peter pollock echoed that, begging: louisa o'brien added: others object to the amount of airtime givenerviews such as those: and joe chandler expressed concern about the recent focus on one particular book: plenty there to discuss with the editor of bbc breakfast, richard frediani. thank you so much for coming on newswatch. it's lovely to have you here along with the rest of bbc news, i think it's fair to say you've done a lot about prince harry in the past couple of weeks. too much? we have, we have done a lot, but we've done far more on the cost of living or the health crisis facing the national health service across the uk. prince harry's story is a story of genuine interest. look at how many books he sold in the last few days. it's a story that the viewers will react to. and i would argue, is it about we've done too much or is there just a subjective appeal about whether we should be doing it at all? ultimately, we live in a constitutional monarchy. prince harry is part of that. and therefore, what he has to say about his own life, the life of his relationship with prince william,