 Speaker 1: British press, you know, calling Megan those very same things. Now, 105 00:06:02,279 --> 00:06:05,360 Speaker 1: in a response, Harry writes that William unleashed on him, 106 00:06:05,360 --> 00:06:07,760 Speaker 1: and it all happened so fast, so very fast. He 107 00:06:07,839 --> 00:06:10,279 Speaker 1: grabbed me by the collar, ripping my necklace, and he 108 00:06:10,360 --> 00:06:13,160 Speaker 1: knocked me to the floor. The author rights. He says, 109 00:06:13,160 --> 00:06:16,039 Speaker 1: I landed on the dog's bowl, which cracked under my 110 00:06:16,080 --> 00:06:19,120 Speaker 1: back and the pieces cut into me. I lay there 111 00:06:19,120 --> 00:06:21,000 Speaker 1: for a moment days then I got to my feet 112 00:06:21,000 --> 00:06:24,680 Speaker 1: and I told him to get out. Harry thirty eight 113 00:06:24,720 --> 00:06:28,560 Speaker 1: claims that the alleged altercation left him with visible back injury. 114 00:06:28,640 --> 00:06:30,640 Speaker 1: I'm not sure if he still suffers from it, but 115 00:06:30,960 --> 00:06:33,960 Speaker 1: at the time it was a visible, visible back injury. 116 00:06:34,160 --> 00:06:36,320 Speaker 1: Now that heated exchange with the forty year old William 117 00:06:36,320 --> 00:06:39,520 Speaker 1: occurred at Nottingham Cottage, which you've talked about off and 118 00:06:39,560 --> 00:06:43,320 Speaker 1: on our show, after he expressed interest in discussing the 119 00:06:43,440 --> 00:06:48,400 Speaker 1: rolling catastrophe of his crumbling relationship with Harry. Now, Harry 120 00:06:48,440 --> 00:06:51,400 Speaker 1: claims that William was piping hot during their chat. After 121 00:06:51,440 --> 00:06:54,599 Speaker 1: the insults were exchanged, Harry writes that William claimed he 122 00:06:54,680 --> 00:06:56,800 Speaker 1: only wanted to help his younger brother. He says, are 123 00:06:56,839 --> 00:06:59,800 Speaker 1: you serious? Helped me? Sorry? Is that what you call this? 124 00:07:00,040 --> 00:07:04,159 Speaker 1: Helping me? This comment, Harry writes, really angered William even more, 125 00:07:04,360 --> 00:07:08,200 Speaker 1: who then began swearing while stepping toward him. It's like 126 00:07:08,240 --> 00:07:10,400 Speaker 1: a street fight at this point. Yeah, yeah, you're like 127 00:07:10,480 --> 00:07:14,280 Speaker 1: in a bar room brawl basically. And so Harry told William, look, Willie, 128 00:07:14,480 --> 00:07:16,360 Speaker 1: I can't speak to you when you're like this, and 129 00:07:16,400 --> 00:07:18,560 Speaker 1: he offered him a glass of water before he was 130 00:07:18,600 --> 00:07:22,960 Speaker 1: allegedly assaulted. Now here's an interesting fact too. Now, of 131 00:07:23,000 --> 00:07:25,480 Speaker 1: course the Palace, who always typically you know, have to 132 00:07:25,480 --> 00:07:28,960 Speaker 1: respond to these things. The Palace responded to this allegation 133 00:07:29,080 --> 00:07:32,400 Speaker 1: that William physically assaulted Harry over Megan Markham in their 134 00:07:32,480 --> 00:07:37,520 Speaker 1: usual fashion, they refused to comment anything but the comment 135 00:07:37,960 --> 00:07:41,720 Speaker 1: a physical attack inside a royal palace, Inside a royal palace, 136 00:07:41,920 --> 00:07:46,800 Speaker 1: he said, William was piping hot, piping out, livid, lunged 137 00:07:46,800 --> 00:07:48,840 Speaker 1: for him, got him. And you know, if rob is 138 00:07:48,880 --> 00:07:51,760 Speaker 1: funny to those words rude, difficult, you know, I've discussed 139 00:07:52,000 --> 00:07:55,080 Speaker 1: those words and what they mean. Very often when women 140 00:07:55,120 --> 00:07:57,200 Speaker 1: are called those words. You've had this discussion on the 141 00:07:57,240 --> 00:08:00,040 Speaker 1: show where you know that's a code word for for 142 00:08:00,280 --> 00:08:04,600 Speaker 1: the B word. Basically, what's shocking about this is that 143 00:08:04,920 --> 00:08:08,320 Speaker 1: if you called my partner those words, it would be 144 00:08:08,360 --> 00:08:11,640 Speaker 1: me lunging at you. William did both. Not only did 145 00:08:11,680 --> 00:08:19,440 Speaker 1: he assault William Megan verbally too. It is William really 146 00:08:19,600 --> 00:08:24,240 Speaker 1: to put that cottage furious? Yes, that's pretty ready for it. 147 00:08:24,280 --> 00:08:26,880 Speaker 1: Harry said, it was like a duel, going back into 148 00:08:26,960 --> 00:08:32,840 Speaker 1: Medievil times. William turned up and oh my goodness, it exploded. 149 00:08:32,920 --> 00:08:35,760 Speaker 1: We knew things were bad between the two brothers, we 150 00:08:35,800 --> 00:08:39,280 Speaker 1: didn't know it had got to physical, but now we do. 151 00:08:39,760 --> 00:08:42,920 Speaker 1: This is an excerpt. We're trying to find details for 152 00:08:42,960 --> 00:08:45,640 Speaker 1: each family member so that you don't have to listen 153 00:08:45,679 --> 00:08:48,280 Speaker 1: to any other podcast or read anything. Everything here is 154 00:08:48,360 --> 00:08:51,120 Speaker 1: on the Naughty but Nice Show. So Harry said that 155 00:08:51,280 --> 00:08:56,680 Speaker 1: William urged King Charles not to marry their quote wicked 156 00:08:56,920 --> 00:09:05,840 Speaker 1: stepmother Miller. So if you remember in the infamous interview, 157 00:09:06,080 --> 00:09:08,960 Speaker 1: Diana said, quote, there are three of us in this marriage, 158 00:09:09,320 --> 00:09:14,440 Speaker 1: so it's a bit crowded. Well after that, after that interview, 159 00:09:14,559 --> 00:09:17,440 Speaker 1: they all knew he said his mom tried to shelter 160 00:09:17,559 --> 00:09:19,800 Speaker 1: them from the fact his dad was having an affair. 161 00:09:19,920 --> 00:09:22,560 Speaker 1: She didn't talk about it, but after she admitted it 162 00:09:22,600 --> 00:09:26,120 Speaker 1: on National TV, they all knew about it. And when 163 00:09:26,520 --> 00:09:29,840 Speaker 1: and then when their father married cam Miller, Harry writes, quote, 164 00:09:30,120 --> 00:09:32,800 Speaker 1: despite Willie and me urging him not to do it, 165 00:09:32,960 --> 00:09:38,800 Speaker 1: par was going ahead. We bumped his hand and wished 166 00:09:38,880 --> 00:09:44,080 Speaker 1: him well, no hard feelings. We recognized that he was 167 00:09:44,160 --> 00:09:47,800 Speaker 1: finally going to be with the woman he loved and 168 00:09:47,880 --> 00:09:51,960 Speaker 1: the woman he always loved. They had come to terms 169 00:09:52,000 --> 00:09:55,360 Speaker 1: as young boys with the fact that they knew their 170 00:09:55,480 --> 00:09:59,439 Speaker 1: dad did not love their mom. And then when their 171 00:09:59,559 --> 00:10:03,760 Speaker 1: dad did finally propose get married to Camilla, at first 172 00:10:04,120 --> 00:10:06,120 Speaker 1: they tried to tell him not to do it, but 173 00:10:06,240 --> 00:10:10,520 Speaker 1: they accepted it. And I think, although that's phrase wicked 174 00:10:10,600 --> 00:10:14,720 Speaker 1: stepmother's there, he's using that as a little bit tongue 175 00:10:14,760 --> 00:10:17,400 Speaker 1: in cheek. He's not calling her that, he's saying that's 176 00:10:17,440 --> 00:10:21,080 Speaker 1: what the media called her. And in fact, there's not 177 00:10:21,160 --> 00:10:24,920 Speaker 1: a lot about Camilla or his dad actually in this book. 178 00:10:25,520 --> 00:10:31,200 Speaker 1: Most of the drama he's turned towards William and hate, 179 00:10:31,240 --> 00:10:36,440 Speaker 1: which just sets you up beautifully car for the next story. Yeah, absolutely, 180 00:10:36,480 --> 00:10:39,600 Speaker 1: because this was a big controversy. I remember what had happened, 181 00:10:39,600 --> 00:10:41,640 Speaker 1: and I guessed when I saw this. But you know, 182 00:10:41,920 --> 00:10:44,680 Speaker 1: Prince Harry claims that it was William and Kate who 183 00:10:44,720 --> 00:10:48,920 Speaker 1: told him to wear that infamous Nazi costume that was 184 00:10:48,960 --> 00:10:51,240 Speaker 1: all over the headlines a few years back. Were quite 185 00:10:51,280 --> 00:10:53,240 Speaker 1: a few years back, of course, But Prince Harry, he 186 00:10:53,320 --> 00:10:57,000 Speaker 1: has sensationally put some of the blame on this Nazi 187 00:10:57,080 --> 00:11:00,800 Speaker 1: uniform scandal on his brother William and his sister in 188 00:11:00,880 --> 00:11:03,720 Speaker 1: law Kate Middleton and this new and this new memoir. 189 00:11:03,880 --> 00:11:06,800 Speaker 1: Now the Duke of Sussex will claim the Prince and 190 00:11:06,840 --> 00:11:09,800 Speaker 1: Princess of Wales howled with laughter when they saw him 191 00:11:09,920 --> 00:11:12,800 Speaker 1: dressed up for this two thousand five party. Now, Harry 192 00:11:12,840 --> 00:11:15,440 Speaker 1: was twenty years old when the Sun newspaper published a 193 00:11:15,520 --> 00:11:20,200 Speaker 1: front page photo of him dressed as a nazimengerer with 194 00:11:20,240 --> 00:11:25,800 Speaker 1: a red arm band emblazoned with a big swashtika. Really disgusting. Yeah, 195 00:11:25,840 --> 00:11:28,640 Speaker 1: but the picture was taking taken at a costume party 196 00:11:29,000 --> 00:11:34,920 Speaker 1: with a native and colonial theme, which is there's nothing yeah, 197 00:11:34,960 --> 00:11:37,280 Speaker 1: I mean they all went to the party just looking 198 00:11:37,280 --> 00:11:40,280 Speaker 1: for trouble with that that theme. But but William was 199 00:11:40,360 --> 00:11:42,960 Speaker 1: also a guest there, and he was dressed in a 200 00:11:43,000 --> 00:11:46,040 Speaker 1: homemade lion outfit, which I'm not sure how that fits 201 00:11:46,040 --> 00:11:52,000 Speaker 1: into anything William was and oh maybe so a lion. 202 00:11:53,080 --> 00:11:55,440 Speaker 1: That's that's even more gross than a weird way. But 203 00:11:55,520 --> 00:11:57,680 Speaker 1: in one segment of the book, Harry writes about choosing 204 00:11:57,720 --> 00:11:59,480 Speaker 1: the outfit, and he reveals that it was a toss 205 00:11:59,559 --> 00:12:02,720 Speaker 1: up between two costumes, either a pilot or a Nazi. 206 00:12:02,840 --> 00:12:08,319 Speaker 1: He I think you paid. You made a wrong choice there, buddy, 207 00:12:08,360 --> 00:12:11,280 Speaker 1: But he says, I phoned William Kate. I asked what 208 00:12:11,360 --> 00:12:14,160 Speaker 1: they thought. Not to the uniform, they said, Harry writes, 209 00:12:14,160 --> 00:12:16,360 Speaker 1: adding adding that when he went home and tried it 210 00:12:16,520 --> 00:12:20,440 Speaker 1: on for them, they both how old as they laughed 211 00:12:20,440 --> 00:12:21,920 Speaker 1: at it, and they really thought it was funny and 212 00:12:21,960 --> 00:12:24,559 Speaker 1: fun They encouraged him to wear it, he's claiming, now 213 00:12:24,559 --> 00:12:28,760 Speaker 1: worse than Willie's leotard outfit, way more ridiculous, of course, 214 00:12:29,000 --> 00:12:31,000 Speaker 1: which again was the point. You know, it was like 215 00:12:31,000 --> 00:12:33,560 Speaker 1: a much more fun they thought of a costume more 216 00:12:33,600 --> 00:12:35,560 Speaker 1: than the lion, but of course it was grotesque as 217 00:12:35,559 --> 00:12:38,480 Speaker 1: a Nazi soldier. That Although the Duke of Sessex has 218 00:12:38,559 --> 00:12:41,080 Speaker 1: called the Nazi incident one of the biggest mistakes of 219 00:12:41,120 --> 00:12:44,720 Speaker 1: his life. One senior publishing Sturce, who has read Harry's spare, 220 00:12:44,880 --> 00:12:48,440 Speaker 1: told us it's strange as you think that Harry would 221 00:12:48,520 --> 00:12:50,959 Speaker 1: take ownership of this and just move on and not 222 00:12:51,240 --> 00:12:54,360 Speaker 1: drag his to it. But he makes it clear that 223 00:12:54,360 --> 00:12:57,640 Speaker 1: he feels strongly about William's role in this big scandal. 224 00:12:59,120 --> 00:13:01,840 Speaker 1: It's it's true, though, because I think when I read this, 225 00:13:02,000 --> 00:13:04,280 Speaker 1: I thought, well, it was a long time ago, and 226 00:13:04,320 --> 00:13:06,280 Speaker 1: granted he was the older brother at the time who 227 00:13:06,280 --> 00:13:09,200 Speaker 1: advised him, but it's done. You made the choice to 228 00:13:09,280 --> 00:13:12,120 Speaker 1: do this, and let's not try to put blame on it. 229 00:13:12,280 --> 00:13:14,959 Speaker 1: There's something really personal going on with this. It's personal. 230 00:13:15,080 --> 00:13:16,959 Speaker 1: You can feel it in the pages of the book. 231 00:13:17,120 --> 00:13:20,319 Speaker 1: This is personal. This is Harry telling his story. This 232 00:13:20,360 --> 00:13:23,040 Speaker 1: is a man who feels like he has lost his voice. 233 00:13:23,280 --> 00:13:25,600 Speaker 1: For his entire life, not had a voice, and now 234 00:13:25,640 --> 00:13:28,520 Speaker 1: he has it. And I asked some friends of Harry 235 00:13:28,520 --> 00:13:31,640 Speaker 1: about this, because obviously he had to mention talk about 236 00:13:31,640 --> 00:13:35,200 Speaker 1: that Nazi uniform. It was one of the biggest, biggest 237 00:13:35,240 --> 00:13:37,920 Speaker 1: moments of his life. He was on the cover of newspapers. 238 00:13:37,960 --> 00:13:40,680 Speaker 1: He said it was probably the worst moment of his 239 00:13:40,880 --> 00:13:43,719 Speaker 1: entire life, the biggest mistake of my life. You have 240 00:13:43,840 --> 00:13:46,760 Speaker 1: to talk about your your mistakes. I was told that 241 00:13:46,840 --> 00:13:49,319 Speaker 1: he's not blaming William and kat here, but he's putting 242 00:13:49,320 --> 00:13:52,120 Speaker 1: it into context that they were part of this, that yes, 243 00:13:52,240 --> 00:13:55,080 Speaker 1: it was his choice. He ultimately wore it. And I 244 00:13:55,120 --> 00:13:57,880 Speaker 1: think if you really do read the pages are on 245 00:13:57,920 --> 00:14:01,680 Speaker 1: this uniform, this disgusting austume. I do think you get 246 00:14:01,720 --> 00:14:04,800 Speaker 1: that the headlines make out here as if he's blaming them, 247 00:14:04,800 --> 00:14:07,200 Speaker 1: and there's a little bit of that, but he's sort 248 00:14:07,240 --> 00:14:10,120 Speaker 1: of informing us on the entire story here. It's a 249 00:14:10,160 --> 00:14:13,080 Speaker 1: shocking story, and I do I do find it really 250 00:14:13,120 --> 00:14:17,320 Speaker 1: interesting that they saw the costume before he went Towehead 251 00:14:17,559 --> 00:14:21,000 Speaker 1: and they were like shocked. They were like, oh my god, 252 00:14:21,480 --> 00:14:23,880 Speaker 1: there was The royals were so angry and it had 253 00:14:23,920 --> 00:14:28,240 Speaker 1: this new narrative that William had this crazy brother and 254 00:14:28,280 --> 00:14:31,600 Speaker 1: they said they didn't actually say at the time, we 255 00:14:31,720 --> 00:14:34,640 Speaker 1: saw it and we thought it was funny. Hey keep moving, 256 00:14:34,760 --> 00:14:38,760 Speaker 1: because we got so much to get to. Another William 257 00:14:39,120 --> 00:14:42,320 Speaker 1: story that I thought was was really wild is that 258 00:14:42,480 --> 00:14:48,320 Speaker 1: in his book he calls William his arch nemy. There 259 00:14:48,640 --> 00:14:50,080 Speaker 1: it's like, you can't get more clear that you can't 260 00:14:50,120 --> 00:14:52,600 Speaker 1: get him on that. He said, there's always been competition 261 00:14:53,040 --> 00:14:56,160 Speaker 1: between us, and he said, I think it really plays 262 00:14:56,280 --> 00:14:59,880 Speaker 1: into the air and the spare labels, which is all 263 00:15:00,000 --> 00:15:04,280 Speaker 1: simothly what he called the book. He said that this 264 00:15:04,360 --> 00:15:09,800 Speaker 1: is what his life was from the day he was born. 265 00:15:10,360 --> 00:15:13,280 Speaker 1: He was the spare and within the structure of the 266 00:15:13,320 --> 00:15:16,560 Speaker 1: family and the institution, he was number two. He was 267 00:15:16,680 --> 00:15:20,960 Speaker 1: never ever allowed to be number one, you know, because 268 00:15:20,960 --> 00:15:23,800 Speaker 1: I think we think before reading this book that the 269 00:15:23,840 --> 00:15:26,440 Speaker 1: brothers had a huge falling out and then no longer close. 270 00:15:26,720 --> 00:15:28,920 Speaker 1: What Harry is saying is we were never as close 271 00:15:28,960 --> 00:15:32,680 Speaker 1: as you think. I was always in the shadows, and 272 00:15:33,120 --> 00:15:38,080 Speaker 1: William was always my arch nemesis. Absolutely, yeah. And you know, 273 00:15:38,160 --> 00:15:40,320 Speaker 1: and it's funny because the next story that I'm going 274 00:15:40,360 --> 00:15:42,760 Speaker 1: to share, obviously he has to do a lot with 275 00:15:42,800 --> 00:15:46,120 Speaker 1: that um and he must have always from day one 276 00:15:46,200 --> 00:15:48,800 Speaker 1: been made to feel like he was not really the 277 00:15:48,920 --> 00:15:52,360 Speaker 1: heir apparent in any way shape, and he just reveals 278 00:15:52,400 --> 00:15:55,440 Speaker 1: that right there, I mean, his arch nemesis. That's like 279 00:15:55,440 --> 00:15:59,640 Speaker 1: when you nemesis, that's like Darth Vader and likes it's like, 280 00:15:59,680 --> 00:16:02,840 Speaker 1: oh thing. We also get a whole chapter where Megan 281 00:16:02,920 --> 00:16:09,120 Speaker 1: Markle was reprimanded for a comment about Kate, so Harry 282 00:16:09,120 --> 00:16:11,960 Speaker 1: claims that Megan was firmly put in her place for 283 00:16:12,080 --> 00:16:16,120 Speaker 1: making a comment about Kate ahead of their wedding. He 284 00:16:16,240 --> 00:16:20,200 Speaker 1: wrote that Megan told Kate that she must have quote 285 00:16:20,720 --> 00:16:25,280 Speaker 1: baby brain because of her hormones. So there was a 286 00:16:25,280 --> 00:16:29,880 Speaker 1: an incident before the wedding and Kate didn't remember something 287 00:16:30,360 --> 00:16:33,520 Speaker 1: and Megan, in I think a kind way, was trying 288 00:16:33,520 --> 00:16:37,040 Speaker 1: to let her, oh, you just forgotten it, or you 289 00:16:37,160 --> 00:16:39,480 Speaker 1: just had a baby and you've got baby brain. And 290 00:16:40,200 --> 00:16:44,360 Speaker 1: well Kate did not find that funny at all, and 291 00:16:44,440 --> 00:16:47,320 Speaker 1: she was really offended by it and said, we're not 292 00:16:47,440 --> 00:16:50,400 Speaker 1: close enough for you to be making jokes or comments 293 00:16:50,440 --> 00:16:56,960 Speaker 1: about my whole. And so they had an explosive, explosive 294 00:16:57,160 --> 00:17:01,160 Speaker 1: falling out that ended up with Willie him putting his 295 00:17:01,360 --> 00:17:07,800 Speaker 1: finger in Megan markles face. Oh my goodness. Well Megan 296 00:17:07,880 --> 00:17:10,520 Speaker 1: was having none of that. Megan said, remove your finger 297 00:17:10,600 --> 00:17:17,920 Speaker 1: from my face. This is explosive. This is before the wedding. 298 00:17:18,080 --> 00:17:21,200 Speaker 1: So we think that everything was great, remember that wedding. 299 00:17:21,280 --> 00:17:25,760 Speaker 1: Everything was great? Wasn't from day one almost this was 300 00:17:26,119 --> 00:17:30,560 Speaker 1: a disaster. Now, talking of weddings, what did Harry say 301 00:17:30,680 --> 00:17:34,120 Speaker 1: about William when he got married. So Prince Harry says 302 00:17:34,119 --> 00:17:37,919 Speaker 1: that Prince William was gone forever after the Kate Middleton wedding, 303 00:17:37,920 --> 00:17:40,679 Speaker 1: so he felt like there was already this separation that 304 00:17:40,760 --> 00:17:43,960 Speaker 1: was just kind of irreconcilable at that point. So Prince 305 00:17:43,960 --> 00:17:47,280 Speaker 1: Harry reflects in his new memoir Spare On saying goodbye 306 00:17:47,320 --> 00:17:50,159 Speaker 1: to his relationship with Prince William. When the Prince of 307 00:17:50,160 --> 00:17:54,280 Speaker 1: Wales married Kate Middleton in two thousand eleven, the brother 308 00:17:54,440 --> 00:17:58,640 Speaker 1: I escorted into Westminster Abbey that morning was gone. He'd 309 00:17:58,720 --> 00:18:02,200 Speaker 1: never again be first and foremost Willie Pete, never ride 310 00:18:02,200 --> 00:18:05,640 Speaker 1: with him again across the countryside with keeps blowing behind them. 311 00:18:05,800 --> 00:18:09,480 Speaker 1: We'd never again share a horsey's smelling cornage while learning 312 00:18:09,520 --> 00:18:14,359 Speaker 1: to fly. Who shall separate us life? That's we all 313 00:18:14,400 --> 00:18:16,720 Speaker 1: think it's the wedding with Megan. It wasn't. When he 314 00:18:16,800 --> 00:18:20,080 Speaker 1: married Kate, Harry felt abandoned. Harry felt as if he 315 00:18:20,160 --> 00:18:22,560 Speaker 1: lost his brother. And that's when he really married into 316 00:18:22,640 --> 00:18:26,720 Speaker 1: the institution of becoming the King of England. That's when 317 00:18:26,760 --> 00:18:29,560 Speaker 1: he became a real member of the royal family. Before then, 318 00:18:29,560 --> 00:18:32,720 Speaker 1: there were just two young kids joined London lots and 319 00:18:32,760 --> 00:18:35,439 Speaker 1: lots of privilege running around London together. But when he 320 00:18:35,480 --> 00:18:38,000 Speaker 1: got married he started to take the royal part of 321 00:18:38,040 --> 00:18:41,760 Speaker 1: the institution, seriously the institution, and that's when he lost 322 00:18:41,840 --> 00:18:44,520 Speaker 1: his brother. So I think that we're going to figure out, 323 00:18:44,680 --> 00:18:47,160 Speaker 1: or anybody that's read the book is going to read 324 00:18:47,200 --> 00:18:49,720 Speaker 1: the book, that's the moment that you will figure out 325 00:18:49,920 --> 00:18:54,320 Speaker 1: this relationship was over that. Hey, we have ran out 326 00:18:54,320 --> 00:18:57,399 Speaker 1: of time. We have so much more to get to 327 00:18:57,480 --> 00:19:00,119 Speaker 1: on this. Don't worry this story we own. We're the 328 00:19:00,119 --> 00:19:03,560 Speaker 1: best at the Royals. Nobody has royal sources like I do. Corey. 329 00:19:03,600 --> 00:19:05,880 Speaker 1: You are so up to speed on this one. We 330 00:19:06,000 --> 00:19:08,719 Speaker 1: know this really, really well. So those were just some 331 00:19:08,760 --> 00:19:12,720 Speaker 1: of the biggest, biggest highlights from the book, the stuff 332 00:19:12,880 --> 00:19:15,439 Speaker 1: everybody is going to be talking about, and we are 333 00:19:15,480 --> 00:19:18,080 Speaker 1: so used that we got to bring it to you 334 00:19:18,520 --> 00:19:22,280 Speaker 1: a couple of days early. Are we naughty? Thank you 335 00:19:22,359 --> 00:19:28,840 Speaker 1: Spain all this week. Thank you so much for listening 336 00:19:28,840 --> 00:19:30,639 Speaker 1: to The Naughty but Nice with Robin Corey Show, a 337 00:19:30,680 --> 00:19:33,679 Speaker 1: production of I Heart Radio. Don't forget to subscribe on 338 00:19:33,760 --> 00:19:36,040 Speaker 1: the I Heart Radio app Apple podcast. Wherever you listen, 339 00:19:36,480 --> 00:19:39,280 Speaker 1: leave us a review if you can, and remember altogether. Now, 340 00:19:39,720 --> 00:19:45,280 Speaker 1: if you're going to be naughty, you've got to be nice. 341 00:19:46,280 --> 00:19:47,920 Speaker 1: It's not even nice with