Royal family is finally providing bang for the buck
By: Rachel Marsden
PARIS — We pardon the interruption of your regularly scheduled programming of
global conflict, economic woes and morbid daily pandemic tallies to bring you
the sordid tale of a married couple complaining to a billionaire about their
family, from which they have recently emancipated themselves and now accuse of
racist undertones, backstabbing, badmouthing and almost driving one of them to
suicide.
Does that sound like a matter on which the White House and the prime minister of
the United Kingdom should be commenting? Because they were asked to. Does it
sound like something that 17 million Americans and millions more abroad would
take time out of their own busy lives to witness? Because that indeed happened.
All due to the fact that the family in question isn’t some unknown entity on a
reality TV show but rather the British monarchy. And the couple in question is
Meghan Markle and Prince Harry. Their confidante? American talk-show mogul Oprah
Winfrey. Crass and unbecoming of royals? Perhaps. But then what isn’t these
days?
I’m from Canada, part of the British Commonwealth. It’s estimated that the royal
family costs each of us in the Commonwealth $1.58 in U.S. dollars per year. The
question for those paying taxes to the monarchy has always been whether we’re
getting our money’s worth. Now that certain family members are putting on a show
that costs far less than a monthly Netflix subscription, perhaps the answer is
finally yes.
The big question seems to be whether Meghan and Harry will somehow reform the
monarchy. Into what, exactly? From a rather boring reality show into a hit
reality show? Mission accomplished. The Oprah interview is now widely considered
to be the biggest royal interview since Princess Diana of Wales aired dirty
laundry about her marriage to Prince Charles in a BBC interview a
quarter-century ago, which is perhaps the last time anyone paid serious
attention to the royals aside from the occasional wedding.
No doubt the monarchy takes itself seriously and has many people within “the
firm” working hard on its branding. But the reality is that we’re a long way
from the initial function and purpose of the British royals. Elizabeth I, for
example, has a biography that reads like that of a military commander. But her
reign was back in the 16th century, when the world was much different and
monarchy was synonymous with government. While the queen is still technically
the head of state of Britain and Canada, the prime ministers of those nations
carry out the daily functions of running the country, while the monarchy has
become a vestige.
In much the same way that the human appendix is considered an evolutionary
remnant that played a digestive role back when humans were more herbivorous, the
royal family no longer has a practical function. It exists to serve as a living
reminder of the British Empire. It has a public relations function similar to
that of foreign diplomats. But it has lost the power to shape actual policy,
since such a role for a monarch would be incompatible with the modern democracy
that Britain has become.
There’s nothing wrong with the monarchy serving as a living window into
Britain’s past — a reminder of the nation’s roots. But the problem with being
statues in a living museum is that it’s hard to know what to do with yourself
when you wake up in the morning. Mostly, the royals try to spend their time
serving charitable causes and bringing attention to various social issues. But
now they’re competing for relevance in a noisy sea of “influencers” with
jacked-up bums and chests, plastic after-market modifications, and a willingness
to say anything to capture an audience whose attention spans increasingly
approach those of fruit flies due to the rewiring of their brains by the
instant-gratification programming of social media.
Now that Meghan and Harry have moved to Hollywood and picked a public fight with
their family from across the Atlantic, they have already changed the royal
family in a sense. With just one interview, they’ve made the royal family drama
the hottest reality show in the world. People can’t seem to get enough, judging
by the ratings. It may be incompatible with how the institution views itself,
but it’s entirely aligned with what people seem to want in the current times. By
playing things too straight, the monarchy would be making the same kind of
miscalculation that Tom Cruise made by fancying himself a dramatic actor rather
than a seriously talented comedic one.
In much the same way that the military-industrial complex is the ultimate winner
when it sells weapons to both sides in a war, the British monarchy as an
institution is the ultimate winner in this family skirmish. It’s back on the
radar as an entity that’s relatable to a world captivated by publicly aired
personal drama and nonstop oversharing.
The royals are finally showing the plebeians how it’s really done. Own it.
Embrace it. Unless, of course, you have something more compelling to offer the
thirsty masses paying for the privilege.
COPYRIGHT 2021 RACHEL MARSDEN