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bsdetector

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I wouldn't have noticed this before, but since getting the virus and having most of my small intestine removed leading to a rare condition known as Short Bowel Syndrome, I now need additional help getting the nutrients I need into my body.

That white wire that hangs down and goes underneath Archie's jacket looks very similar to my TPN feeding tube. The liquid food is pumped into my body through a PICC line in my upper arm. When I go out, I need to take my bag of liquid food and the pump with me. It has it's own rucksack for portability and convenience. There are 2 different types of liquid food I have on alternate days. The water & electrolyte mixture is a clear-coloured liquid. The lipid (fats) mixture is white. The wire itself is always transparent (presumably to be able to see if there are any air bubbles or blockages). So when I am on a lipid day, the wire looks white.

If we are to believe that is Archie, I would say the presence of the wire is indicative of some health issues.
Sorry, forgot to expand the acronyms:

TPN = "Total parenteral nutrition (TPN) is a method of feeding that bypasses the gastrointestinal tract. Fluids are given into a vein to provide most of the nutrients the body needs. The method is used when a person cannot or should not receive feedings or fluids by mouth." (Medline)

PICC = "A PICC line is a thin, soft, long catheter (tube) that is inserted into a vein in your child's arm, leg or neck. The tip of the catheter is positioned in a large vein that carries blood into the heart. The PICC line is used for long-term intravenous (IV) antibiotics, nutrition or medications, and for blood draws." (Children's Hospital of Philadelphia)

Sorry to hear about your health issues, that must be tough :(

Is it a wire or is it a mitten string? I think it's connecting his mittens together, she just hasn't bothered to thread it through his coat sleeves.
Yes it's probably a mitten string and I'm probably overthinking!

Thanks, I'm learning to live with it 👍
 
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Wightgirl

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Pippa Middleton is pregnant - so Eugenie, Zara and Pippa. Not much point Smeg joining the crowd 😂😂
 
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Scotch Mist

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Tier 4 fucking lockdown 😭 I'm bloody pissed off

And the Harkles are still cunts 🤬

Article from The Times if anyone interested. It's long, so it's in a spoiler tag to spare those on mobile! There's nothing new here as far as I can tell, but still bolded some parts that I thought were interesting.

A year of Megxit: Harry and Meghan are pedal to the metal on the road to riches

The Sussexes are too busy in the US to build bridges at home. There’s vegan lattes and a Spotify podcast to plug, says royal correspondent Roya Nikkhah

When a member of Hollywood royalty, Oprah Winfrey, took to Instagram to swoon over a “basket of deliciousness” from “my neighbour M ... yes that M” — adding a crown emoji in case any of her 19.2 million followers were in any doubt — those vegan coffee sachets, nestled in a festive hamper, were always going to fly off the shelves.

Within hours of Oprah’s post on Monday, the Duchess of Sussex announced she had personally invested in Clevr Blends, the “woman-led, mission driven” company behind the “wellness lattes” that is “dedicated to giving a shit”. Co-founded by Hannah Mendoza, from Buckinghamshire, the California-based company donates 1% of revenue to food poverty programmes.

The move marked a new direction as an investor for Meghan, who contacted Mendoza after trying one of her organic oat milk lattes. The duchess plans to “build a portfolio” of female-led start-up companies that are “in line with her values”. As she told the American business publication Fortune: “This investment is in support of a passionate female entrepreneur ... I’m proud to invest in Hannah’s commitment to sourcing ethical ingredients and creating a product that I personally love and has a holistic approach to wellness.”

So far, “sooooo Santa Barbara”, as one royal insider joked, referring to the couple’s adopted home town. But is this really what Meghan and Harry’s world-changing Great Move West was supposed to be about?

It’s just over a year since the Sussexes decamped to Canada for what was meant to be a six-week sabbatical for “much needed family time”. That was November. Rumours started in December. And on January 8, the couple dropped their bombshell: in a statement they set out their intention to “make a transition ... to carve out a progressive new role within this institution” and plans to “balance our time between the United Kingdom and north America”, becoming “financially independent while continuing to fully support Her Majesty the Queen”.

That is not how it panned out. The Queen made it clear at the “Sandringham summit” later that month that their “half-in, half-out” offer was unacceptable, and a hard Megxit was the only route if they wanted out.

The manner of last week’s coup induced a bout of queasiness in royal circles, where Oprah’s involvement was considered “tacky” and “clumsy”. Harry and Meghan had pledged their future activities would “uphold the values of Her Majesty”. An almighty plug from a talk-show host flagging her royal connections has stretched the elastic contours of the “Megxit” deal to snapping point.

One royal source compared the lapse of judgment in deploying Oprah to the recent gaffe by Peter Phillips, Princess Anne’s son, who was widely criticised for making the most of his royal connections in a Chinese milk advert. There is a fear the Sussexes may take to product placement much as their friend George Clooney has, becoming as synonymous with Nespresso coffee as his films.

Hot on the heels of Meghan’s lattes last week came the announcement that the Sussexes have followed in the footsteps of Michelle Obama and Kim Kardashian, signing a deal with Spotify — reportedly worth up to £30m — to make podcasts that “build community through shared experience, narratives and values” focusing on “finding kindness and compassion”. A teaser trailer had the couple plugging their product and laying it on thick, Meghan reminding listeners their insights will be “for free only on Spotify”, while Harry encouraged listeners to “tap ‘follow’ right now. Go ahead, go on. Tap follow and that way you won’t miss out and you’ll be able to hear new shows ... as soon as they drop.” The timing of the deal was perhaps not ideal: as Spotify handed the couple £30m, it was under pressure from a campaign urging it to raise the tiny percentage of its income that it pays musicians.

The royal biographer Penny Junor said the couple would “always be exploited for their names because ‘Harry and Meghan’ means ‘royal’, so they are inevitably trading on their royal connections. But they can never get away from that, so they’re damned if they do and damned if they don’t. The curious thing is they left the UK because they wanted more privacy and to escape the criticism. But in much of what they’ve done, they’ve put themselves squarely into the spotlight.”

With millions in the bank, the Sussexes may find the criticism easy to shrug off. After their divorce from “the Firm”, they have — on the surface at least — got much of what they wanted: an £11m home, multimillion-pound business deals and, unrestrained by royal protocol, the freedom to opine on Black Lives Matter and the American election, issues that would have been risky territory as working royals. Meghan’s ongoing privacy case against Associated Newspapers seems to be the only dark cloud on their otherwise clear horizon.

But however happy Harry appears, he is not at peace with the loss of his military roles. The Afghanistan veteran marked Remembrance Sunday at Los Angeles National Cemetery — photographer in tow — after his request to have a wreath laid at the Cenotaph was denied by Buckingham Palace. As Peter Hunt, a former BBC royal correspondent, said: “This is what happens when an institution fails to make peace with the son of a future king.”

Anyone who knows Harry knows he would forgo several noughts on any deal to don uniform and lay a wreath at the Cenotaph. But palace aides say the decision echoed the Queen’s view that “either you work for the royal family or you don’t. You don’t make the royal family work for you.” As painful a lesson as that was, Harry surely knows that much as he might want to negotiate a way back, his official military ties are off the table. Princess Anne is expected to replace him as captain general of the Royal Marines.

Soon after their move from Canada to California in March, there were early hints Harry was struggling to find his feet as just another mega-celeb in a town full of famous faces. In April, the conservationist Jane Goodall, a friend of the couple, revealed that Harry was “finding life a bit challenging”.

But the couple have set a well-oiled machine in motion in California, hiring a posse of American strategists, including Catherine St Laurent, chief of staff at Archewell, their new charitable foundation and vehicle for their relaunch. Their newly formed Archewell Audio production company will make their podcasts with Spotify.

St Laurent, who previously worked for Melinda Gates, husband of Bill, is part of a set of advisers working with the Sussexes on their deals and public image, including Nick Collins, Meghan’s agent from her acting days, Andrew Meyer, her business manager, Rick Genow, an entertainment lawyer, and Sunshine Sachs, a Hollywood PR firm. Tim Burt, a British former financial journalist who is managing director with the American PR giant Teneo, has been informally advising them on philanthropic roles and commercial deals.

“All no doubt experts at boosting their clients’ profiles and bank balances, but none will give two figs about the impact of decisions on the royal family and institution,” notes Junor.

The deal hammered out at the Sandringham summit allowed for a year-long review period from Harry and Meghan’s official royal departure date of March 31. Aides made it clear the “door was left open” to any change of heart. But with three months left on the trial calendar, the Sussexes seem unlikely to swap the manicured estates of Montecito for Frogmore Cottage, Windsor.

“If they are happy, then the gamble of leaving has paid off,” said a royal source who knows the couple and other members of the royal family. “Even if there has been a lot of collateral damage.”

Their move this summer from borrowed LA digs to a nine-bedroom, 16-bathroom palace of their own in Santa Barbara extracted them from the goldfish bowl of Beverly Hills and landed them in one of America’s most discreet and opulent suburbs. Their new neighbours include the actress Gwyneth Paltrow, the talk-show host Ellen DeGeneres and Oprah, with whom Harry is making an “enlightening and inclusive” documentary on mental health for Apple TV+. Harry is donating his undisclosed executive producer fee to charity, but royal watchers will wait to see if superlattes at £21 a pack feature in the ad breaks.

Sources close to the Sussexes say that “much of their work happened privately” this year, and while there has been some public volunteering, they remain mostly suspended in lockdown isolation, with regular visits from Meghan’s mother, Doria Ragland, who lives in Los Angeles. They occasionally venture to the beach in Malibu or downtown Montecito for dinner with Meghan’s old friend the actress Katharine McPhee, 36, and her music mogul husband, David Foster, 71. McPhee has described Harry’s relationship with Foster as “like father and son”.

Despite being locked down, they have managed to generate headlines, not all of them as positive as the response to Meghan’s announcement last month that she had suffered the “unbearable grief” of a miscarriage in July. “This year has brought so many of us to our breaking points,” she wrote in The New York Times. “Loss and pain have plagued every one of us in 2020, in moments both fraught and debilitating.”

But there have been other moments when the Sussexes’ willingness to speak their minds ended less well, notably when they waded into the US presidential election, Harry calling on voters to “reject hate speech, misinformation and online negativity” and Meghan describing it as “the most important election of our lifetime”. Their comments were widely interpreted as a swipe at Donald Trump, who shrugged it off with a joke at Harry’s expense: “I’m not a fan of hers and I would say this ... I wish a lot of luck to Harry, because he’s going to need it.” It was no joke in London, and Buckingham Palace distanced itself from Harry’s remarks. The episode showed Harry and Meghan were still “feeling their way through [their changed status]”, according to a royal aide. Some courtiers feared the royal family was being dragged into a political minefield; others called it a “violation” of the Megxit agreement.

Another obstacle to future harmony arrived with the publication of Finding Freedom, a biography of the couple told mostly from the Sussexes’s perspective. They denied any collaboration, but the book sent shudders along palace corridors. It laid bare a rift between Harry and his brother Prince William, portrayed Meghan as a victim of prejudice and sexism and described how she felt the Duchess of Cambridge had not sufficiently welcomed her.


Royal aides were described as “vipers” and there seemed to be no “closure” on a saga that was clearly still raw for the Sussexes. The book did nothing to help William and Harry’s already fractured relationship — a friend of the brothers says things are “still not great” between them.

The biggest splash was the signing of a lucrative production deal with Netflix to make “inspirational family programming” that “informs but also gives hope”. Neither party has publicly talked money, but the deal is reported to be worth about £75m. For that kind of money, Harry and Meghan might be expected to include royal revelations in the highbrow, uplifting content they have promised. A nature documentary and an animated series about inspiring women are in the pipeline, but to what extent they may be pressured to provide royal-themed programming remains the stuff of nightmares in London.

Eyebrows have been raised over the Netflix deal, given the furore over the latest season of The Crown, one of the streaming network’s most successful series, which depicts Prince Charles as an abusive husband to Harry’s mother, Diana, much to royal fury. The Crown may be trickier viewing for Harry and Meghan now they are committed to its makers, but they can be soothed by the knowledge that the Netflix and Spotify deals have secured the financial independence they craved. They have paid back the £2.4m of taxpayers’ money spent on refurbishing Frogmore Cottage and no longer rely on Charles for support.

So will there be anything left to review come March, beyond “dodgy” celebrity endorsements? As far as Buckingham Palace is concerned, probably not, and aides suggest there is unlikely to be a Sandringham summit sequel. The feeling at monarchy HQ is that the Sussexes are making their way in a brave new world and good luck to them, but fewer crown emojis would be appreciated. Megxit, an all-consuming drama at the start of the year, has been overtaken by “far bigger issues that put it into context”, say royal insiders.

“Harry and Meghan have more control over their lives, but they have taken some major hits to their reputation,” said the royal source who knows the couple. “There is a portrayal of Harry in some parts of the media as to some extent having abandoned Britishness for a more progressive Californian style. That probably quite accurately reflects what a lot of the British public are thinking.


“Harry was beloved and adored for being the happy, energetic, boisterous, down-to-earth prince. But that person isn’t as evident any more, he’s been partly replaced by a rather earnest character.” Harry certainly left many people scratching their heads when during a video broadcast this month he mused: “What if every single one of us was a raindrop, and if every single one of us cared?”

Come March, there may be adjustments to the terms of divorce, but no kiss-and-make-up. There will be no sighting of Archie here this year and no joyful reunion of Harry and his brother any time soon. While the Queen, 94, will spend Christmas at Windsor, Harry will be in his new home in California, his mother-in-law likely to be the only visiting guest.

“They are a big loss to the institution and the nation,” said a friend of the royals. “The biggest loss is on the family side of things; there’s a lot of repair to be done.”
Good article but I take issue with this:

They are a big loss to the institution and the nation,” said a friend of the royals

I don't think those money grabbing selfish bastards are any loss at all.
 
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Sea

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HARRY and Meghan plan to publish an official family Christmas photograph despite stepping down as working royals, it has been claimed.
It will be a black and white shot of the back of their heads (Archie too) handing out food parcels to a crowd of grateful poor/veterans/whatever charity is in fashion.
 
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Margot1977

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She’s deffo had fillers and Botox - her face is smooth and wide as a result. That blouse though - wtf is going on in the neck area?? It looks hideous. Then there’s the cosplaying Charles and Camilla’s garden bench scene with the exact same coloured flowers 🤦🏻‍♀️

View attachment 346192
Well...on the blouse...guess what Kate was wearing a couple of weeks ago or so 🤣🤣🤣
 

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Toto

Chatty Member
Agree re the top. Looks like it doesn't fit. Or her stylist hates her.

The Empress's top looks beautifully finished with sharp shoulders, whereas Smeggy's looks like a lot of fabric tied up at the neck with a slip knot.

To paraphrase the legend that is Dolly Parton (who always looks polished albeit rather OTT) it must take a lot of effort, money and stylists to look that bad.

The only time she looked okay was when she had no choice in how she looked, i.e when she was in Suits.

You'd think she'd be açomplished at *something* but everything from her pretend handwriting to her dress sense to her values come over as half-assed. It keeps us Tattlers amused though!
 
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Loved this reply.:m

Yebbut... that 'sexy' video of her barbecuing burgers gave me the biggest soft-on I've had in years.
The porn version would probably leave me in a state that Viagra or even an injection of concrete couldn't help with. Permanently.
Would I be able to claim?
Literally snorted out loud when I read that.

I always thought she was beautiful (if duplicitous bitch) but wtf has she done to her face?!?! Those porn lips and shiny face. I wonder if that was at the request of Ginge.

WTF is advising her? Her clothes make her look turdy, her causes are always a day late and a dollor short. With all that money you want to tell me they are still struggling to turn her into a star
 
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NotaHincher

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Does anybody else want to run up screaming like a banshee shouting 'shut up! Shut up! Shuuuuut the fuuuuuck up!'? With their hands over their ears?

Also, apparently this was video'd a few weeks ago, allegedly 🙄 I'm calling bullshit on that, she's seen the good publicity Willie and Kate have had and she wants to look like them, won't happen cos she's a cunt.

Go away Meggy will the 80's tendrils bad hair and take your morphing into omid scabies plastic face with you!
 
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ResidentMerkin

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Earlier in the year. There was a lot of talk about her hiring a top vocal and dance coach, she wanted to be a holder of the EGOT.

Here's a nice little mickey take ... How Meghan Markle is preparing to participate in a Broadway musical ⋆ ♕News Royals
I cannot today. Just cannot. can you imagine the caterwauling swill spewing from that pie-hole? I mean her speeches make my ears recoil in horror - there is no vaccine for any attempt at smearing that shit across 2 or three octaves. and Dancing? she walks like an obese billy-goat, her legs permanently jammed into an upside-down Upper-case "Y" from all her "Y"acthing "Y"ears, so honestly the idea of paying to hear her cloven hooves clattering spread-eagle on a stage?



*bangs head repeatedly on desk*
 
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rangrang88

Well-known member
Another day, another Megnuts preaching to us from her 14 million mansion.

if she was so concern about feeding the poor, why did she leave the RF and took away her husband away from his charity works?
 
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NutMegandCinnamong

Well-known member
Hi, long time lurker, first post! Just thought I’d share this article where Noel Gallagher denounces H&M as “f***ing do-gooders”. I agree with the sentiment, but I’m not sure what good they’re actually supposed to have done.
 
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Scotch Mist

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Treads carefully. Not unknown for celebs and paps to have mutually agreed arrangements, where instead of payment a fee comes over in the form of some sort of legal settlement for 'invasion of privacy'. That way, technically, pictures haven't been staged or shopped around. Sometimes happens in situations where the children's privacy is part of (say) a divorce custody agreement.

The lawsuit over the drone shots of their house near Soho Farmhouse which 'invaded their privacy' was always a bit murky (just my opinion...)
Well if Splash have now gone into administration at least we'll be spared more set ups like this with them in future. This was her way of ensuring the payment as she was still a member of the royal family at that time.

Detestable woman. She worships money above anything else.
 
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Baguette

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I find it pretty funny that those two have ventured into podcasts now. They are the epitome of lip service. Jumping from cause to cause, venture to venture.
Podcast is what all those failed „influencers“ tried to do before crawling back to Instagram. All those new media formats, very interestingly, still work best under the same rules as the traditional ones. You need regular quality content, a USP and a niche/topic. Consumers also love to know when to expect something and when. That’s why normal radio and tv still aren’t dead.
I don’t think they have developed a great strategy for more than 10 episodes. If this whole thing goes longer than March I will be surprised.
Harry using the American Phrase „happy holidays“ just proves to me, that he is fully on board and has finally realised the UK is burned earth and he will have to build his persona up in the USA. It might also be a hint, that very much like the HRH, they “will choose” to not use the Duke and Duchess titles any longer. Obviously “their choice”, because they are totally entitled to do so (which they will remind us about a lot till summer) and conveniently they stop using the titles after the Queen had their review done.
No chance they are seperated (and if they were I would expect him to owe his err of judgment and stay in the US around his son. Suck it up and put the child first.). I also strongly believe she is either pregnant or on fertility meds re: her latest sight. If she is pregnant she is probably extremely annoyed about the flush of babies with royal connections next year. Her only chance would be to hide it till she has a massive bump and then refuse to comment or even hide till the baby is born. I almost wish Kate would get pregnant with twin girls just to see that drama unfold.
Can we take bets on how fast they drop the podcast? We should have stated listing their causes and ventures right from the start. Would make an interesting statistic.
Great post.

They've placed some PR in the Mirror claiming the deal is worth 'up to $30 million' but that smells of Harkle Puff to me.

Will Spotify have paid a fee? Yes possibly - they pay some names for exclusive content. Why would they pay a big sum to an unproven brand though? They are a controversial couple (according to Disney, who do their research) with zero track record of appealing to consumers.

The Harkle have hired an agency to produce the podcast, that won't be cheap, so they just have to turn up and read their scripts.

If Spotify have paid much, presumably Harry is expected to deliver a juicy royal family anecdote each episode as part of the deal. They can disguise that by calling the episodes reflections on grandparents, dealing with bereavement, sibling rivalry, and the like, as Harry sells out his family for dollars.
 
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