What did Gayle King say on her SiriusXM show?
On Prince Philip:
‘Well, just so you know, they had done that interview before Prince Phillip went into the hospital.
‘And if something, God forbid, had happened to him, the interview would not have run at this particular time. But the interview was done and was scheduled before he went into the hospital. But a lot of people have raised that point.’
On why Harry and Meghan did the Oprah interview:
‘I think that Harry and Meghan both have been through so much for the past three years and they really have tried to work it out privately. They really have tried to get help, and nothing was working.
‘So I think they wanted people to have some understanding about why they made the decision that they made and what they’ve been going through, and I do think that they accomplished that. I do. I think it was very brave of her and Harry to reveal what they did.
‘It’s unheard of, and it certainly has been a ‘bombshell’, is the word. There were six or seven that night. I stopped counting at six. It was bombshell, after bombshell, after bombshell, but I do believe it was an honest conversation. I’m hoping it will lead to change.’
On Piers Morgan and Alex Beresford:
‘Piers Morgan is no longer with a job. He stormed off the air after saying that I don’t believe that she had mental illness, I don’t believe she was suicidal. They got over 41,000 calls of people weighing in to say that is not OK, that is not cool. And by the next day, he was out of a job. He said he resigned. I find that a little hard to believe when you had 41,000 calls.’
‘And kudos to his co-anchor, they said it was the weather guy. I wonder if he was the weather guy, but they described him as a weather guy, who spoke out and really let Piers have it on the air, and then Piers stormed off, and now Piers is no longer on the air there.’
Meghan’s Markle’s broadcaster friend Gayle King has claimed the Duke and Duchess of Sussex had a deal with CBS and ITV to postpone their bombshell interview with Oprah Winfrey if Prince Philip had died.
Miss King’s remarks on TV yesterday have already sparked a new row between Meghan’s supporters and Buckingham Palace after she revealed the Sussexes told her that they had held talks with Harry’s brother Prince William and father Charles which ‘were not productive’.
Now, her revelations about the couple’s arrangements for the death of Harry’s grandfather, which she revealed on Thursday last week, will add further fuel to the fire amid claims the palace is unhappy at the Sussexes’ revealing a private conversation over the weekend.
The Duke of Edinburgh, 99, was released from King Edward VII’s Hospital in London yesterday after a month being treated for an infection and having heart surgery.
During their interview on March 7, the Sussexes accused an unnamed royal – not the Queen or Philip – of raising concerns about how dark their son Archie’s skin tone would be before he was born, and Meghan also claimed she begged for help while suicidal.
And Miss King, 66, who is also close friends with Oprah, revealed on her SiriusXM radio show in the US: ‘Well, just so you know, they had done that interview before Prince Phillip went into the hospital. And if something, God forbid, had happened to him, the interview would not have run at this particular time. But the interview was done and was scheduled before he went into the hospital. But a lot of people have raised that point.’
Philip was admitted to King Edward VII’s Hospital on February 16, before moving two weeks later to another hospital in the City of London, St Bartholomew’s, where he had a successful heart operation on March 3.
Two days later he was transferred back to King Edward VII’s to recuperate and continue his treatment, and left yesterday before being driven to Windsor Castle where he was reunited with the Queen after a month apart.
The Sussexes had faced calls to postpone the interview while Philip was in hospital out of respect for him.
Miss King, speaking on her radio programme Gayle King In The House, during which she was interrupted by a FaceTime call from her best friend Oprah, added: ‘I think that Harry and Meghan both have been through so much for the past three years and they really have tried to work it out privately. They really have tried to get help, and nothing was working.
‘So I think they wanted people to have some understanding about why they made the decision that they made and what they’ve been going through, and I do think that they accomplished that. I do. I think it was very brave of her and Harry to reveal what they did. It’s unheard of, and it certainly has been a ‘bombshell’, is the word.
Gayle King spoke about the deal the Sussexes made regarding the Duke of Edinburgh on her SiriusXM show last Thursday
The Duke and Duchess of Sussex in conversation with Oprah Winfrey in an interview first aired on CBS on March 7
Prince Philip, who is set to celebrate his 100th birthday in June, leaves King Edward VII’s Hospital in London yesterday a
Gayle King, who is close friends with Meghan, revealed on CBS This Morning yesterday that Harry had spoken to William
Timeline of the Duke of Edinburgh’s hospital stay and Harry & Meghan’s Oprah interview
- Tuesday, February 16, 2021: The duke is admitted to King Edward VII’s Hospital on a precautionary basis after feeling unwell. He travels from Windsor Castle by car. Philip is said to be in ‘good spirits’ and walks into the private hospital unaided. He is expected to stay for a few days.
- Friday, February 19: Sources say Philip is now expected to remain in hospital for ‘observation and rest’ over the weekend and into the next week.
- Harry and Meghan are stripped of their prestigious patronages as the couple confirmed Megxit has become permanent.
- Saturday, February 20: The Prince of Wales makes a 200-mile round trip to see his father, spending around half an hour at the hospital.
- Tuesday, February 23: Seven days after the duke was admitted, the Palace says he is being treated for an infection and is ‘comfortable and responding to treatment’, but is not expected to leave hospital for several more days. The Earl of Wessex says the duke is a ‘lot better’ and looking forward to getting out.
- Friday, February 26: Harry says a ‘toxic’ atmosphere created by the British press forced him and his family to leave the UK, in an interview with James Corden
- Monday, March 1: Philip is transferred in an ambulance to St Bartholomew’s Hospital for treatment for an infection and testing and observation for a pre-existing heart condition, Buckingham Palace says. The duke is shielded from public view by large umbrellas as he leaves King Edward VII’s Hospital.
- A preview clip of the Oprah Winfrey interview shows Harry saying his biggest fear is that ‘history would repeat itself’ in a reference to his mother’s death, while the host is also seen asking Meghan if she was ‘silent or silenced’, but her answer is not revealed.
- Tuesday, March 2: The Queen continues with her official duties by holding calls with the Chancellor and the head of the British Army.
- Wednesday March 3: Philip undergoes surgery on his heart. The Duchess of Cornwall says of her father-in-law: ‘We heard today that he’s slightly improving. So, that’s very good news. We’ll keep our fingers crossed.’
- A spokesman for Meghan says she is ‘saddened’ by a report in the Times that she faced a bullying complaint during her time at Kensington Palace.
- Thursday, March 4: Buckingham Palace says Philip has had a ‘successful procedure’ for a pre-existing heart condition at St Bartholomew’s. It adds: ‘His Royal Highness will remain in hospital for treatment, rest and recuperation for a number of days.’
- Friday, March 5: Philip returns to King Edward VII’s Hospital to continue his recovery.
- Sunday, March 7 – Meghan and Harry’s interview with Oprah Winfrey airs in the US. They make allegations including accusing a member of the royal family of making a racist comment about their son Archie.
- Tuesday, March 9 – Buckingham Palace says the Queen is ‘saddened’ to hear the full extent of the challenges faced by the Sussexes and the issues raised around race are ‘concerning’.
- Tuesday, March 16: Philip leaves King Edward VII’s Hospital after a total of 28 days in hospital. Gayle King reveals Harry has held talks with Charles and William.
‘There were six or seven that night. I stopped counting at six. It was bombshell, after bombshell, after bombshell, but I do believe it was an honest conversation. I’m hoping it will lead to change.’
Miss King also spoke about Piers Morgan, who quit his role on Good Morning Britain last Tuesday after he refused to apologise for casting doubts on comments made by Meghan during the Oprah interview.
His remarks sparked more than 41,000 complaints to the media regulator Ofcom, who also received a complaint on behalf of the Duchess of Sussex herself, who had earlier also sent a formal complaint to ITV.
And Miss King said: ‘Piers Morgan is no longer with a job. He stormed off the air after saying that I don’t believe that she had mental illness, I don’t believe she was suicidal.
‘They got over 41,000 calls of people weighing in to say that is not OK, that is not cool.
‘And by the next day, he was out of a job. He said he resigned. I find that a little hard to believe when you had 41,000 calls.’
Miss King also referred to GMB weather presenter Alex Beresford, who was involved in the moment that saw Morgan walk out last week. She said: ‘And kudos to his co-anchor, they said it was the weather guy.
‘I wonder if he was the weather guy, but they described him as a weather guy, who spoke out and really let Piers have it on the air, and then Piers stormed off, and now Piers is no longer on the air there.’
The comments from Miss King emerged today, after she revealed yesterday that Harry and Meghan had told her that the Duke of Sussex had finally spoken to his father and brother following the interview with Oprah.
Hours later, Miss King disclosed on CBS This Morning yesterday that the talks ‘were not productive’.
The breakfast show host also suggested that Meghan was unhappy no one in the Royal Family had thought to telephone her. And, in a thinly veiled threat, the presenter said the duchess had ‘documents to back up everything she said on Oprah’s interview’.
The Queen’s former press secretary Dickie Arbiter said yesterday: ‘Seems like the narrative is being driven by Gayle King of CBS. I don’t think a continual play on American TV is quite what the Queen had in mind. Time for a cooling off period – best for everyone to put up and shut up.’
The fact the Sussexes chose to reveal sensitive discussions between senior members of the Royal Family met with an icy response from Buckingham Palace.
‘None of the households [the Queen, the Prince of Wales and the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge] will be giving a running commentary on private conversations,’ said a senior royal source.
It was clear, however, that both the Windsors and senior officials see it as a severe betrayal of trust and unhelpful to attempts to rebuild bridges. Prince William, when he was questioned by a TV reporter on a public engagement last Thursday, said he had not yet spoken to his younger brother, but vowed he would.
He also insisted the Royal Family were not racists after Meghan claimed one member had raised ‘concerns’ about ‘how dark’ her baby’s skin would be, and suggested there was an attempt to deprive Archie of a title and security because he was of mixed race.
The duchess also said she had been given so little support by the Palace that she suffered suicidal thoughts.
Harry said he felt ‘really let down’ by his father, accused him of cutting him off financially and refusing to take his calls, while also revealing the gulf with William.
Prince William is pictured driving outside Kensington Palace in London yesterday after speaking to Harry over the weekend
Piers Morgan is pictured near his home in West London last Wednesday, the morning after he quit Good Morning Britain
The Queen responded to the Oprah interview with a deeply personal message saying that while ‘some recollections vary’, the issues raised, particularly that of race, were ‘concerning’ and would be taken seriously.
Piers Morgan’s reaction to Meghan Markle’s Oprah interview becomes the most complained about TV show ever – but still only a quarter of the number of viewers who demanded his return as ratings plummet
Piers Morgan’s comments about the Duchess of Sussex’s interview with Oprah Winfrey have led to the highest number of complaints in the TV regulator’s history.
The episodes of ITV’s Good Morning Britain on March 8 and 9 sparked 57,121 complaints to Ofcom.
But a defiant Morgan tweeted today: ‘Only 57,000? I’ve had more people than that come up and congratulate me in the street for what I said. The vast majority of Britons are right behind me.’
ITV announced Morgan had left the show on the evening of March 9, shortly after Ofcom said it had launched an investigation under its harm and offence rules, after receiving more than 41,000 complaints in two days.
It later emerged that Meghan also made a formal complaint to Ofcom about the TV host after he dismissed her account of suffering suicidal thoughts and experiencing racism at the hands of the royal family.
Morgan said on-air that he ‘didn’t believe a word’ of her interview with chat show host Winfrey when she laid bare her struggles.
She raised concerns with the broadcaster about the effect Morgan’s comments may have on the issue of mental health generally and those attempting to deal with their own problems – and not about the former newspaper editor’s personal attack on herself.
After a clip aired of Meghan discussing her issues with mental health and suicidal thoughts and royal official’s knowledge of them, Morgan said during Monday’s programme: ‘I’m sorry, I don’t believe a word she says. I wouldn’t believe her if she read me a weather report.’
More than 252,000 people have now signed three separate Change.org petitions demanding Morgan should be brought back to GMB.
Significantly, however, she emphasised that from now on the difficulties would be addressed by the family privately.
There have been a handful of stories published in the UK media reporting that Charles and William felt hurt by what Harry had said, but with very little detail on what was taking place behind the scenes.
That was turned on its head yesterday when Miss King decided to speak out on her prime-time morning show on CBS, the same channel that broadcast the Oprah interview.
Harry was accused of ’embarrassing’ hypocrisy this week for speaking to CBS, which caused outrage in 2004 by showing a photograph of his mother dying in a 1997 car crash in Paris.
Miss King told viewers she had called Harry and Meghan at their £10million California home ‘over the weekend’ to discuss the fallout from the interview and revealed they had told her details of their intimate conversations.
She said: ‘Well I’m not trying to break news, but I did actually call them to see how they were feeling, and it’s true, Harry has talked to his brother and he has talked to his father too.
‘The word I was given was that those conversations were not productive. But they are glad that they have at least started a conversation.’
Miss King also claimed the couple were unhappy that ‘the Palace’ had allegedly been leaking what they believed were untrue stories to the media.
She added: ‘And I think what is still upsetting to them is the Palace keep saying they want to work it out privately, but yet, they believe these false stories are coming out that are very disparaging against Meghan, still.’
She made clear that the duchess was unhappy that no one in the family had called her. ‘No one in the Royal Family has talked to Meghan yet, at this particular time,’ she said.
The Sussexes effectively accused the Royal Family and Buckingham Palace of institutional racism in their interview with Oprah.
But Miss King claimed they felt ‘frustrated’ that much of the coverage had focused on this – when they had apparently wanted only to provoke the monarchy into taking action against the media, which they believe has a racist agenda against Meghan.
‘It’s frustrating for them to see that it’s a racial conversation about the Royal Family when all they wanted all along was for the royals to intervene and tell the Press to stop with the unfair, inaccurate, false stories that definitely have a racial slant.’
Miss King said. ‘And until you can acknowledge that, I think it’s going to be hard to move forward.’ She also raised the issue of the investigation launched earlier this month by Buckingham Palace into how claims of bullying against Meghan lodged by a senior member of staff were handled.
Prince Charles and Camilla visit a vaccination pop-up centre at Finsbury Park Mosque in North London yesterday
Prince William, Charles, Harry, Camilla, Kate and Meghan follow the Queen at Westminster Abbey on March 9, 2020
The Queen with Harry and Meghan at the Queen’s Young Leaders Awards Ceremony at Buckingham Palace in June 2018
She said: ‘Anyone who has worked with her will tell you exactly who she is. You know, she’s really a very sweet, caring person.’
Omid Scobie equates Gayle King’s revelation of Harry’s ‘unproductive’ peace talks with William and Charles to briefings by royal ‘sources’
Meghan and Harry’s friend today launched a fresh attack on Buckingham Palace in the growing row over the couple’s decision to reveal their ‘unproductive’ peace talks with the Royal family to US TV host Gayle King.
Omid Scobie accused the media and Royal aides of double standards after it was reported that the Palace is believed to be unhappy with the couple’s decision to reveal the details of the private talks with William and Charles. He claimed he was ‘confused’ by criticism of the couple and claimed a ‘new royal protocol’ had been concocted after the Palace said it would not provide ‘running commentary on private conversations’.
Buckingham Palace has issued one statement on the Sussexes about the Oprah interview, on Tuesday last week, which said that ‘some recollections may vary’ but the claims raised would be ‘addressed by the family privately’. Royal sources have since said the palace will not ‘giving a running commentary on private conversations’, but there has been no briefing from palace sources since the initial statement was made on the Queen’s behalf.
Mr Scobie, co-author of the Sussexes biography Finding Freedom and a close ally of the couple, said today he was ‘confused’ by the criticism they have received as their friends again came out to back them as royal insiders accused Harry and Meghan of a betrayal of trust.
He tweeted: ‘Bit confused here, so just want to get this new royal protocol correct. It’s okay when info is leaked to the papers via a palace source but not when Gayle King shares it on TV? Righty-ho then’.
But critics have accused the Sussexes of double standards, with one replying to Mr Scobie’s tweet: ‘The point is that private phone calls are openly discussed with personal media friends. This is the very reason Meghan cut off her family’.
There was no immediate indication from the couple’s team of PR representatives – either in London or California – as to whether Miss King was speaking at their request.
Meanwhile it emerged today that Morgan’s comments about the Duchess’s interview with Oprah have led to the highest number of complaints in the TV regulator’s history.
The episodes of ITV’s Good Morning Britain on March 8 and 9 sparked 57,121 complaints to Ofcom.
ITV announced Morgan had left the show on the evening of March 9, shortly after Ofcom said it had launched an investigation under its harm and offence rules, after receiving more than 41,000 complaints in two days.
It later emerged that Meghan also made a formal complaint to Ofcom about the TV host after he dismissed her account of suffering suicidal thoughts and experiencing racism at the hands of the royal family.
Morgan said on-air that he ‘didn’t believe a word’ of her interview with chat show host Winfrey when she laid bare her struggles.
She raised concerns with the broadcaster about the effect Morgan’s comments may have on the issue of mental health generally and those attempting to deal with their own problems – and not about the former newspaper editor’s personal attack on herself.
After a clip aired of Meghan discussing her issues with mental health and suicidal thoughts and royal official’s knowledge of them, Morgan said during Monday’s programme: ‘I’m sorry, I don’t believe a word she says.
‘I wouldn’t believe her if she read me a weather report.’
Morgan added she had sparked an ‘onslaught’ against the royal family. His final episode of the show saw him storm off the set after a heated exchange with co-star Alex Beresford, in which Beresford accused Morgan of ‘trashing’ Meghan.
Morgan has stood by his controversial comments and said his departure from Good Morning Britain was caused by the ‘cancel culture that is permeating our country.’
The complaints about Morgan’s comments far exceed those made about about Celebrity Big Brother in 2018 when ex-Emmerdale actress Roxanne Pallett alleged she had been assaulted by fellow housemate Ryan Thomas, which prompted 25,327 complaints.
Ofcom received around 24,500 complaints about Diversity’s performance on Britain’s Got Talent last year, which was inspired by the Black Lives Matter movement.
The controversy with Shilpa Shetty on Celebrity Big Brother in 2007 was previously the most complained about issue, attracting 44,500 complaints.
There goes another 100,000 viewers! Susanna Reid ridicules Piers Morgan’s replacement Ben Shephard after he calls for the Royals to ‘share their truth’ with Harry and Meghan as show’s ratings plummet
ITV presenter Ben Shephard was mocked by his Good Morning Britain co-hosts today for urging the Royal Family and the Duke and Duchess of Sussex to ‘share their truth’ and ‘hopefully start healing’ after their private talks were leaked.
Shephard, who added that it was important for all parties ‘to be honest with each other’, was accused by Susanna Reid of ‘sounding like a Californian therapist’ while Ranvir Singh joked that he needed to get his ‘teeth whitened’.
The terms used by Shephard have strong similarities to those of Meghan and Harry during their bombshell interview with Oprah Winfrey, which first aired on CBS on March 7, and then on ITV the following night.
His language also comes in stark contrast to that of Piers Morgan, who quit the show on Tuesday last week after refusing to believe Meghan Markle’s claims made during her Oprah Winfrey interview with Prince Harry.
Morgan’s resignation has sparked a dramatic exodus of 400,000 viewers, with the GMB audience dropping by a third in the space of a week, leaving it trailing behind its main rival BBC Breakfast by 600,000 in the ratings war.
The ITV morning show has pulled in less than 900,000 viewers for its past three days – significantly down from the 1.29million who tuned in on Tuesday last week for what turned out to be Morgan’s final programme.
ITV presenter Ben Shephard (left) mocked by his Good Morning Britain co-host Susanna Reid (right) on today’s show on ITV
That figure represented the first time the ITV broadcast had beaten its long-time rival BBC Breakfast, which had 1.25million, but GMB has since lost 400,000 viewers in a week to fall well behind in the morning ratings war.
Yesterday GMB had 890,000 viewers with an audience share of 23 per cent, compared to the 1.57million tuning into the BBC with a 42 per cent share. The BBC’s peak saw 2.34million watching at 8.15am. On the same day last year – Monday, March 16, 2020 – GMB had an average of 900,000 compared to the BBC’s 1.81million.
Standing in the outspoken former host, Shephard, 46, told GMB viewers this morning: ‘It feels like this is the sort of thing that’s not going to be sorted out in one phone call. We don’t know how much is going on either.
‘But if there’s been such a hugely seismic moment within a family that has been suddenly thrown, very personal things have been thrown into the spotlight, it’s not going to be sorted out quickly. It’s going to take a while for everybody to be able to share their truth and be able to be honest with each other and hopefully start healing, because that’s what we all want.’
Reid told him: ‘You sound like a Californian therapist, Ben.’ He replied: ‘Maybe I should be’, before she added: ‘Speaking a bit of truth and healing.’ And Singh joked: ‘You need a bit of tan, Ben… get your teeth whitened.’
Meghan used the word ‘truth’ seven times during her interview which was first shown on March 7, while Oprah told her she was speaking ‘your truth’ – and the Duchess also talked about giving an ‘honest’ answer relating to the row over Archie’s potential skin tone.
Good Morning Britain has lost nearly a third of its viewers since Piers Morgan sensationally quit the ITV show last week after claiming he didn’t ‘believe a word’ Meghan Markle said during her Oprah Winfrey interview
The word ‘healing’ was yesterday used by Meghan’s friend Gayle King on US breakfast show CBS This Morning, when she spoke of Harry’s talks with his brother Prince Charles and their father William – and, during the Oprah chat, Harry said of his relationship with William: ‘Time heals all things, hopefully.’
Shephard’s choice of words set a different tone from the language of Morgan, whose remarks sparked more than 41,000 complaints to broadcast regulator Ofcom, which also received a complaint on behalf of the Duchess of Sussex herself, who had earlier also sent a formal complaint to ITV.
A dramatic GMB programme today also saw former EastEnders star Patsy Palmer shut down her interview after being billed as an ‘addict to wellness guru’, and Reid scolded by former MP Edwina Currie who told the presenter she is ‘not Piers Morgan’ during a heated conversation about the Government’s coronavirus response.
During the show, Singh also spoke about the latest royal news, saying: ‘You try to think what is the gain for Harry and Meghan in allowing that information out, what is it, it seems a little bit sort of mean spirited in a way?
‘You’ve had your moment, you’ve had your two hours on telly where you’ve said everything you want to say… and all the stuff on the cutting room floor. You just think well what is the point of it at this point, releasing little… are we expecting to hear every phone call that happens?’
Shephard added: ‘Unless it’s to keep it out there, keep the conversation viable, so that means the conversations keep happening, like they feel maybe that will orchestrate more.’
And Dr Hilary Jones said: ‘I think Ranvir you’re right, I think conciliation is needed, and they need an independent third party who can be a go-between between them and say come on, let’s have some conciliation.’
Also today, British chat show host Trisha Goddard told the programme: ‘Beyond them being a Royal Family they’re a family, and this is the part I’m concentrating on.
‘And I’ve said all along when they did that interview what I heard was absolute pain and anguish – and they might not have got all the details right and what have you but the message was we are in pain.
‘Now the Royal Family – a family – needs time to react to that. I’m reminded of something that the Duke of Edinburgh and Prince Charles apparently were having a conversation back in the days of Princess Diana.
‘And apparently the Duke of Edinburgh said to Prince Charles I wish you and Diana would just speak, just talk. And Prince Charles said, well here’s the problem, every time I do it ends up on the front page of a certain tabloid.
‘So if a family feels that everything they’re going to say is going to end up as a headline, they’re naturally going to be more reticent and perhaps less honest, and maybe more sparing with the communication.’