Meghan’s latest interview lifts the lid on her gilded life in the millionaires’ haven of Montecito in California.
Over 6,400 gushing words, American journalist Allison P. Davis describes everything from the Soho House-branded rosewater candles that she burns to the conjoined palm trees at the Sussexes’ home that the loved-up couple compare to themselves.
In New York magazine The Cut, she even quotes Meghan telling her what to write after the duchess answered a question with ‘moaning’ and ‘guttural sounds’.
But it was her and Harry’s apparent jibes at the Royal Family that caused jaws to drop on the other side of the Atlantic last night.
The interviewer explains that Meghan discussed how ‘toxic tabloid culture has torn two families apart’, an apparent reference to Meghan’s falling out with her own father, Thomas Markle, and Harry’s fractured relationship with Prince Charles.
She is quoted as saying: “Harry said to me, “I lost my dad in this process.” It doesn’t have to be the same for them as it was for me, but that’s his decision.”
Her comment was widely interpreted as meaning that Harry felt he had ‘lost’ his father because of the fall out.
But hours after the piece was published, an ally of the couple came out to suggest that is not what she meant.
Royal reporter Omid Scobie, known to be close to them, said: “I understand that Prince Harry is actually referring to Meghan’s loss of her own father, and Meghan is saying she doesn’t want Harry to lose his.”
US publication Page Six separately quoted a ‘highly placed royal insider’ as saying: “I’m not aware that Harry has broken up with his father. Charles gave Harry and Meghan millions when they left the UK. Right now, the family are all at Balmoral, and I’m sure they are aghast at this interview.”
Meghan’s comment was made after the interviewer asked her about a letter Thomas Markle provided to The Mail on Sunday, and the legal case that followed.
Harry’s relationship with his family became increasingly strained after he and Meghan gave an explosive interview to Oprah Winfrey last year in which he claimed Prince Charles had cut him off financially and stopped taking his calls.
“It was bittersweet, you know? Knowing none of it had to be this way,” Meghan said when talking about the couple’s decision to leave the UK and criticism of their £2.4million taxpayer funded refurbishment of Frogmore Cottage.
Meghan said the couple wanted to earn their own money so tabloids could no longer attack them under the ‘guise of public interest’ because their lives were taxpayer funded.
“Then maybe all the noise would stop,” she said, adding they were willing to move to any commonwealth country, including Canada, New Zealand or South Africa.
Anything to just … because just by existing, we were upsetting the dynamic of the hierarchy.
The couple had proposed a hybrid arrangement, mixing official duties with private commercial work but were told it would not work.
Meghan said: “That, for whatever reason, is not something that we were allowed to do, even though several other members of the family do that exact thing.”
Meghan recalled an encounter she had at the 2019 London premiere of a live-action version of The Lion King.
She said a cast member from South Africa pulled her aside. “He looked at me, and he’s just like light. He said, “I just need you to know: When you married into this family, we rejoiced in the streets the same we did when Mandela was freed from prison,” she said.
Among the most shocking claims by Meghan is that her children have been called the highly offensive and racist ‘N-word’.
She made the comment while discussing how she was angered by the Royal Family’s arrangement for releasing pictures of her children, which she said needed to be distributed to the media’s accredited royal correspondents, known as the Royal Rota, before she could post them herself.
The interviewer said that this ‘didn’t sit right with Meghan, given her strained relationship with the British tabloids’.
Meghan is quoted as saying: “Why would I give the very people that are calling my children the N-word a photo of my child before I can share it with the people that love my child?” she said.
It was unclear who she was accusing of using the racist language.
The couple are known to have faced abuse from online trolls. Harry said the couple working together from their shared home office for their company Archewell feels ‘natural and normal’.
But in what will be seen as a swipe at his own family, he added: “Most people that I know and many of my family, they aren’t able to work and live together.”
The interviewer said he enunciated family with a ‘vocal eye roll’.
The interviewer, who apparently accompanies Meghan to pick son Archie, three, up from pre-school as part of the piece, says Meghan felt she would not be able to do the school run in Britain without being hounded by the paparazzi.
She feared it would have become a ‘royal photo call with a press pen of 40 people snapping pictures’, the interviewer states.
Royal experts pointed out strict rules governing the press prevent taking photographs of children in education. The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge regularly drop their children off at school most days without note.
Any pictures published of their children are ones released to the press with their approval or taken at public events. Meghan told the magazine she is still very aware that people see her as a princess.
“It’s important to be thoughtful about it because - even with the Oprah interview, I was conscious of the fact that there are little girls that I meet and they’re just like, ‘Oh my God its a real-life princess’.”
But she said her ambitions for the little girls who look up to her are more than to marry well. “I just look at all of them and think, “You have the power within you to create a life greater than any fairy tale you’ve ever read”. I don’t mean that in terms of “You could marry a prince one day.”
“I mean you can find love. You can find happiness.”
A gushing Prince Harry told his wife she could be both model and a ‘mom’.
He made an appearance to tell the interviewer how he’d had to reassure his wife after a ‘ten hour’ cover shoot the day before.
Addressing his wife he said: “Tell her the first thing you said when you got back last night,’ before turning to the interviewer and saying: “She said, “I’m not a model”. I was like, “No, you are, of course you can be a model”. And she’s like, “I’m a mom!” And it’s like, “You can be both”,’ he said.
Meghan, who included privacy concerns among her reasons for quitting the UK, welcomed the interviewer into their Californian home, and she in turn described it in detail.
“The Montecito house is the kind of big that startles you into remembering that unimaginable wealth is actually someone’s daily reality,” the journalist wrote.
“Meghan said they initially dismissed the property believing it to be too expensive because they ‘didn’t have jobs’.
But they later went on to sign multi million pound deals with Spotify and Netflix. Meghan said: “We were looking in this area and this house kept popping up online in searches.”
They did eventually view it and fell ‘almost immediately in love’.
“One of the first things my husband saw when we walked around the house was those two palm trees,’ she said.
“See how they’re connected at the bottom? He goes, “My love, it’s us”.’ Meghan said she told Harry ‘We have to get this house’ after only touring the grounds.
Meghan dictated how the noises she was making should be interpreted by interviewer Miss Davis.
The writer said: “At one point in our conversation, instead of answering a question, she will suggest how I might transcribe the noises she’s making: “She’s making these guttural sounds, and I can’t quite articulate what it is she’s feeling in that moment because she has no word for it; she’s just moaning”.’
Meghan hinted that the couple’s upcoming Netflix documentary would be about their ‘love story’.
“The piece of my life I haven’t been able to share, that people haven’t been able to see, is our love story,’ she said.
The couple are reportedly filming a fly-on-the-wall style documentary and have been spotted accompanied by a camera crew. Harry and Meghan are trying to teach their son manners, she revealed.
“We always tell him: ‘Manners make the man. Manners, manners, manners, manners, manners.’
She also recalled a saying she’d learned from a friend’s mum: Salt and pepper are always passed together.
“She said, ‘You never move one without the other.’ That’s me and Harry. We’re like salt and pepper. We always move together.”
Meghan has made up black back packs containing water, peanut butter crackers and granola bars to give out to the homeless.
In the car on the way back from the preschool run, they stop to get one from the boot and a member of the security team gives it to an ‘unhoused man on the corner’.
She said they were teaching Archie that ‘some people live in big houses, some in small, and that some are in between homes’.
Meghan says: “I’ve never had to sign anything that restricts me from talking,’ she said:
“I can talk about my whole experience and make a choice not to.
Asked why she hadn’t, she replied: “Still healing”.
Asked if she thinks there is room for forgiveness between her and her royal in-laws and her own family she said: “It takes a lot more energy to not forgive.
“But it takes a lot of effort to forgive. I’ve really made an active effort, especially knowing that I can say anything.”
https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMinwFodHRwczovL3d3dy5wZXJ0aG5vdy5jb20uYXUvbmV3cy9yb3lhbC1mYW1pbHkvbWVnaGFuLW1hcmtsZXMtbGF0ZXN0LWludGVydmlldy1saWZ0cy10aGUtbGlkLW9uLWhlci1yZWxhdGlvbnNoaXAtd2l0aC1yb3lhbC1mYW1pbHktYW1pZC1uLXdvcmQtY2xhaW1zLS1jLTgwNTQxNjnSAQA?oc=5
2022-08-30 03:10:00Z
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