Is Brooklyn Beckham the New Prince Harry? Psychic Claims David's Son is 'Done' Being a Family Brand Puppet
Psychic claims Brooklyn Beckham is ready to break from the Beckham brand and build a life on his own terms.

Brooklyn Beckham, standing beside his wife Nicola Peltz on yet another red carpet, often looks like a man permanently stuck in someone else's photo. The flashbulbs may be roaring for him, but the shadows—David's football legend, Victoria's fashion empire, the carefully curated Beckham 'brand'—are always there, lingering at the edges.
Now, if one celebrity psychic is to be believed, Brooklyn is quietly preparing to walk out of that frame altogether.
In an interview with the Daily Star, psychic Tracey Woolterton claims the 25-year-old is heading for his own 'Prince Harry moment,' pulling away from the family machine to live life on his own terms. It's a bold comparison, bordering on provocative, but it captures something people have been whispering for a while: Brooklyn might be done playing the role of Beckham family prop.
Is Brooklyn Beckham Really Having a 'Prince Harry Moment?'
Woolterton, who says she has worked with high-profile names such as Katie Price, describes sensing a shift in the eldest Beckham son. In her reading, Brooklyn isn't just easing away from his parents' orbit—he's actively stepping out of what she calls a money-driven, work-obsessed family bubble.
'I sense he's coming away from the family because they're too busy and money-orientated. He wants his own freedom,' she told the Daily Star.
It's hard not to hear the faint echo of Prince Harry's break from the royal fold in that language. For years, Harry lived as a sort of human emblem for an institution that left little space for personal agency. Then he walked—across an ocean, into commercial deals, media storms, and a new life with Meghan Markle in California. The fallout has been messy, but the pattern is familiar: a son raised in a dynasty deciding the dynasty isn't enough.
Woolterton draws that line herself. 'He wants his own world, his own projects, his own life, his own family. He doesn't want to be caught up in the family brand,' she said of Brooklyn.
That phrase—'family brand'—is doing a lot of work. The Beckhams are not just a family, they're a multimedia enterprise. From Victoria's fashion label and beauty lines to David's Inter Miami venture and sponsored campaigns, the couple long ago turned their surname into a global trademark. Their children, willingly or not, have been woven into that narrative since they were toddlers in matching outfits pitched as 'adorable' to the tabloids.
So when Woolterton suggests Brooklyn is ready to detach, even a little, it lands with a certain plausibility. You don't have to believe in psychic ability to recognize the suffocating potential of that kind of legacy.
Brooklyn Beckham, the Family Brand, and the Fight for a Normal Life
Brooklyn Beckham's attempts to carve out his own role have already been widely scrutinised. Photography, cooking, various media projects—each has been greeted with a mix of curiosity and eye-rolling criticism, often filtered through the assumption that he's coasting on his last name. The irony is sharp: the very brand that opens doors for him also makes it nearly impossible to be taken seriously on his own merits.
Woolterton is adamant that Brooklyn's shift is less teenage rebellion and more adult self-preservation. 'This isn't rebellion,' she said, framing it instead as a need for autonomy, something she directly compares to Harry's exit from royal life. In her view, Brooklyn wants permission—perhaps from the public, perhaps just from his parents—to do something smaller, more grounded.

'If he wants to be a chef, have his own little restaurant or bar, let him do it. Let him live his life without being in the limelight of just them,' she said.
There is something almost mundane in that wish that makes it feel believable. The Beckhams are empire-builders. Brooklyn, by contrast, is often mocked for wanting what so many people his age want: a job that feels vaguely creative, a partner, a home, a bit of stability and anonymity. If anything, the public derision that follows him reinforces Woolterton's point. Why wouldn't he want out?
Central to her reading is Brooklyn's relationship with Nicola Peltz and their future family. Woolterton says she envisions 'one boy and one girl' for the couple, a neat parallel to Harry and Meghan's two children, Archie and Lilibet. In psychic terms, that prediction is specific. In symbolic terms, it suggests Brooklyn sees his future not as David and Victoria's eldest, but as the head of his own small unit.
Yet, unlike Prince Harry, who essentially detonated his relationship with the institution that raised him, Woolterton does not see a permanent exile in Brooklyn's cards.
'I don't think he will shut them out forever... There's still a little bit of love in his heart for his parents,' she said. The phrase 'a little bit' is doing some discreet editorialising of its own.
Victoria Beckham, Control, And The Cost Of A Brand
Her portrayal of Victoria Beckham is particularly pointed. Woolterton calls her the 'backbone' of the clan—'She keeps everyone going... She's very possessive, but with good intentions. He doesn't want to be that controlled,' she explained. It paints a picture of a son who isn't fleeing cruelty or chaos, but the well-meaning control of a matriarch who has built an empire and expects everyone to pull their weight.
Woolterton insists Brooklyn will maintain some connection to the Beckhams, but on his own terms. 'He's got his own little things going on where he can be successful... He doesn't need to be amongst all this for now,' she said.

Sceptics will dismiss all of this as theatrically vague—a psychic surfing the already visible tension between fame, family, and individuality. Maybe so. But even as entertainment, the reading taps into a very real discomfort with dynastic celebrity culture. At what point does a 'family brand' stop being a source of pride and start feeling like a cage?
Woolterton, who is currently filming a supernatural TV series and shares street readings on Instagram and TikTok, is in the business of narrative as much as foresight. Her Brooklyn Beckham 'Prince Harry moment' line works because it crystallises a story many people were already half-telling: the golden boy of a golden couple quietly asking for something unfashionable in his world.
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