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Post by paca on Aug 1, 2012 4:53:56 GMT -5
Actually Trampolina did say something utterly stupid, "... I get to wear a tiara every now and then ..." Hey Dumbo ... we haven't seen you wear a tiara since your wedding reception! Duh! LOL she did for the red cross and you can bet she will wear one again for this one. It's not like she has otherwise opportunity like the other princesses who have important state functions to attend in full attire. Even on NH it would be too much
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Post by paca on Aug 1, 2012 4:56:04 GMT -5
When he asks whats her favorite part of being a Princess she replied: "Getting to wear a tiara" and laughs. Or if she dreamed of being a Princess she replied no she wanted to be like Zara Phillips ;D What? If you wwanted to be like her, you would have worked your ass off and get a medal like Zara today. LOL what would be a joke with others is the truth with her. Apart from the Zara Philips part. But she definetely has the BRF as the royals she would rather be part of.
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Post by paca on Aug 1, 2012 5:12:38 GMT -5
Ha, was I right or what? To the point, as I said couple of days ago. P. Morgan took pity on them and gave them what them wanted...a fluff interview and an opportunity to explain themselves. He even made fun of WC buy saying to Assbert "you see she is turning into a nice Princess herself after all", and making fun of WC by saying "they where saying all those nasty rumors about you, but at the end you went home with your handsome Prince". ;D ;D ;D I must applaud to P. Morgan, he was very gentle with Dumb and Dumber and had led them step by step almost answering the questions for them. The funniest part of interview was WC's explanation of the run-away bride story. She had no idea of the rumor until she came back to the Palace. Her explanation was that she went with her mother to buy some shoes, hat and handbag for her mother to wear for the wedding. Really? You plan your wedding one year in advance, spend 75 million dollars on it, but mother of the bride goes to buy her clothing couple of days before the wedding.... Another hilarious thing, WC actually quoted Paca when Pierce asked her what is the best part of been Princess. Paca advised her in one of her posts that she should say exactly what WC ended up saying, so at least she will be funny. Unbelievable!!! WC actually took Paca's advise! ;D ;D ;D We should stop writing in here until they start paying us some serious money for couching their stupid Princess! ;D ;D Well as I said, more of her fake laughs, head tilting, mouth pouting and unfinished sentences.....I hope the Palace and Assbert are finally happy with the interview and her performance so we can all be spared another bull shit in a near...or far future. LOL I think I should do the Eringer and sue them for unpaid bills... So I had Hello stealing from me without giving credit, trashy is stealing from me without giving credit...why is everyone stealing from me??? Maybe I should post an advert "for hire" here and propose my services...Mitt romney could use some help. I don't like him though... I think doing an Andy Morton would be more fun. Especially when posting quotes from these boards with dates and then putting quotes from the interview which we know when it was given.... ANy one up to write an unauthorized bio together and outing them? We could do a group work and use a fake name
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Post by paca on Aug 1, 2012 5:25:01 GMT -5
I haven't seen the interview posted on CNN yet, but I doubt that it will get as much press as the other one. So it will go pretty much unheard...
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Post by paca on Aug 1, 2012 7:33:28 GMT -5
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Post by MyAdia on Aug 1, 2012 8:13:42 GMT -5
Having technical difficulties, so I cannot watch the interview now. I don't need to see it - most of us already predicted what it would be about. I didn't even want a separate thread for it because you cannot separate this interview from the CBS one - you need to understand that Piers Morgan is just acting as the palace mouthpiece for a replacement CBS interview. One of the most ironic thing about the con job that Charlene has pulled over her Sucker Al is that this man really believes that Charlene admires his mother when in reality Charlene and Lynette despise Grace and deeply resent that people compare Charlene to the "perfect" Grace. They hate more that people expect Charlene to meet Grace's standards - especially since Charlene and Lynette believe that Grace was an overrated slut. Albert really revered his mother and the fact that Charlene convinced him about her admiration for his mother shows how utterly easy it is to sucker the fool Albert. One day - like everything else - this too will be publicly exposed. Charlene has met her karma with so many other things and this one too will come. But for now, they all are still riding the gravy train and living high off the fat hog - Sucker Al!
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Post by MyAdia on Aug 1, 2012 8:19:54 GMT -5
Can they even possibly look any worse than they did in the CBS interview - full duck form? They look absolutely nasty - like diseased nasty.
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Post by royalpauper on Aug 1, 2012 9:42:39 GMT -5
P.S. Hibou, just to let you know WC didn't mean she wanted to be Zara, but ZORO when she was kid. You know, Zoro, the guy with a black cape, hat and a mask over his face...which just proves that even as a child WC was confused about her gender.
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Post by royalpauper on Aug 1, 2012 9:51:42 GMT -5
Princess Grace! ;D ;D ;D Who are they kidding?!!!
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Post by royalpauper on Aug 1, 2012 10:04:01 GMT -5
There is something truly disturbing that a fifty some years old man, thirty years after his mother passing, still can't talk about her without chocking his tears. At one point I thought Albert will burst into tears as he struggles to finished a sentence describing how wonderful his mother was and how much he misses her. IMO, no matter how wonderful she was and no matter how much he loved her...he had enough time to get over it and move on. COME ON, LETS GET REAL IN HERE FOR GOD'S SAKE!!! YOU ARE FIFTY FOUR YEARS OLD AND YOUR MOTHER DIED THIRTY YEARS AGO! f*cking, GROW UP!!!!!
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Post by vamilkshake on Aug 1, 2012 10:07:06 GMT -5
Piers Morgan lost the last shred of journalistic credibility with that infomercial last night. He not only put words in their mouths, he actually promoted them and phrased his promotion of them as questions. I think the mainstream media is responding in the fashion that the interview deserves. By completely ignoring it. Dumbest thing I heard coming out of that interview: That Albert shocked Charlene with the news that the world media was reporting that she ran away. As if she had no idea what the world media was reporting about her.
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Post by paca on Aug 1, 2012 10:15:20 GMT -5
interesting they are already announcing tonights guest, but they still only have the one video of ALbert talking up. I wonder if they asked CNN not to post any videos with trashy speaking ue to her latest humiliation and people being able to disect the interview. i didn't see anything in his tweets about the interview either. He only posted that creepy pic. I think the palace has stepped in with major control...
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Post by agentf on Aug 1, 2012 10:16:56 GMT -5
I dont think it's grief at this point. I think he's borderline having a nervous breakdown. Things must be so bad, that the mere thought of something as comforting as his mother brings out this well of sadness and depression. He probably would like to go back in time, before he just went from one mess to the next. Being married to an out-of-control freak too only compounds the despair. I hope he's getting psychological help. If not, he should. There is something truly disturbing that a fifty some years old man, thirty years after his mother passing, still can't talk about her without chocking his tears. At one point I thought Albert will burst into tears as he struggles to finished a sentence describing how wonderful his mother was and how much he misses her. IMO, no matter how wonderful she was and no matter how much he loved her...he had enough time to get over it and move on. COME ON, LETS GET REAL IN HERE FOR GOD'S SAKE!!! YOU ARE FIFTY FOUR YEARS OLD AND YOUR MOTHER DIED THIRTY YEARS AGO! f*cking, GROW UP!!!!!
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Post by paca on Aug 1, 2012 10:25:45 GMT -5
There is something truly disturbing that a fifty some years old man, thirty years after his mother passing, still can't talk about her without chocking his tears. At one point I thought Albert will burst into tears as he struggles to finished a sentence describing how wonderful his mother was and how much he misses her. IMO, no matter how wonderful she was and no matter how much he loved her...he had enough time to get over it and move on. COME ON, LETS GET REAL IN HERE FOR GOD'S SAKE!!! YOU ARE FIFTY FOUR YEARS OLD AND YOUR MOTHER DIED THIRTY YEARS AGO! f*cking, GROW UP!!!!! I truly agree. SHe has been dead way longer then he has consciously known her. Will and Harry were much younger losing their mom and they know how to keep her memory. BUt I also think that their love for her was pretty intact. They were kids, so they didn't have much other then the good times they had with her. especially since they were a great part of it in boarding schools. Albert on the other hand was an adult when she died and in one interview he recalls her last morning and her trying to get him out of bed, in vain. SHe was probably not at all happy to have a playboy partying son, who'd do nothing except sports and partying and showing on occasion for a photo op. She was probably nagging a lot and being irritated both with him and STeph. IMO it's his bad conscious talking there. I think he knows that he was a great disappointment to her at the day of her death. And he knows that Rainier considered him a great disappointment as well. Now he is getting back at both of them. He says he is hoping that she would be proud of him. Trust me Albert, she wouldn't be. At all. And she would most like loath trashy and her family. This marriage would not have happened with either of his parents around. It would be nice if Albert not only wore the clothes of an adult, but would also behave like one for a change and take responsibility for himself and his actions.
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Post by paca on Aug 1, 2012 10:31:02 GMT -5
I dont think it's grief at this point. I think he's borderline having a nervous breakdown. Things must be so bad, that the mere thought of something as comforting as his mother brings out this well of sadness and depression. He probably would like to go back in time, before he just went from one mess to the next. Being married to an out-of-control freak too only compounds the despair. I hope he's getting psychological help. If not, he should. There is something truly disturbing that a fifty some years old man, thirty years after his mother passing, still can't talk about her without chocking his tears. At one point I thought Albert will burst into tears as he struggles to finished a sentence describing how wonderful his mother was and how much he misses her. IMO, no matter how wonderful she was and no matter how much he loved her...he had enough time to get over it and move on. COME ON, LETS GET REAL IN HERE FOR GOD'S SAKE!!! YOU ARE FIFTY FOUR YEARS OLD AND YOUR MOTHER DIED THIRTY YEARS AGO! f*cking, GROW UP!!!!! I think you are right about him suffering of some kind of depression. I do think that it is originating in some kind of guilt with regards to her accident. I don't think that any of them ever received psychological help to help them deal with it. It was a different time then and in Europe people were not as ready in getting help as they are and were in the US. IMO in their case also out of fear that private matters might actually end up in public. But he really would need some help. But he won't get it, because that would be the end for a lot of people around him, not only the trashlenes....
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Post by vamilkshake on Aug 1, 2012 10:55:01 GMT -5
I thought the tears for his mother were self pitying tears (If my mother were alive, I wouldn't be in this marital mess!). However, Grace did not stop the marriage of Philip Junot to Caroline even though she knew it was a huge mistake. Grow up Al!
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Post by paca on Aug 1, 2012 11:00:42 GMT -5
I thought the tears for his mother were self pitying tears (If my mother were alive, I wouldn't be in this marital mess!). However, Grace did not stop the marriage of Philip Junot to Caroline even though she knew it was a huge mistake. Grow up Al! she didn't because she knew Caro well enough to go through with it regardless. Albert wouldn't and never did. STeph in that way was like Caro. Unstoppable hanging herself. ALbert on the other hand could have been stopped easily. Had anyone cared enough about him. ANd that is the saddest part of it. No one seems to care enough about him. He has to be one of the loneliest people...Selfinflicted though, so my pitty with him is zilch.
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Post by hibou on Aug 1, 2012 15:56:14 GMT -5
P.S. Hibou, just to let you know WC didn't mean she wanted to be Zara, but ZORO when she was kid. You know, Zoro, the guy with a black cape, hat and a mask over his face...which just proves that even as a child WC was confused about her gender. LOL and here I thought she wanted Zara's medal! Zorro Ha! she's much too klutzy unless of course she fell on her sword. JMO.
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Post by MyAdia on Aug 3, 2012 4:50:51 GMT -5
Two surprising things, a copy of the CBS News interview that I linked to is still there ( see it here - also this person has a copy of a drunken Lynette bragging about how she is sharing the gold that her daughter struck by hitching up with the biggest sucker in Monaco) and Charlene's most rabid personal PR flunkie has stopped foaming at the mouth about the CBS interview and has not said anything about the CNN interview. Perhaps Charlene told her to lay low because she was being too obvious. She revealed a lot of inside information about the filming of the interview that was not evident from just watching it. Actually, I am thinking they know no one cares about the interview during the Olympics so they will wait until after the Olympics and start promoting how great Charlene was in the interview.
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Post by MyAdia on Aug 3, 2012 5:11:56 GMT -5
I read some of the comments stating that this was the best Charlene has ever performed in an interview - but did you actually listen (or read) what he actual;l;y said. I read the transcript and all she says is a bunch of lies. She continues with the "been involved in Special Olympics all my life" lie. Ok, Charls, Albert already bought you that spot on the Board of Directors and the World Ambassador gig - just stop with that lie ok. Some of us read your previous Sports Illustrated 2001 interview where you stated you had time for nothing else but swimming and how you were a very selfish person. But, hey as long as no one ever ask you any specifics of what you did for Special Olympics (besides having two friends who had disabilities) or ask you what exactly and with whom did you teach all those underprivileged children to swim (besides twice with the SA Swim Team over a decade ok and once for the cameras with Bunte when suckering Jackass for the ring) - then I guess your lies will become fact. Below is the official CNN transcript - I placed the separations between questions. I included the introductory segment that included a preview of all three o the segments presented that night. Albert and Charlene were the 2nd of 3 segments.
SHOW: PIERS MORGAN TONIGHT 9:00 PM EST CNN July 31, 2012 Tuesday
HIGHLIGHT: Companies such as Panasonic say the Olympics are the perfect investment for their brand and image. Michael Phelps won his 19th Olympic gold medal amidst Chinese swimmer controversy. Exclusive tour aboard the British Navy's largest warship on watch for terror. Prince Albert and Princess Charlene reminiscing about their Olympic years, on Nelson Mandela and the global status of America. MORGAN: Next, my candid interview with Monaco's royal couple. From their Olympic past to their new life together.
MORGAN: Prince William and his bride Catherine aren't the only royal couple in London for the Olympics. So are Prince Albert and Princess Charlene of Monaco. Married for a year, they have a lot to say about living in the palace and in the public eye. I sat down with them for a surprisingly candid interview.
(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)
MORGAN: Your Royal Highnesses. Welcome. Thank you for joining me. We're here in London for the Olympics. And here is a fascinating fact that many of my viewers may not be aware of. You have both competed at the Olympic games. H.S.H. PRINCE ALBERT II: Yes. It was great to -- well, it was a wonderful moment for me and I think for Charlene, too, but it was great that the sport brought us together because --
MORGAN: You were in five games. In the Monaco bobsleigh team. Bobsled as they say in America. But you and I would say bobsleigh. And you were -- you were the pilot. You were the guy at the front in a four-man bobsled. I watched this. It looks absolutely terrifying to me. Is it as terrifying to do it? H.S.H. PRINCE ALBERT II: Well, you know, I've often said that anyone who's done bobsleigh, especially as a driver, if they weren't scared once during their career, they weren't real bobsledders. So you learn to overcome those fear and you learn to work with the track and your jobs is to beat that track and to make sure your sleigh gets down safely. And the crew is down safely in a fast time.
MORGAN: Prince Charlene, you are an Olympic swimmer. H.S.H. PRINCESS CHARLENE, PRINCESS OF MONACO: Was. (LAUGHTER)
MORGAN: Yes. But I mean, you always are, once you? Once you've competed in the Olympics. PRINCESS CHARLENE: Yes. Yes.
MORGAN: For the rest of your life, you can say, "I was an Olympic swimmer." PRINCE ALBERT II: Once an Olympian, always an Olympian.
MORGAN: Yes, I think that was they all say, isn't it? Tell me about your swimming career. PRINCESS CHARLENE: Well, I started swimming when I was 8 years old. I competed for Zimbabwe. And at the age of 12 I moved to South Africa and I'm competing for South Africa when I was 16 and I had a dream to go to the Olympics when I was 8 years old. My mom was a diver and I think I drew a lot of inspiration from her and I managed to get to the Olympic Games.
MORGAN: You have two horses in the race for the Olympics. You have, obviously, the Monaco contestants. How many -- there are six I heard? PRINCE ALBERT II: We have six athletes. And --
MORGAN: Six athletes. And obviously, a number of South Africans competing. You'll be supporting both I presume. South Africa is an extraordinary country. I went to Johannesburg just before the soccer world cup and I've had the great honor of interviewing Nelson Mandela before that a few years ago. Incredible changes in your country. What would you feel about South Africa today? PRINCESS CHARLENE: I'm always optimistic about South Africa. I think South Africans are great people. It's a beautiful country. And a lot of talented athletes and people. So yes, I -- optimistic about South Africa.
MORGAN: And you must have met Nelson Mandela, I guess so? A remarkable man. PRINCE ALBERT II: Yes, in fact, I met him, and the first time, we were a small group of IOC members going to check on the Cape Town bid for the Olympics. And he received us in his office. And Victoria. It was just an incredible meeting. Could sense the incredible personality and the -- the essence of what he was all about. And that he was --
MORGAN: I loved his humor, too. A funny man as well. PRINCE ALBERT II: Absolutely. PRINCESS CHARLENE: He was a very simple man. Very smart in the way he united a country through a simple game of sport. He -- you know, South Africa was never the same after the '95 World Cup Rugby. And, you know, he's an enthusiastic sports person. Was a sports person himself. And, you know, I just think -- PRINCE ALBERT II: And it was in Monaco that he got the Laureate in Sports award that he -- wonderful speech that he made that evening, but then you said that sport has the power to unite the world. And that's exactly what -- what we are trying to do in the International Olympic Committee. But in -- support organizations all over the world. But he was the first one to really coin that phrase.
MORGAN: Yes, he was. What about President Obama? He's coming near the end of his first term. He's obviously battling for re-election in November. You've met him. What do you think of him? PRINCE ALBERT II: Yes, I met him at the United Nations a couple of years ago. And was really struck by his personality and very engaging person. I met Michelle Obama also. I think he's -- considering the circumstances and the overall world economic slowdown that he's managed pretty remarkably well.
MORGAN: What do you think of America as a country today? Because they're struggling a little bit I think with their identity. No longer the only super power. What do you think? PRINCE ALBERT II: Well, I think America -- we still look up to America in many ways. And in many areas. But of course the world is -- the world is changing. The world is -- there are other powers that are coming into -- into their own of course. We think of China at the forefront of that. But there's not only China. There are other countries in Asia or in different parts of the world that are developing at a very rapid pace. And so America still has a lot of work to do to be competitive, to assert its place and to find its dominant position in the world. I think it's an incredible country, you know, a wonderful country.
MORGAN: Let's come back. I want to talk about your mother, Princess Grace. Obviously, for an American audience, they still hold your mother in the deepest of affections. I'd like to discuss it with you. (BEGIN VIDEO CLIP) GRACE KELLY, PRINCESS OF MONACO: On marrying his heinous, I will become Monocan. But I will also retain my American citizenship. UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: Does that go for your children too? KELLY: I don't know about that as yet. (END VIDEO CLIP)
MORGAN: Prince Albert, that was your mother, Princess Grace, talking before she got marry to your father, Prince Rainier. When she was talking there about having children, it was interesting that already she was having to think about American citizenship and so on and so on. Your mother was an extraordinary woman, a fabulously talented actress. And she became this impossibly glamorous princess. And the whole world fell in love with her. Her life was cruelly ended so young at 52. What do you think she would have made of the way that you have conducted yourself since you had to take over the reins of the palace? PRINCE ALBERT II: First of all, I can't believe it's already 30 years since her passing. I still think of her every day. And I hope that she would be proud of me and proud of what I tried to achieve in the last 30 years.
MORGAN: You were 24 when she died. PRINCE ALBERT II: Yes.
MORGAN: I would imagine the memories of that awful day are very acute for you. PRINCE ALBERT II: Yes.
MORGAN: But for those who didn't know your mother, how would you describe her? PRINCE ALBERT II: She was the most warm, gracious, engaging person. Of course, very -- very close to all of us, an incredible mother. But just an incredibly generous person in heart and spirit. And she touched the lives of so many people in so many different ways all over the world.
MORGAN: Do you have any American citizenship because of your mother? PRINCE ALBERT II: I never actually had a passport, but I had a paper in my passport that said when I was to travel to the United States, I shouldn't be considered as a foreign citizen. So it was that kind of dual -- unofficial dual citizenship that I had for years. And then I gave it up when I became 21, which was then the legal age in Monaco. But I've never felt foreign -- never felt as a foreign land to me. I've always felt very -- not only proud of my American heritage, not only very -- very close to it, but I spent a lot of time over there.
MORGAN: You have just celebrated your first anniversary with two great royal weddings. For the people of Monaco, this was the big one. How's it going, Princess Charlene? PRINCESS CHARLENE, PRINCESS OF MONACO: Very well, thank you.
MORGAN: Life is good as Princess Charlene? PRINCESS CHARLENE: Busy. A lot more busier. Yeah, it's going great.
MORGAN: When you come into it, as indeed Princess Grace had to do, what is the culture shock? What is the reality of entering a royal family? PRINCESS GRACE: Well, from what I've experienced, it's very busy, a lot of responsibilities. And yeah it -- PRINCE ALBERT II: A lot of engagements. PRINCESS CHARLENE: Yeah, a lot of engagements, a lot of functions.
MORGAN: What's the best bit? PRINCESS CHARLENE: The best bit? MORGAN: Other than being married to this charming, handsome prince? PRINCESS CHARLENE: I get to wear a tiara now and then. MORGAN: Every woman wants to wear a tiara. Doesn't they? I bet they're dazzling tiaras, aren't they, in Monaco? PRINCESS CHARLENE: Also, I think it's quite special that little girls say, where's your tiara? You're a real princess? Yes, I am.
MORGAN: Did you ever dream of that when you were a little girl yourself? did you ever think, one day I want to be a princess, marry a handsome prince? PRINCESS CHARLENE: I wanted to be Zoro.
MORGAN: You've had a hard time from the press, as I would have expected, because it's such a huge high-profile thing to be marrying Prince Albert. All the expectation of people in Monaco and around the world and so on. You've taken some legal action on some of these reports. They had you dashing to the airport before the wedding, that kind of thick thing. Briefly tell me about that. PRINCE ALBERT II: I think it was only because we wanted the truth to be known and to come out. And so that's why we felt compelled to take action against -- I guess against that magazine, but I think it was extremely unfair, extremely unprofessional of those people and others who repeated that story.
MORGAN: And hurtful to you, Princess Charlene. No bride wants to read all this nonsense. PRINCESS CHARLENE: I actually had no idea. I was in Paris the day before. I'd taken my mom shopping to get her some shoes and bags and whatever the case. I got back to the palace. Albert came down and said, there's a rumor out that you've left. I said, what? What do you mean I've left? Yeah, it's all out. When did this happen? Like not even an hour ago. I was, like, wow. Well, it's not true, is it?
MORGAN: There is an upside. And you're with your handsome prince. Tell me about the Princess Grace Foundation. PRINCE ALBERT II: Well, the Princess Grace Foundation has been established since my mother's passing, because she wanted to establish the foundation in the U.S. There's one in Monaco that has slightly different aims. She wanted to help young artists, young emerging artists in theater, dance and film. And she was never able to do that. So we just carried on her mission and her vision, and tried to make it happen. And it's been now almost 30 years. And it's doing remarkably well. We've distributed tens of millions of dollars in scholarships, apprenticeships and fellowships to these young American artists. And we will have our next awards going, fund-raiser in New York City on October 22nd.
MORGAN: Princess Charlene, tell me about the Special Olympics. Obviously a cause dear to your heart. Why is that? PRINCESS CHARLENE: Well, training in South Africa, I was, you know often training alongside athletes that had disabilities and, you know, they also tried to get to their meets, to reach their goals in life, very little support. So I said to them, if I was in a position some day, I would definitely give back and help in any way I could -- possibly can. And so I thought, well, I've always been involved in Special Olympics and the Paraolympics. In the meantime, I also started a foundation. You know, drawing inspiration from the Princess Grace Foundation, her passions were to obviously help struggling artists. I hope to do the same with some athletes and the support development programs and mentoring programs in the future.
MORGAN: Good for you. See, she's turning into quite the princess, isn't she? It's been a real pleasure to talk to you both. Thank you for sharing the time. Enjoy the Olympics. Enjoy London and Britain. I know that you've been a longtime supporter of this country. I thank you for that. Thank you both for joining me. PRINCE ALBERT II: Thank you.
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