<p>Prince Harry and his wife Meghan's explosive tell-all interview with Oprah Winfrey went much further than expected and will be hugely damaging to the royal family, British media said Monday.</p>.<p>The Duke and Duchess of Sussex, as they are formally known, delivered "enough bombshells to sink a flotilla", reported The Daily Telegraph, as the dust settled on the broadcast on Sunday night.</p>.<p>"And possibly, some might fear, do similar damage to the British monarchy," it added.</p>.<p>"Whatever the royal family was expecting from this interview, this was worse," another traditionally "establishment" newspaper, The Times, said.</p>.<p>"We were clearly expecting something pretty dramatic. I think it exceeded those expectations," royal expert Robert Hardman told AFP.</p>.<p>Tabloid newspapers filled their front pages with screaming headlines quoting Meghan: 'How dark will baby's skin be?' wrote The Daily Mail.</p>.<p><strong>Also read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/from-suicidal-thoughts-to-race-harry-and-meghan-unload-on-royal-family-959555.html" target="_blank">From suicidal thoughts to race: Harry and Meghan unload on royal family</a></strong></p>.<p>The Sun went with: 'I felt suicidal.'</p>.<p>While the CBS interview was not broadcast in the UK, discussion dominated social media from the early hours.</p>.<p>Chris Ship, the royal editor of ITV, which is to air the interview in Britain on Monday night, said he was "momentarily paralysed" by the sheer volume of revelations.</p>.<p>"The couple had effectively loaded up a B-52 bomber, flew it over Buckingham Palace and then unloaded their arsenal right above it, bomb by heavily-loaded bomb," he added.</p>.<p>Buckingham Palace now faced "two very serious questions" -- first, Meghan's claim of racist comments about her baby's potential skin colour, and that she received no support while having suicidal thoughts.</p>.<p>Queen Elizabeth II was the only member of the royal family to "emerge unscathed," wrote The Daily Telegraph.</p>.<p>Yet Ship said since the couple voice such grave concerns about the family, "surely their severe criticisms of it extend to the Queen herself?"</p>.<p>The interview eclipsed recent royal scandals, journalists and commentators said.</p>.<p>"We have never heard anything like this in any previous royal interview," Roya Nikkhah, royal correspondent for The Sunday Times, told BBC television.</p>.<p>Daily Mirror associate editor Kevin Maguire said it was a "bigger crisis" for a royal family "struggling for relevance" than the divorce of Harry's mother Diana from Prince Charles, or an affair by Prince Andrew's ex-wife Sarah.</p>.<p>Harry and Meghan used the show to set out a "new narrative", The Times reported. Yet there was also criticism of the couple for giving the interview.</p>.<p>The Daily Mail, which has been highly critical of Meghan, quoted royal expert Robert Jobson as saying that the couple were "self-obsessed".</p>.<p>And he called their interview at times "terribly self-indulgent".</p>.<p>Several media outlets questioned the specifics, including Meghan's suggestion that the royal family changed their rules to refuse their son Archie the title of "prince" because of his skin colour.</p>.<p>"This is a complex area -- there are rules laid down that Archie would not be a prince at birth, but would be a prince when Charles (Harry's father) becomes king," wrote The Times.</p>.<p>Archie could have taken a title, the Earl of Dumbarton, but his parents chose for him not to use it, said Hardman, a royal reporter for the Daily Mail.</p>.<p>Meanwhile the decision to stop providing security to the couple, one of Harry's main grievances, "isn't really a matter for the royal family" but "one for the police," Hardman said.</p>.<p>Overseas, The Australian newspaper wrote that the royal family's dispute had "gone nuclear".</p>.<p>But its Europe correspondent Jacquelin Magnay said the couple were trying to "destroy the institution which provides them with a lucrative platform," as they have struck deals with streaming giants Netflix and Spotify.</p>.<p>The New York Post called Meghan a "perpetual victim", accusing her of exaggerating the royals' hostility to the couple's relationship.</p>.<p>"The British taxpayers spent millions on Harry and Meghan's wedding. Prince Charles walked her down the aisle... People were rooting for them," it said.</p>.<p>The Sun, The Times, The Sunday Times, The Australian and the New York Post are all part of Rupert Murdoch's News Corp global media empire.</p>.<p>Meghan and Harry have also taken legal action against the publishers of the Daily Mail, The Sun and the Daily Mirror.</p>.<p>Buckingham Palace has not commented -- and it is not immediately clear whether they will.</p>.<p>The interview is so damaging that the palace should be "very methodical" in responding to "each and every claim," said Nikkhah.</p>.<p>The royal family will continue their ordinary routine despite the scandal, said Hardman.</p>.<p>"I think they'll just get on with it."</p>
<p>Prince Harry and his wife Meghan's explosive tell-all interview with Oprah Winfrey went much further than expected and will be hugely damaging to the royal family, British media said Monday.</p>.<p>The Duke and Duchess of Sussex, as they are formally known, delivered "enough bombshells to sink a flotilla", reported The Daily Telegraph, as the dust settled on the broadcast on Sunday night.</p>.<p>"And possibly, some might fear, do similar damage to the British monarchy," it added.</p>.<p>"Whatever the royal family was expecting from this interview, this was worse," another traditionally "establishment" newspaper, The Times, said.</p>.<p>"We were clearly expecting something pretty dramatic. I think it exceeded those expectations," royal expert Robert Hardman told AFP.</p>.<p>Tabloid newspapers filled their front pages with screaming headlines quoting Meghan: 'How dark will baby's skin be?' wrote The Daily Mail.</p>.<p><strong>Also read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/from-suicidal-thoughts-to-race-harry-and-meghan-unload-on-royal-family-959555.html" target="_blank">From suicidal thoughts to race: Harry and Meghan unload on royal family</a></strong></p>.<p>The Sun went with: 'I felt suicidal.'</p>.<p>While the CBS interview was not broadcast in the UK, discussion dominated social media from the early hours.</p>.<p>Chris Ship, the royal editor of ITV, which is to air the interview in Britain on Monday night, said he was "momentarily paralysed" by the sheer volume of revelations.</p>.<p>"The couple had effectively loaded up a B-52 bomber, flew it over Buckingham Palace and then unloaded their arsenal right above it, bomb by heavily-loaded bomb," he added.</p>.<p>Buckingham Palace now faced "two very serious questions" -- first, Meghan's claim of racist comments about her baby's potential skin colour, and that she received no support while having suicidal thoughts.</p>.<p>Queen Elizabeth II was the only member of the royal family to "emerge unscathed," wrote The Daily Telegraph.</p>.<p>Yet Ship said since the couple voice such grave concerns about the family, "surely their severe criticisms of it extend to the Queen herself?"</p>.<p>The interview eclipsed recent royal scandals, journalists and commentators said.</p>.<p>"We have never heard anything like this in any previous royal interview," Roya Nikkhah, royal correspondent for The Sunday Times, told BBC television.</p>.<p>Daily Mirror associate editor Kevin Maguire said it was a "bigger crisis" for a royal family "struggling for relevance" than the divorce of Harry's mother Diana from Prince Charles, or an affair by Prince Andrew's ex-wife Sarah.</p>.<p>Harry and Meghan used the show to set out a "new narrative", The Times reported. Yet there was also criticism of the couple for giving the interview.</p>.<p>The Daily Mail, which has been highly critical of Meghan, quoted royal expert Robert Jobson as saying that the couple were "self-obsessed".</p>.<p>And he called their interview at times "terribly self-indulgent".</p>.<p>Several media outlets questioned the specifics, including Meghan's suggestion that the royal family changed their rules to refuse their son Archie the title of "prince" because of his skin colour.</p>.<p>"This is a complex area -- there are rules laid down that Archie would not be a prince at birth, but would be a prince when Charles (Harry's father) becomes king," wrote The Times.</p>.<p>Archie could have taken a title, the Earl of Dumbarton, but his parents chose for him not to use it, said Hardman, a royal reporter for the Daily Mail.</p>.<p>Meanwhile the decision to stop providing security to the couple, one of Harry's main grievances, "isn't really a matter for the royal family" but "one for the police," Hardman said.</p>.<p>Overseas, The Australian newspaper wrote that the royal family's dispute had "gone nuclear".</p>.<p>But its Europe correspondent Jacquelin Magnay said the couple were trying to "destroy the institution which provides them with a lucrative platform," as they have struck deals with streaming giants Netflix and Spotify.</p>.<p>The New York Post called Meghan a "perpetual victim", accusing her of exaggerating the royals' hostility to the couple's relationship.</p>.<p>"The British taxpayers spent millions on Harry and Meghan's wedding. Prince Charles walked her down the aisle... People were rooting for them," it said.</p>.<p>The Sun, The Times, The Sunday Times, The Australian and the New York Post are all part of Rupert Murdoch's News Corp global media empire.</p>.<p>Meghan and Harry have also taken legal action against the publishers of the Daily Mail, The Sun and the Daily Mirror.</p>.<p>Buckingham Palace has not commented -- and it is not immediately clear whether they will.</p>.<p>The interview is so damaging that the palace should be "very methodical" in responding to "each and every claim," said Nikkhah.</p>.<p>The royal family will continue their ordinary routine despite the scandal, said Hardman.</p>.<p>"I think they'll just get on with it."</p>