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Prince Harry: the millennial’s millennial The over-therapised posho never grow up

'The Sussexes embody the great tragedy of the Millennial.' Chris Jackson/Getty Images

'The Sussexes embody the great tragedy of the Millennial.' Chris Jackson/Getty Images


September 13, 2024   6 mins

Somewhere in Montecito on Sunday, a balding Englishman will celebrate his birthday over a bold Tignanello, clinking glasses with his glamorous Californian wife. Like Footloose, Agadoo and the original Apple Mac, Prince Harry is turning 40 — leaving behind a torrid decade of public spats, todger confessions and expensive therapists.

Nothing quite boils the blood of middle-aged men more than the departure of the Duke of Sussex for a better life out West, an upside-down Steinbeck protagonist. Most will claim to be enraged by the duke’s abandonment of duty or some such sniffy notion, but we all know that his great crime — greater even than that suggestion that his wife once made the sainted Princess of Wales cry over bridesmaid dresses — is self-involvement. His 2021 interview with Oprah alongside his wife Meghan confirmed our most sickening fears: that the toxic creed of “speaking your truth” had become irreversibly lodged in good old Harry Windsor’s brain.

Despite having two of the most unpopular qualities in British culture — he is, after all, a ginger posho — Harry was always respected among the bulk of the public (who, we must remember, regard the royal family with nothing more and nothing less than detached, bemused affection). He was the light relief to William’s sombre nobility, the cheeky spare who winked at Noughties lad culture and seemed to enjoy his privilege rather than wince at it, frolicking around in states of controversial dress (or undress) and injecting a sense of normality — fun, even — into a unit which had been so wracked by tragedy and, worse, off-putting stuffiness.

But his capture by millennial therapy culture signalled the death of this happy-go-lucky persona. For those who once grinned that Harry was a “rum lad”, this was a personal affront precisely because of the loss of that pleasing irony, the sauciness and levity which turns even bluebloods into good drinking partners. When the winks stopped, we sobered up and realised we had been sat opposite a quiffed clown, made up to look like a cheeky friend. The slipping of that mask must have hurt — particularly among those middle-aged men, for whom any association with the touchy-feely bollocks of California is not just embarrassing, but offensive.

Prince Harry is, without a doubt, the most millennial millennial to ever have breathed. In his trajectory from cheeky chappy to earnest, self-regarding counselling patient lies the story of his generation’s downfall into cringe. Though he sees his transformation as a journey to his authentic self, it is crystal clear to everyone not living under the glass dome of American therapy-speak that he has simply journeyed from one posture to another, each freighted with unbearable artifice. For the first, 1,000 years of monarchy and the straitjacket of the British class system determined his route from genteel thicko (he left Eton with a B in art, a D in geography and a dash of notoriety for smoking weed) to Army to nice girlfriend called Cressida. Had he been a commoner, he would have ended up as a mid-level consultant in Putney, probably in the shadow of his barrister brother William. Raffles has lost a lot of custom since his enlightenment.

“Prince Harry is, without a doubt, the most millennial millennial to ever have breathed.”

But this second, new persona — one which he hard-launched with the Oprah interview — is no less fated. With the awakening of West Coast elites comes a compulsory set of fixations, which I like to imagine their shrinks laugh about together at dinner parties. First and foremost, the wrongs of your parents, childhood trauma. Of course, Harry has more of this than most, and that is fair enough. But the endless remonstrations with your family, friends and “support network” — and a compulsion to cut them out for historical wrongs — is so distinctively millennial, and something which Abigail Shrier has rightly identified as having engendered complexes and neuroses in people who, for the most part, would have otherwise chugged along without a problem. Harry represents the great millennial task of seeing yourself as a kind of project, and the fallacy that it is not what you do, but how you feel about what you do, which matters.

His description of his teenaged family dynamics in Spare is so typical of the desire to frame ourselves as victims at the centre of a great conspiracy to hurt us, and to seek to “call out” and shame those responsible for the problems they have landed us with for the rest of our lives. It is a selfish culture of retribution, under the guise of “boundaries” and “transparency”, which has motivated Harry and countless other special children who have grown up to be the insufferable, childlike adults we all know. Harry has traded quiet, fair reconciliation for what amounts to a protracted family shouting match at a restaurant, the sulky teenager coming home from university armed with a new vocabulary and a clutch of crimes for which they’ll get justice now. I have been that person — most of us have — but to do so on the cusp of middle age, and via the bookshelves of Waterstones, is quite another matter. And in place of the grown-up realisation that your parents might have had no idea what they were doing either, he has trapped himself in a perpetual fantasy where he is a little Cinderello, describing Camilla as a “wicked stepmother” and his brother as an “arch-nemesis”.

So, childhood trauma? Check. Second millennial mania: a pathological obsession with privilege. If anyone should feel guilty about being a nepo baby, Harry should. But it has consumed his life, so that every sun-soaked, truth-living Californian minute is an act of repentance for chilly privilege in dreary old England. Harry and Meghan’s discussions around race are not the egregious sacrilege some newspapers claim them to be, nor is Meghan unjustified at all in complaining about the hideous, sexist coverage she has had to endure. An old colleague once described her, with great, sickly pride, as the “People’s Prostitute” — and the ire middle-aged men hold for her is definitely about something more than her being annoying. But what really sticks in the craw is not the Sussexes’ progressive values — which I find to be admirable, requiring considerable bravery in today’s media climate — but the damned hypocrisy of it all. It is difficult to be told to “check your privilege” by two Montecitan millionaires, and I fear they represent a very millennial crusade for justice: that is, one which privileges Instagrammable opportunities over substance. Besides, an obsession with one’s own privilege is really another opportunity to practise that terrible habit of the over-therapised — wanging on about ourselves.

Overall, the Sussexes — and Harry, in particular (we cannot fault Meghan for being from wet-blanket Los Angeles) embody the great tragedy of the millennial: the generation which, faced with new, strange waves of social disharmony, decided to do nothing about it and think about themselves instead. Harry is a harbinger of the turning-inwards of youth culture, a preference for introspection over duty, and the self over the whole. He is, too, a model of the irreversible way American obsessions have crossed the Atlantic, and planted themselves in the formerly funny, sardonic and self-knowing English.

Whether social media’s preference for the mooningly internal over the societal persists for other generations is up for debate; my own has seized it for its brand of activism — for instance, on Gaza — which yet may prove as hollow as the Sussexes’ Archewell Foundation Instagramming. Harry’s millennial earnestness has gone down like a cup of warm Sancerre with Gen Z who are, on the whole, much funnier and much less cringe. And right behind us, Gen Alpha is ready to snatch the crown from their parents’ receding hairlines: Prince Louis will no doubt prove that we ain’t seen nothing yet.

One wonders how Harry’s own story will end. Commentators, admittedly licking their lips over any perceived cracks in the ducal union since day one, have speculated that all is not sunshine and reiki for H&M. Harry’s teenagery conduct has left him rather rootless, and if speculation proves correct that Meghan is having a much better time of it than he is, rubbing shoulders with Ellen DeGeneres and launching lifestyle brands, then the “pootling” prince might find himself up the proverbial creek. If an attempt to rejoin the fold is ever on the cards, it would be to reunite with a family who has grown eminently more loved by the public for each year of his absence. It is hard to imagine Harry ever commanding the affection that Kate does, nor the public ever tolerating a sepia-toned Enid Blyton-style video of the Sussex brood like the one released this week upon the princess’s announcement that she was now cancer-free.

At 40, you may not have to give up the lifelong task of exploring your terribly interesting self — but at the very least, you must have grown up. My own birthday being the day before Harry’s, I’ll raise a glass to the ghost of the cheeky duke: and to all the reformed Eton boys who came before him. Sadly, my special day will not involve the automatic inheritance of £8 million — but at least I’ve got all my hair.


Poppy Sowerby is an UnHerd columnist

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Katharine Eyre
Katharine Eyre
3 months ago

Well, I am going to display my thoroughly millennial social-media-fuelled lack of attention span by only reading the first 3 paragraphs of this article before giving up and emitting rather a loud Cher-from-Clueless-style WHATEVERRRRR

Philip Stott
Philip Stott
3 months ago
Reply to  Katharine Eyre

Oh don’t be mean (or should that be #bekind).
Although somewhat frivolous, Poppy’s articles are always well written, and contain a kernel of interest.
And for me at least, as a middle aged bloke, it’s refreshing to get the yoof take on things now and again (instead of asking my own moody teenager).

Katharine Eyre
Katharine Eyre
3 months ago
Reply to  Philip Stott

It’s not Poppy’s writing (which I generally like a lot), it’s the basic concept of Prince Harry and Walmart Wallis. My brain just ejects it in the same way that a lactose-intolerant person would eject normal milk.

Allison Barrows
Allison Barrows
3 months ago
Reply to  Katharine Eyre

“Walmart Wallis”. Perfect. Did you coin that? If so, please start a Substack so I can read more from you!

Katharine Eyre
Katharine Eyre
3 months ago

No, I’ve got to come clean and say it’s not my invention. But I do have my own blog if you want to read more of my stuff: katharinewrites.com

Hal Lives
Hal Lives
3 months ago

I’d suggest a “Poundland Wallis” for the Brits on here.

Hilary Easton
Hilary Easton
1 month ago
Reply to  Hal Lives

It’s not the same without the alliteration though.

Richard Craven
Richard Craven
3 months ago
Reply to  Katharine Eyre

Walmart Wallis, haha!

Hersch Schneider
Hersch Schneider
3 months ago
Reply to  Katharine Eyre

You lasted 3 paragraphs? I got to ‘middle-aged men’ and had enough, jumped to the comments. As I do with 80% of Unherd articles these days

p3rfunct0ry 4p4th3t1c
p3rfunct0ry 4p4th3t1c
3 months ago
Reply to  Katharine Eyre

I wish I’d read your comment before the article. Would have avoided a few wasted minutes.

Clare Knight
Clare Knight
3 months ago
Reply to  Katharine Eyre

I thought it was spot on.

2 plus 2 equals 4
2 plus 2 equals 4
3 months ago

A mate of mine was in the army with Harry. Says he’s an absolute d**k.
I don’t really care about him or his wife. I’m broadly in favour of the Royal Family and understand that there is always going to be the risk of some of the spares being a bit useless and under-employed. As long as they are basically harmless, I’m not too bothered what they do.
I think what irritates their detractors about them though is not just hypocrisy or their Californian wokiness, but what people perceive as grievance baiting and grifting. Making claims about their treatment which often turn out to be, at best, misrepresentations in order to parley public attention into dollars is, frankly, gross. e.g. they made a big thing about their children being initially denied the title of prince, implying that this decision was related to Meghan being mixed race. When in fact it turned out that it was simply consistent application of the rules which have been in place since the early 20th century.
Anyway, just to say, I haven’t always thought much of Poppy Sowerby’s article’s in Unherd, but this is one of the best written of them imho.

Richard Craven
Richard Craven
3 months ago

My younger brother shared a desk with him at prep school and says much the same.

Clare Knight
Clare Knight
3 months ago
Reply to  Richard Craven

“Shared a desk”! Jeez, could the school not afford one desk per boy?

Nancy G
Nancy G
3 months ago

That claim about the titles was one of many lies they told.

Hilary Easton
Hilary Easton
1 month ago

You are right, that horrible lie about their children being denied titles on account of their race is the one thing I can never forgive them for. It is a slander upon the whole country and I expect most Americans believe it to this day, because it would make sense to them in a way it would not do here. We have never had apartheid or Jim Crow in this country.
I think I am right in saying that we have never had laws that officially differ by race, (even if the police and courts may at times have applied them differently by race, that is another thing altogether.) The right to vote, for instance was originally applied on the basis of property and gender, never race, unlike the US. https://www.theguardian.com/world/2024/oct/24/britains-first-black-voter-was-in-1749-25-years-earlier-than-thought-and-ran-a-pub.
Betraying your family in a very public way is a bad enough look in any case, when that family’s job depends on their reputations, and when their reputations reflect on one’s whole country, it borders on treason.

Tony Price
Tony Price
3 months ago

An interesting article which went on a bit to fill the space, but was rescued by the absolutely splendid phrase “…touchy-feely bollocks of California…”.

Louise Henson
Louise Henson
3 months ago

I doubt whether he has much to celebrate. Nothing has gone well for them in America and I’d be amazed if he didn’t have serious money worries. He just doesn’t the kind of cash necessary to sustain the lifestyle demanded by the People’s Prostitute.

Harry Phillips
Harry Phillips
3 months ago
Reply to  Louise Henson

The People’s Prostitute.

Phnarr phnarr..

Thing is, if she had just stuck it out, opened a few neo-natal units and youth clubs in dodgy parts of London, she could have been one of the most popular royals ever – and still could have headed over to Ca. for a couple of months a year.

As it is, I dread to think of the reception she will get if she shows her face on British soil again. As for Harry’s furtive 11- hour visits, they are pathetic.

Karen Arnold
Karen Arnold
3 months ago

I am the same generation as Poppy’s parents, she has captured well how I feel about him. We are mostly all self absorbed as teenagers and then we grow up and realise there are other perspectives than our own. Harry seems to have gone from seeming to be growing up rather well to becoming tiresome, Meghan is Californian, this has always seemed tiresome, I would suggest their best bet from the point of view of many in Britain is to get out of the spotlight and lead a quiet life. In 10 or 20 years time they may find they are rehabilitated.

M Kernan
M Kernan
3 months ago

Poppy’s here to get a rise out of middle-aged men as far as I can see, fair play.

J Bryant
J Bryant
3 months ago
Reply to  M Kernan

LOL. Yeah, that’s sometimes my impression too. But she writes well and brings a younger perspective to Unherd, so I’m a fan.

Benedict Waterson
Benedict Waterson
3 months ago
Reply to  J Bryant

Yeh, and ‘Poppy’ is a nice name

El Uro
El Uro
3 months ago

Lately, for some reason, I’ve become irritated by the wide-open mouths of female celebrities. 

UnHerd Reader
UnHerd Reader
3 months ago

Well done.

Christopher Barclay
Christopher Barclay
3 months ago

Harry a “mid-level consultant in Putney …” A mid-level consultant at what? More like the dim-witted son of a family friend who is given a job in an estate agency to sit in the corner and greet anyone who comes in the door.

Christopher Barclay
Christopher Barclay
3 months ago

What is never discussed is the possibility of Harry or one of his American children, who probably will never have been back to the UK, coming across the Atlantic to claim the throne. The Establishment know that Harry has put them in a checkmate. It is absurd to allow this to happen. If, however, Harry is removed from the line of succession, he and his wife will cry ‘racism’. The solution of course, which Harry is too dim to have thought of, is to abolish the Monarchy.

Hilary Easton
Hilary Easton
1 month ago

Harry has certainly brought the abolition of the Monarchy a few steps closer. Parliament should remove both him and Andrew from the succession to clean it up. Charles has already introduced the division between “working” and “non-working” royals, so that could be extended.
As Meghan once said “we are only one plane crash away from the throne”. I think if this happened and the ghastly pair returned to be crowned there would be a public uprising, so anti-monarchists should pray for that. (There’s a great film in there for someone). Parliament has blocked the succession before now, (Act of Settlement 1701) it can easily do it again.

UnHerd Reader
UnHerd Reader
3 months ago

I will never forgive the grifters, H&M, for making Queen Queen Elizabeth’s last years a living hell. They permanently damaged her family, and she must have despaired in her dying moments that the world believed she was a racist. Eventually, the world will come to its senses, and H&M ‘s cries of racism, even now, four years after their destruction of Harry’s family, are getting old. Even the A-listers,including Oprah, have given them the cold shoulder. They must be living lives of quiet desperation. Good. (On a different note, I have to defend my state, California. Everyone seems to think every Californian is some kind of granola eating, yoga master. No. Ninety nine percent of the population, even most of L.A’s residents, don’t resemble the rich and famous. )

Bret Larson
Bret Larson
3 months ago

The authors bias against men is in full display. That said, I guess it makes sense as I could read the whole essay. I guess write what you know about is a thing.

Hilton Holloway
Hilton Holloway
3 months ago

This is truly terrible.

UnHerd Reader
UnHerd Reader
3 months ago

You definitely sum my attitude to the Royal family with ‘detached bemused affection’. From the ‘Peoples Princess ‘ to the ‘Peoples Prostitute’, very amusing. I predict a divorce down the road sometime. Home is where the heart is, and he will go through his forties and start to think, I made a big mistake, and come to that conclusion that he needs to go home with his tail between his legs.

Hilary Easton
Hilary Easton
1 month ago

Prince Harry has embodied “the irreversible way American obsessions have crossed the Atlantic, and planted themselves in the formerly funny, sardonic and self-knowing English.” so very sad, but true.