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Panellist Mick Booker told Jeremy Vine: “[Prince Harry] has been open for a long time and I feel as though we are getting a bit of openness fatigue from Prince Harry.
“Looking at that screen there with Glenn Close and Oprah Winfrey as well all I see is celebrities talking about it as well.
“And I do think that the more he talks about it, he has had the praise, he has had a lot of praise when him and Kate and William started up their foundation that was around mental health and that was getting us talking.
“But that was about five years ago now and we have been praising him but the last couple of weeks in particular we get him talking and talking about his problems.
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“And it just begins to become noise and I think that avoid what it is all supposed to be about and that is listening to other voices and encouraging younger to talk about it.”
He added: “Again I look at that screen it is three celebrities moaning and a lot of people will start seeing that.
“Last night on that show it was him talking to Robin Williams’s son again they were talking about how difficult it was to grieve about a famous parent.
“And again not all of us have famous parents so again some kids who have lost their parents will be well he is not talking about me because I haven’t got famous parents.”
Harry also sat down with Zak, the son of the actor and comedian Robin Williams who died by suicide in 2014.
Zake remarked: “From my end, it was really hard to separate initially the process of privately grieving versus sharing the grieving with the general public. I really didn’t get a chance to really focus on the private grieving process until a year and a half after my dad passed away.”
The Duke replied: “I think we have a lot of shared experience when you talk about that … when you see so many people around the world grieving for someone they feel as though they knew them better than you did in a weird way because you’re unable to grieve yourself.
“It’s like … how are you grieving more for someone who was my parent and I’m unable to grieve myself?”
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