the paparazzi for much of his life. though critics say meghan and harry also court the cameras and publicity pointing to their netflix docu series. it was 26 years ago this summer his mother princess diana died during a car chase in paris. you get followed, photographed, chased, harassed and the clicking of cameras makes my blood boil. it makes me angry and takes me back to what happened to my mother and what i experienced as a kid. nbc s gabe gutierrez with that report. still ahead ensports the miami heat continue an improbable play off run while the boston celtics remain very frustrated. and an incident in baseball that happened out ipoakland during pregame warmups. we ll tell you about it when we come right back. warmups. we ll tell you about it when we come right back. volunteering! playing pickleba.!
over decades, harry drawing parallels to what his mother experienced and what meghan has been experiencing. the clicking of cameras and the flashes of cameras makes my blood boil, it makes me angry and takes me back to what i experienced as a kid. reporter: the relentless media attention part of the reason the couple stepped down from royal duties and moved to the u.s. they ve pursued a number of public projects here including interviews, that netflix documentary, and harry s recent high profile book release. so it s important to note, ana, that harry and meghan lost their royal security detail in the uk when they stepped away from their royal duties and that is something that prince harry has been fighting to get back. this is a police presence when they re on the ground in the uk. regardless of that battle, that would not have affected what happened to them here in manhattan. okay. well, interesting, thank you so much, stephanie gosk. ahead here on ana cabrera reports, house
paparazzi much of his life, accusing them of invading his privacy. i did everything i could to protect my family. reporter: critics say harry and meghan also court the cameras and publicity, pointing to their ddocu-series. no one sees what s happening behind closed doors. reporter: 26 years ago this summer that his mother, princess diana, died during a car chase in paris. you get followed, photographed, chased, harassed. the clicking of cameras and the flashes of cameras makes my blood boil. it makes me angry, takes me back to what happened to my mom, what i experienced as a kid. you absolutely understand why he feels that way. won t get a defense of the paparazzi here, generally speaking, but the new york city police department did say it was chaotic, not near catastrophic, but they are looking at every traffic camera, every corner of the city is covered by a camera. if anybody committed a crime, they ll find them. the police are saying, for the record, it wasn t really
she is leading a life of luxury in france, while her ex-husband is leading russia s invasion into ukraine. a russian socialite has been caught shopping in paris and partying at an exclusive ski resort despite her previous partner s on going role in the war. clarissa ward joins us now from london. who is this socialite? what is she up to? the contrast of what she s doing and what s happening in ukraine is striking. reporter: it s very striking. it s one of those stories that literally makes people s blood boil. and it has caused a big uproar in france where svetlana maniovich continues to travel despite the role of her husband in the war and despite the fact that, you know, she s spending all this money as people are dying and there are very real questions as to where that money comes from. svetlana maniovich is a woman of expensive tastes.
a meltdown here after a catastrophic earthquake and tsunami for six years. he couldn t fish told to stay off the water. when he heard he couldn t fish, he was sad, disappointed the ocean was off limits. 12 years later, fishermen faced yet another challenge. treated wastewater that accumulated inside the plant will soon be released into the ocean, a threat to their reputation and way of life. george not, he says the decision made his blood boil. he wonders why the government made the decision without the consent of the fishermen. at the time, the prime minister said it had to be done to decommission the plant. we wanted to see the plant for ourselves and we were allowed to after agreeing to a strict safety protocol. this is as close as we can get two reactors one through four cleanup work