Looking up and serious face. It is the most stoic and unalterable image of Carlos III this Thursday, December 8, the same day that the Netflix platform has released the Harry and Meghan docuseries. Thunder and lightning unloaded on Buckingham Palace before the broadcast of the first three chapters of this serial in which revelations from the Sussexes about their life within the Windsors are heard. These confessions also point to the one who is now the head of The Firm. In full storm, the monarch has presided over an act.
Impassive, resigned and professional, King Carlos III has faced up to his schedule commitments and has planted this Thursday the 8th at King’s Cross Church, in London. Someone from the public has come to ask him the most uncomfortable question about what he thought of the series of his son Harry and Meghan, but Carlos, firm, has not said anything. There have been no words. They have not flown eggs either (he already received one in an act and it was not the first). There was no oven at all.
With the British press broadcasting minute by minute of the three episodes of the Sussexes, the atmosphere was conditioned by the monotheme. Upon his arrival, Carlos has met with volunteers and beneficiaries of local community initiatives in King’s Cross, on a visit to the King’s House community center in the capital. Silence has marked the act of the day. Carlos, in ‘holding the downpour’ mode, has followed the script set by his mother around the culture of silence.
The revelations of his son Harry in the streaming giant’s series have come in the form of taunts, such as that he grew up in Africa: “I have a second family there. A group of friends who literally raised me”. Making a common front with his wife, Meghan, he assures that the “most important thing” for them is “not to repeat the same mistakes” that “perhaps” their parents made. Both children of divorcees, they feel united in a childhood that has “much in common”. Furthermore, the duke has compared his wife to his mother, Diana of Waleslike two women who have suffered the unbearable pressure of living in a palace and dealing with the tabloids.