 Mae myl i chi, eich meddwl, eich myl i'ch meddwl yn cael ei bywyd y cyfnod digwydd, yn ei ddiddordeb, fe y bydd cael y byd yn cael ei meddl bydd yn ei ddiddordeb o'r gwneud ymddiriaeth yma. Mae'r ysgol ffordd iawn yn eu gyrraedd yma a'r rwyf yn fwy gael amser. Wrth gwrs, nid yw rwy'n meddwl yn ei fod yn lle o'r meddwl. ..y'r ffordd yw'r ffordd yw iawn. Yr hyn y gallu'n ymdianneb yn fawr o'r tyn yn tabloid. Mae hyn yn fawr o'r thawd yn oed yma yn ymdianneb yw yn tawd... ..y bydd hynny'n gweithio yn y rhan o'r llwyddoch yn ystod... ..yny'n gweithio o'r fan hynny yn fawr o'r hwn... ..yny'n gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio. a he also doesn't recognise the need and value of good journalism or he doesn't explicitly realise that. So, him as a press reformer, tricky. One of the ironies of the press coverage here, the really terrible UK press coverage, is that you have people bloviating about how badly Harry's behaved and being terribly terribly critical of him ac yn bwysig ni i'w gael hyd yn rhoi gwybodaeth ein monerci. Mae ei bwysig yn bwysig i hoffi eu mwrdd i'r monerci oedd yn cael ei ffordd gwneud o Mandod i hynny gyda meddwl. Ond efallai, ei gael, mae'r monerci yn bwysig i gael y pwn yn ei wneud a'r unrhyw o agliannu hynny a yn bwysig i ti wedi ei pob hyn sy'n dod, mae'r monerci'n oed yn unifyr. Ond rydw i'r monerci'n bwysig i'r monerci all o'r angen. ..cydwyd arferwyd. Mae hynny o'r mwyaf, mwyaf. If the end of the game is a reconciliation with his family, again, I wouldn't have thought that this was the way to bring it about, but that doesn't mean that I'm critical of him doing it. Because I think his real purpose in all of this is that he has felt traduced by everything that's been written and said about him, a dweud hynny'n gynnwys i'r hyn o'r narod. Mae'n gweithio ar y dyfodol y ffrindio'r gwaith yma sy'n dweud hynny. Mae'n dweud hyn sy'n dweud hynny'n gweithio'r narod. Felly mae hynny'n gweithio'r narod sy'n gweithio'r rhain i'w ddwylltyniad sy'n dweud hynny'n gweithio'r rhai o'r ddwylltyn. absolut nonsense. If you actually look at the press responses to the interviews to the book, these are planted stories. This is exactly what Harry is talking about. You know, it's all about palace sources and if like me you're a royal watcher and you know who has which source, you actually can tell who's planted the stories. And this is a huge constitutional issue for him. It's a huge reputational issue for him and it comes ahead of his coronation and in the very early phase of his reign. So he is having to respond to this both as a parent and as a monarch and I don't really know what he's going to do but he absolutely needs to try to do something. It can't be something public, it can't be by way of a public response so it will have to be some kind of reaching out on his part but given the levels of anger and hurt that there are in royal circles it may be hard for him to do that. I think one of the really big problems is that the royal family is misunderstood as a tourist attraction, as celebrities, as a sideshow, as the cast of the crown, you know a long-running soap opera. This is a huge institution of state, it has significant powers, it has significant influence, it gets a shed load of money from us, the taxpayers, it has you know the king is head of state in 14 other realms as well and we're treating it like a soap opera. Obviously this is reputationally damaging in all sorts of ways because how can you have credibility as head of state, how can this be a credible system if what you're seeing is dysfunction and also inequality because this is a story of course about you know race, about misogyny, about all sorts of things that are part of modern discourse and the institution is failing every time it tries to deal with these things.