Nightmares from Harry’s Palace! Duke of Sussex ‘sounds like Gordon Ramsay’ while reading excerpts from memoir Spare, royal fans say
- Fans were shocked by the similarities between the Duke’s and Gordon Ramsay’s voices
- ITV viewers heard Prince Harry narrate his own bombastic memoir Spare
- Hundreds took to social media to share their thoughts on the couple’s voices
Royal fans were left confused after mistaking Prince Harry’s voice for Gordon Ramsay’s after hearing him read excerpts from his bombastic “Spare” memoir.
The revelation came as the Duke of Sussex gave an explosive interview with ITV’s Tom Bradby, which revealed Harry’s narrative of his explosive revelation to viewers.
Those watching from home were quick to point out similarities in sound to the royal and Scottish chef, famed for his fiery temper.
It comes as Harry shocked the world by launching his most vehement attack on the royal family yet, when he branded his own relatives “abusers” who spread stories about his wife in the press in order to “rehabilitate” their own reputation .
Royal fans were left confused after mistaking Prince Harry’s voice for Gordon Ramsay’s after hearing him read excerpts from his bombastic “Spare” memoir. The Duke is pictured above with ITV’s Tom Bradby
Those watching from home were quick to point out similarities in sound to the royal and Scottish chef, famed for his fiery temper
Dozens of royal fans took to Twitter to share their thoughts on the Duke and Mr Ramsay’s voice.
James Armstrong wrote, “Was that Harry or Gordon Ramsay reading excerpts from ‘Spare’?”
ITV journalist Richard Gaisford added: “Part of #HarryTheInterview is based on Harry’s own voice, reading excerpts from his book #Spare. Unnervingly, he delivers his own words in a style reminiscent of Gordon Ramsay.’
Others revealed how they first saw the similarities between the two.
Garry Spence asked: “Did Gordon Ramsay do the audio book for Prince Harry? Or have I just never noticed how similar they sound?’
Those watching from home were quick to point out similarities in sound to the royal and Scottish chef, famed for his fiery temper
It comes as Harry dropped fresh “truth bombs” on the royal family during his latest media blitz for his memoir.
In an extraordinary interview, the Duke told ITV’s Tom Bradby that he was not “scathing” towards Camilla in his book, in an interview that viewers say contained several contradictions, including dismissing previous allegations that the royal family was racist.
There was further disbelief when Harry told Mr Bradby that whatever he tells William going forward will remain “private” despite using his memoir, TV interviews, a Netflix documentary and Oprah to spill the beans about, what his family said to him and Meghan behind closed doors. He also said he has no desire to hurt his family.
Mr Bradby – like millions of viewers – was visibly stunned by his screeching about-face from earlier incendiary claims that an unnamed senior royal had raised concerns about the color of his son Archie’s skin.
Addressing Oprah’s 2021 interview with Meghan, the broadcaster said, “You have accused members of your family of racism.” But Harry snapped back, “No, I didn’t. That’s what the British press said.
He also told his friend Bradby that his family was “complicit” in the “pain and suffering” inflicted on his wife Meghan, comparing them to “abusers”.
He suggested they helped “damage” his and Meghan’s reputations, forced them to move to California and “showed no willingness to reconcile.”
Harry also said there were a lot of stereotypes about Meghan after she was introduced to the royal family because she was an “American actress, divorced, multiracial”. But in a contradictory interview, he later insisted the royal family was not racist – despite the claim being the focus of the Sussexes’ Oprah interview in 2021.
The Duke said the comments about his son Archie’s skin color were “unconscious bias”. Mr Bradby seemed surprised by the answer – while experts said Harry clearly didn’t understand the term he was now using.
Harry told him, “You talk to every other multiracial couple in the world, and you’ll probably find that the white side of the family has either been open about it or secretly talked about what the kids will look like?”.
“And that’s part of a larger conversation that needs to be had.
He added: “The difference between racism and unconscious bias, the two things are different.
“But once acknowledged or pointed out to you as an individual or institution that you have unconscious biases, you have an opportunity to learn and grow from them so that you are part of the solution rather than part of the problem.”