🧨“Diana Would CRINGE!” – Prince Harry BLASTED for ‘Copycat’ Angola Stunt in Cringeworthy Attempt to Channel Princess Legacy

🧨“Diana Would CRINGE!” – Prince Harry BLASTED for ‘Copycat’ Angola Stunt in Cringeworthy Attempt to Channel Princess Legacy
He thought it would be a touching tribute—but many say it was a tone-deaf imitation. Prince Harry’s recent landmine walk in Angola with The HALO Trust—eerily mirroring his mother Princess Diana’s 1997 iconic visit—has backfired spectacularly. Critics, commentators, and even royal insiders are slamming the Duke of Sussex, calling his actions “self-serving,” “opportunistic,” and “a poorly staged photo-op.” One royal watcher didn’t mince words: “Diana would have cringed.”
A Walk Through the Past—or a Walk Into PR Disaster?
When Prince Harry stepped into a cleared minefield in Angola, donning protective gear and standing solemnly for the cameras—many initially assumed it was a heartfelt gesture to honor his late mother. After all, Princess Diana’s 1997 landmine walk in the very same country helped change global attitudes about war-torn landscapes and innocent lives left in peril.
But what Harry didn’t expect was the fury and ridicule that followed.
Instead of praise, the act was quickly branded a “shameless PR mimicry.” Social media erupted with memes comparing Harry’s photo to Diana’s—with captions like “Spot the difference: One fought for change, the other fought for relevance.”
Veteran royal biographer Angela Levin blasted the stunt, saying, “This wasn’t a tribute—it was a re-enactment. There’s a difference between honoring your mother’s memory and hijacking it for public sympathy.”
Royal Expert: “Diana Did It to Change the World. Harry Did It to Save His Image.”
The backlash wasn’t limited to Twitter.
In a searing panel discussion on GB News, commentator Kinsey Schofield labeled the visit “a desperate PR move” by a prince whose public approval has been spiraling since the release of his explosive memoir Spare and the couple’s controversial Netflix docuseries.
“She [Diana] walked through active minefields to make a global statement about forgotten lives,” Schofield argued. “Harry walked through a cleared zone with camera crews and handlers to make a statement about himself.”
Others echoed similar sentiments, pointing out the striking contrast between Diana’s genuine activism and Harry’s heavily orchestrated media coverage. The original 1997 walk helped trigger a global movement, eventually leading to the Ottawa Treaty, banning anti-personnel mines in more than 160 countries.
What did Harry’s visit achieve? Critics say little more than a handful of Instagram posts and another chapter in his “Diana cosplay campaign.”
“Diana’s Memory Is Being Exploited” – Palace Source Speaks Out
While Buckingham Palace has remained officially silent on the matter, a senior royal aide reportedly told The Mirror: “The Queen would never have allowed this. Diana’s work should be remembered, not recycled.”
This sentiment is shared by many inside the royal circle who feel Harry has been weaponizing his mother’s legacy—from invoking her memory in his Oprah interview, to likening Meghan’s media treatment to the one Diana endured, and now, seemingly re-creating her humanitarian moments for the cameras.
“He’s not honoring her,” one anonymous source claimed. “He’s appropriating her. There’s a very fine line—and he just crossed it.”
Social Media ERUPTS: #DianaDidItFirst Trends Worldwide
The online world didn’t hold back. Hashtags like #DianaDidItFirst, #CringeInAngola, and #PRinceHarry began trending within hours of the photos going live.
One viral tweet read: “Diana didn’t need to tell us she was like Diana. She simply was.”
Another added: “Harry’s entire brand is ‘my mum was Diana.’ But there’s only one Diana—and she never tried to convince us she was someone else.”
Even royal sympathizers found the move awkward. “It just felt… staged,” wrote one popular royal blogger. “When Diana did it, there was danger, emotion, and purpose. With Harry, there were handlers, drones, and a media crew.”
Is the Public Growing Tired of the Diana Card?
Observers say this latest debacle may signal a turning point. Once viewed as the sympathetic prince struggling in the shadow of a lost mother, Harry is now being seen by many as a man who won’t let that shadow go—even if it means turning it into a brand.
“It’s exhausting,” said Dr. Pippa Gardner, a British media sociologist. “People empathized when he spoke of his grief. But now it feels like grief is his marketing strategy.”
And Meghan hasn’t escaped the criticism either. Though absent from the Angola trip, many have noted her role in amplifying the Diana comparisons—from wardrobe choices to soundbites in interviews.
Will There Be a Course Correction—or Is This the New Normal?
With mounting criticism and public fatigue over the Sussexes’ media tactics, experts are urging Harry to rethink his approach—especially when invoking his mother’s name.
“Diana will always be loved,” Angela Levin emphasized. “But the more Harry tries to walk in her exact footsteps, the more people will see him as a man desperately clinging to borrowed nobility.”
For now, the photo from Angola remains online—but what was intended as a moving tribute has instead become a symbol of a prince at war with his own legacy.
And the question echoing through the halls of Windsor and across digital platforms is this:
If Diana were still here… would she smile at Harry’s tribute? Or look away in silent disappointment?
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