In a fresh episode of South Park, the show’s creators unleashed a savage takedown of Meghan Markle and Prince Harry, painting them as the la...
In a fresh episode of South Park, the show’s creators unleashed a savage takedown of Meghan Markle and Prince Harry, painting them as the laughable “Prince and Princess of Canada” on a so-called “Worldwide Privacy Tour.”
This biting satire zeroes in on the glaring hypocrisy between their loud cries for privacy and their nonstop chase for the media spotlight. The episode lands at a perfect time, spotlighting Meghan’s latest business flop and exposing the contradictions she can’t seem to shake.
It’s a dead-on jab at their real-life antics—think high-stakes interviews, Netflix docuseries, and tell-all memoirs—all while they moan about media intrusion.
The show doesn’t stop there, roasting Meghan’s character as a “sorority girl, actress, influencer, and victim.” It’s a sharp dig at how she plays the underdog card despite her cushy, privileged life.
Adding fuel to the fire, Meghan’s new lifestyle brand, As Ever, has stumbled out of the gate. The launch was a mess—disorganized, plagued by last-minute switches, and leaving her team fuming.
Even with big-name celebrity endorsements and a lineup of jams, teas, crepe mixes, and cookies, insiders call it a “logistical nightmare.” Reports say her collaborators are “already over it,” and the chaos only amplifies the irony of her privacy pleas.
The brand’s first drop sold out in just 30 minutes, but critics say it’s a cheap trick—stock was deliberately scarce to fake demand. This move might’ve worked short-term, but it’s got people questioning Meghan’s authenticity and whether she gets the everyday consumer at all.
Then there’s her New York Times interview, staged in her $21 million Montecito mansion. She banned photos but used the exclusive to plug As Ever—hardly the move of someone craving a low profile.
The episode’s gotten a thumbs-up from critics like Meghan’s half-sister, Samantha Markle, who called it “hysterical” and praised South Park for nailing the couple’s double standards. Samantha’s all in for the show calling out Meghan and Harry’s public whining versus their attention-grabbing reality.
In short, South Park has lit up Meghan Markle’s contradictions like a neon sign. Her privacy demands don’t match her media-hungry moves, and her latest business venture—riddled with PR stunts and missteps—only proves she’s playing both sides.
This hilarious roast is a wake-up call to the messy, tangled web of Meghan’s public story, and it’s hitting all the right notes.
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