President Donald Trump is offering Meghan Markle advice on how to handle the media.

In a radio interview with Brexit Party leader Nigel Farage broadcast on LBC radio Thursday, Trump said he watched a recent documentary about the new royal family member and her husband Prince Harry and thinks she's taking criticism from the press too seriously.

"I guess you’ve got to be a little bit different than that but she takes it very personally and I can understand it. But I don’t know her,” he said.

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Trump, 73, also reflected on his trip to the United Kingdom this past June, calling it "wonderful."

He said Harry, 35, was "great" and praised the family -- "He's a great young man. The whole family is terrific, it's a great family."

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Trump also spoke about his interactions with Queen Elizabeth II, calling her “an incredible woman.”

“I sat next to her, and she was smiling and having a good time and I was smiling and having a good time,” he said of the state dinner he attended at Buckingham Palace.

“It was really a great evening, and I was told that she enjoyed it and I can tell you I enjoyed it," he added.

In the ITV documentary, "Harry & Meghan: An African Journey," the Duchess of Sussex, 38, opened up about her struggles handling the pressures of becoming a newlywed and a mother.

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"Look any woman, especially when they're pregnant, you're really vulnerable, and so that was made really challenging, and then when you have a newborn ... And especially as a woman, it's really, it's a lot. So, you add this on top of just trying to be a new mom or trying to be a newlywed," she said.

"And also thank you for asking because not many people have asked if I'm okay, but it's a very real thing to be going through behind the scenes."

In early October, it was revealed that the Sussexes were suing several British publications over the alleged publishing of a private letter and alleged voicemail hacking.

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Harry issued a statement condemning the "British tabloid press" for running what he called a "ruthless campaign" against his wife "that has escalated over the past year."

"Up to now, we have been unable to correct the continual misrepresentations -- something that these select media outlets have been aware of and have therefore exploited on a daily and sometimes hourly basis," Harry noted.

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The royal also said his "deepest fear is history repeating itself."

"I’ve seen what happens when someone I love is commoditized to the point that they are no longer treated or seen as a real person. I lost my mother and now I watch my wife falling victim to the same powerful forces," he said in a reference to his mother, Princess Diana, who died in a 1997 car crash while trying to elude paparazzi in Paris.

Fox News' Melissa Leon contributed to this report.