The Unlikely Mentor: Prince Andrewâs âUnsolicited Adviceâ to Harry
In the gilded, drafty hallways of the Royal Lodge, where the tea is lukewarm and the portraits seem to judge you with increasing intensity, a new voice has emerged from the shadows of royal retirement. Prince Andrew, the Duke of York, has reportedly decided that he is the perfect candidate to offer a âguiding handâ to his nephew, Prince Harry.

While the world has been focused on the âSpareâ and his Netflix specials, Andrew has been quietly observing from the sidelinesâmostly because the sidelines are the only place heâs allowed to be these days. In what can only be described as a masterclass in irony, sources suggest Andrew feels a âkinshipâ with the California-based prince. After all, they both know what itâs like to be the brother of a King, and they both know what itâs like to have a complicated relationship with the HR department at Buckingham Palace.
The âRoyal Exileâ Club
Imagine a clandestine Zoom call between Montecito and Windsor. Andrew, wearing a slightly pained expression and a jumper that smells of mothballs, leans into the camera.
âHarry, dear boy,â he might say, âyouâre doing it all wrong. Youâre complaining about the press? I once sat down with Emily Maitlis for forty-five minutes and thought it went splendidly. Itâs all about confidence, Harry! If youâre going to be misunderstood, do it with a straight face and a very specific alibi involving a Pizza Express in Woking.â
To the public, the idea of Andrew mentoring Harry is like a captain of the Titanic offering navigation tips to a jet-ski enthusiast. One left for love and a multi-million dollar Spotify deal; the other left because⌠well, because the public demanded it with pitchforks and very loud editorials.
A Shared History of Being âSecondâ
The core of Andrewâs supposed âoutreachâ stems from the burden of the spare. For decades, Andrew was the âWar Hero,â the favorite son, the man who added a bit of dash to the monarchy. Then came the 90s, the 2000s, and a series of choices that made Harryâs âLas Vegas billiardsâ phase look like a Sunday School picnic.
In Andrewâs mind, Harryâs decision to air the familyâs dirty laundry in a memoir is a missed opportunity. âWhy write a book, Harry?â Andrew might muse while walking his Corgis. âI simply stayed in a massive house and hoped everyone would forget I existed. Itâs much less work than a six-part documentary series.â
The Verdict
The entertainment value here lies in the sheer lack of self-awareness. There is something inherently comedic about the idea of the Duke of Yorkâa man currently synonymous with âroyal PR disasterââtrying to bridge the gap between the Sussexes and the Crown.
While Harry continues to build his life in the sunshine of California, Andrew remains in the misty shadows of the Great Park, perhaps waiting for the phone to ring. He sees himself as a seasoned veteran of royal scandal, a man who has seen the âFirmâ from the inside out and lived to tell the tale (though heâd prefer you didnât ask too many follow-up questions).
Ultimately, if Andrew truly wants to help Harry, the best advice he could give is the one he rarely follows himself:Â Sometimes, saying nothing at all is the most royal thing you can do.