Meghan Markle and Prince Harry, once again, made noise when they created the ITV documentary, Harry & Meghan: An African Journey. With the revelations the Sussexes dropped, a royal commentator called the program a "PR disaster" that the duke and duchess couldn't afford to repeat.

Since the behind-the-scenes documentary about Meghan and Prince Harry's time in Africa aired on ITV, the royal couple faced a fallout. In the show, they opened about their struggles with the media and the pressures of the royal life. Although there were some people who praised their honesty, others deemed it would have a negative result to their public image, per Express.

It couldn't be denied that Meghan and Prince Harry's 10-day tour in South Africa was a huge success. They championed the causes close to their hearts and showed some of the excellent works they did that could also be applied in the country.

They even made fans happier when they brought their son, Archie Harrison Mountbatten-Windsor, with them. It was their firstborn's first public outing to meet Archbishop Desmond Tutu. Meghan and Prince Harry were also in the mood throughout their tour and received warm greetings from everyone wherever they went.

However, royal commentator Richard Fitzwilliams said that the documentary they did was a "disaster," and Meghan and Prince Harry should avoid giving "pressurized" interviews like it in the future. "The Sussexes are taking six weeks off in November and should use it to plan a clear strategy for the future," he said, via the New York Times Post.

Fitzwilliams added that, if the Sussexes were listening to their advisers about how "disastrous" the documentary was made, they should "change them." According to him, Meghan Markle and Prince Harry couldn't afford to have another type of interview where they looked pressurized to happen again.

He also addressed the rumors that Meghan and Prince Harry would move away from Britain, saying it could be hard for them. News emerged that the two had plans to move from the country. However, Fitzwilliams questioned how such an arrangement would work for them.

In the ITV documentary, Prince Harry appeared to consider living in Cape Town, although he later dismissed the possibility. As everybody knows that they both love Africa, they may use their positions as the President and Vice-President of the Queen's Commonwealth Trust to spend more time abroad.

Fitzwilliams, too, suggested that Meghan Markle and Prince Harry might consider living in the U.S. However, there would be huge security costs and questions about what would they do and where would they stay there when they decided to move.