Phillip Schofield has urged Prince Harry to "move on and shut up" following the release of his memoir.
The Duke of Sussex unveiled his bombshell memoir earlier this week, where he detailed a number of things including his thoughts and feelings surrounding the death of his mother Princess Diana and his claims of physical fights with his brother, Prince William.
He made a number of comments about King Charles and his wife, Camilla, Queen Consort, and there has now been talks of whether he would be welcome at the coronation of the King later this year, as they discussed the possibility on This Morning.
Talk soon turned to Prince Harry and if he might be welcome at the coronation of King Charles later this year, as one of their guests shared: "What's he going to spend his life doing? Is he now going to be the guy to talk about being inside the royal family?"
Host Phillip Schofield then urged Harry to "shut up and move on" following the bombshell memoir.
"You would hope now that the line has been drawn, you move on, you shut up and you crack on with your charity work," he said, whilst Holly Willoughby added that she didn't think he would continue to speak about the royal family.
Senior members of the family are reportedly concerned that he may look to include the details of conversations with his closest family in later editions of the title, as a source revealed: "There have been discussions among the family, including Edward and Anne. They do not want private conversations at the Coronation making it into the paperback edition of Spare."
Charles III’s coronation is set to take place on Saturday, May 6, in London, which will be eight months after his ascension to the throne.
Prince Harry has done a string of TV interviews recently, and in his one with ITV, he claimed he received 'really horrible reaction' from royals on the day that Queen Elizabeth passed away.
He said: "The last moment that we were together was during, you know, our – or the Queen’s funeral. And that, in my mind – and I think globally people felt the same, was a really good opportunity to bring the family together.
"Um, but the day that she died was – was – was just a really, really horrible reaction from my family members and then by all accounts, well certainly from what I saw and what other people probably experienced was they were on the back foot and then the briefings and the leaking and the planting, I was like ‘We're here to celebrate the life of granny and to mourn her loss, can we come together as a family?’ but I don’t know – I don’t know how we collectively – how we change that."