Harry and Meghan #84 Haz should've listened to Auntie Anne, kept his balls to stay a man.

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@YeltsinsTank Hope your mum is OK/ recovering .

I think Pantene sponsor the network or programmer that Megalodon and Hazno will be appearing on. A bit like Foxy Bingo sponsoring Jeremy Kyle....

I agree! They don't need to do anything. I don't want this to become a "he said, she said" argument. The RF are above that. They just need to keep Royalling on. ( and they have been amazing during lockdown. Looking forward to buying Catherine's book, Hold Still project)
 
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Interesting articles in Daily Express today how their credibility is openly being questioned. H&M are threatening to release the unseen 90 minutes footage from the Porker interview and it will be "war."
If this footage is anything like the main interview people will be very sceptical as their lies are being dismantled one by one. I think the lack of BP reaction is driving MM mad.. She is not used to being ignored. She wants drama, BP to phone her, involve her in the investigations, a slanging match like beeyatches with huge hoop earrings. The bigger the hoop the bigger the ho!
MM also rehashed her "miscarriage" of July 20, line by line how she sank to the floor humming bravely. etc. I think she thought the peasants were becoming disrespectful, taking the pee and need reminding that she is a Victim.
Also that William is going to rebut the allegations. Hope he doesn't leave it until Charles is king.
ETA Hazzno and Minge enjoy going for family walks in the countryside near their home. Don't know what the temperature is but she's got a quilted jacket on and he's formally dressed - maybe on a lunch break from his non-job. No child or dog with them on the family walk while they await the birth of their daughter.
 
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No one in the RF should say a word, it's just oxygen to Smeg. Anyone with half a brain already knows that most of what comes out of H&Ms mouth are lies and the ones that don't aren't going to change their mind because of anything the RF say. There are enough youtubers out there doing the Lords work on those 2.
 
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@DarnIt
Yep, upskirt photos, and coming out of a car.
The place had posters claiming to be real royalty, unlike the
"wisteria sisters" and princess Charlote was viperette, after Carole the Viper, a photo of Katherine Heigl from a movie set with brown hair in a denim west was used as evidence of "hagard" Kate smoking.
The above later gave much fuel to the paid sussex loons.
Also Kate being a transvestite, and never giving birth because to thin.
WHAAAT? Never heard of any of this. Is it a joke? Is this on the dark web??? :eek: :eek:
If it's sugaz shite it's not worth repeating here as we know our Catherine is not "hagard" and smoking. If this rubbish gave fuel to the SuxSquitters, I'm sure you will agree we should ignore it and let them fester in their own tit.
 
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I’ve just googled her and am now a stan - she created quantum leap with Donald! Also named her daughter after the character she played. And she was the voice of Ziggy. V cool.
Troian was actually in an episode of Quantum Leap as a young girl who could see Sam in his true form. Also there is an episode named after her.

Sorry back to the Harkles....
 
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WHAAAT? Never heard of any of this. Is it a joke? Is this on the dark web??? :eek: :eek:
If it's sugaz shite it's not worth repeating here as we know our Catherine is not "hagard" and smoking. If this rubbish gave fuel to the SuxSquitters, I'm sure you will agree we should ignore it and let them fester in their own tit.
No this is all stuff that Kate had to endure for a decade of being William's girlfriend before they got engaged, along with paparazzi almost running her off the road ala Diana, being chased down the street by 20 huge men with cameras, her virginity being discussed in the media including places like Loose Women, calling her fat or anorexic, stalking her family, putting her head on a porn stars body and saying she did porn. You know, all the stuff than Meghan and Oprah dismissed as "just rude".
 
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Sorry if already posted, an article from The Times that will cause more plate smashing in Montecito...

Naturally Kate is contrasted to Ginge and Cringe and their antics, which I bolded. Also bolded parts which otherwise highlight how different Kate is to the pair of them.

Worth a read!

For a moment it seemed as though the Duchess of Cambridge might become embroiled in yet another messy, polarising ruckus about pampered royals suiting themselves at the expense of the rest of us. She turned up at an unlawful gathering at Clapham Common in the middle of lockdown! She wasn’t wearing a mask!

Her protection team seemed strangely unaware that earlier that Saturday morning last month, a senior police officer had warned that the vigil in south London for Sarah Everard, 33, who was abducted and murdered as she walked home at night, might be “attractive for terrorists”.

Yet somehow, the duchess still showed up, casually dressed with minimal security, with a bouquet of flowers she had picked from her palace garden. Later it was reported that she had sent a private letter of condolence to the family of the murdered woman.

Hang on a minute, are we talking about the right duchess? A feminist campaigner, showing solidarity with vulnerable women, with seeming disregard for police advice and lockdown regulations? Can we really be talking about Kate? There was an embarrassing muddle at Scotland Yard last week as senior commanders offered conflicting accounts of whether Britain’s future queen had attended the vigil legally, and whether the police had known of her attendance in advance.

It emerged from an independent report into policing of the event that the senior officer in charge of the operation learnt that the duchess had been present only from a television news report after she had left. Yet Dame Cressida Dick, the Metropolitan Police commissioner, told the BBC that “the Met did know [about the visit], absolutely”. Palace sources have described Kate’s visit as private, but Dick said she was there “in the course of her duties; she’s working”.

Getting the story straight has increasingly become a problem for royals embroiled in public relations debacles — just ask the Dukes of Sussex and York. Yet what emerged most clearly from Kate’s modestly controversial outing was not another disaster for the House of Windsor. It has turned into something of a triumph.


“I think she’s played a blinder,” says Jennie Bond, a former BBC royal correspondent and author of several books on the Windsors. Unlike some of her royal relatives, Kate, 39, has barely put a foot wrong in her public embrace of worthy causes over the past few years.

She has made early childhood and mental health the centrepieces of her charitable efforts. Her Early Years initiative produced a landmark survey of attitudes to the first five years of childhood and their links to subsequent social challenges such as addiction, family breakdown, suicide and homelessness. Her passion for photography helped launch a nationwide pandemic project aimed at capturing a portrait of Britain in the grip of Covid-19. “She’s widely admired now as a public figure,” says Bond, “and I think she’s demonstrating that she’s very much in touch with the mood of the country.”

Penny Junor, biographer of Prince William and Prince Harry, describes Kate’s visit to the vigil as a “wonderful gesture”. What might have turned into a made-for-tabloid tempest instead became the story of a young woman who lived in London before marrying a prince, and may have remembered what it was like to have to walk home alone at night.

After the manufactured theatrics of the Sussexes’ interview with Oprah Winfrey, Junor adds, “Kate was making a very subtle point. You don’t need to make a song and dance about things. She showed up at Clapham quietly with absolutely no fanfare. I just thought it spoke volumes.”

Few royal insiders are expecting Kate suddenly to turn into a fire-breathing apostle of “wokeness”, or even to express the remotest hint of a political belief. She does not issue bold proclamations to compare with, say, the welcome page of Harry and Meghan’s new website, Archewell, which announces: “Through our non-profit work, as well as creative activations, we drive systemic cultural change across all communities, one act of compassion at a time.”

Yet Kate is no stranger to acts of compassion, and her low-key approach may strike many as a great deal more effective. “When Harry and Meghan talked to Oprah, they were more concerned about their own welfare; it was all about them and that’s been their narrative all along,” says Junor. “But there’s a difference between service and self-service. I feel real service is doing things selflessly for others. I think that’s what Kate understands.”



She won’t be the queen of Britain for a while, but she’s already a queen of Zoom meetings. Through Kensington Palace’s social media feeds she has become an online video-conferencing force to be reckoned with during lockdown, and the causes she supports and the charities she endorses are reaping incalculable benefits. “All the Zoom calls William and Kate have done are showing them in a very good light,” says Bond. “Usually you just see a tiny bit of them on the telly or a picture in the paper or whatever. But you kind of feel from their work online you’re getting a peek inside their true personalities, inside their homes. They seem much more natural and Kate is coming across as very knowledgeable and compassionate.”

Junor adds: “I think the whole of lockdown has opened people’s eyes to working members of the royal family. They are reaching a far wider audience than before and Kate is coming out of it really well.”

In the past few weeks the duchess has spoken via video links to Harriet Nagaya, the founder of a community midwife project in Uganda; to nurses delivering vaccines in the Midlands; to frontline workers and counsellors dealing with the mental health impact of Covid; and to the family of a 12-year-old boy whose life was saved by a volunteer at the Shout 85258 mental-health support service. It was during the Cambridges’ visit to another mental health project, at a school in east London, that William offered his first response to the Winfrey interview: “We’re very much not a racist family.”

One notable success last month was the video Kate posted to her official @KensingtonRoyal Instagram account, showing a pair of hands opening a box addressed to HRH The Duchess of Cambridge. The hands were unmistakably Kate’s — she was wearing her sapphire and diamond engagement ring, formerly worn by Diana, Princess of Wales.

The box was ripped open and the packaging removed to reveal a book: Hold Still, a collection of photographs of the British experience of the pandemic, with proceeds benefiting the National Portrait Gallery and the mental health charity Mind. Kate, a keen amateur photographer, helped select the photos and wrote an introduction to the book.

“Through Hold Still, I wanted to use the power of photography to create a lasting record of what we were all experiencing,” she writes. “When we look back at the Covid-19 pandemic in decades to come, we will think of the challenges we all faced ... but we will also remember the positives: the incredible acts of kindness, the helpers and heroes who emerged from all walks of life and how together we adapted to a new normal.”

Her short video clip has been viewed by more than two million people. Nicholas Cullinan, director of the portrait gallery, has declared himself “astounded” at the response to the project.

A different side of Kate emerged in a video exchange last month with Jasmine Harrison, 21, who in February became the youngest woman to row solo across the Atlantic. It might easily have been a routine royal congratulatory quickie — jolly fine show, keep up the good work — except that Kate somehow turned it into a stirring eight-minute celebration of womanhood and willpower and dreaming and dedication.

Those with long memories may recall that Kate once embarked on a long-distance rowing project of her own. In 2007 she trained for a cross-Channel attempt as the helmswoman of a dragon boat with an all-women crew, but her then status as William’s girlfriend forced her to give up.

There was nothing remotely artificial about her admiration for Harrison’s achievement in rowing 3,000 miles. “Oh my God, I can’t get my head round 70 days at sea,” Kate laughs at one point. “What you’ve achieved will really change the perception of what is achievable ... I think you’re an inspiration to lots of young women out there.”

Kate ends by wishing her a safe flight back “and enjoy seeing your doggies in Yorkshire”. Harrison, whose Twitter tag is @rudderlymad, replies: “It’s been really nice to talk to you ... it was a surprise to get that call, I thought maybe I HAVE done something big.”

Junor says: “Kate is just really very good at it in a relaxed, friendly way. She’s not over the top, not ‘me, me, me’ at all. I think she’s absolutely coming into her prime now — she’s confident, she’s competent, and you don’t get the impression that she’s waiting for cameras to be there and it’s all a publicity stunt.”

All this might well be encouraging news for a family that seems to specialise in disaster mismanagement. After the transatlantic travails of the Duke of York and the ongoing agonies of the Sussexes, a duchess who gets things right might yet prove an invaluable asset.

At the same time, the burden of royal expectation has crushed many a free spirit. The closer Kate gets to becoming Queen, the more she may be expected to conform; to be careful with her words, to avoid spontaneous excursions in the middle of a health crisis. Can she really carry on being Kate, the increasingly daring duchess? Or must she prepare to be Catherine, our smiling but silent queen?

“I think what William and Kate have demonstrated is that you can have a much greater impact if you go large on a smaller number of causes,” says Bond, who like many royal watchers believes Kate will stick to non-controversial issues such as child development and mental health.

“She’s naturally engaged and comes across as genuine because she is genuinely interested in the topics she has espoused,” Bond adds. “I think she’ll be wise enough to stick to issues quite specific to her personality and knowledge.”

Junor notes that Kate may have learnt an important lesson from Diana, whose popularity began to outstrip her husband’s. “Charles was Prince of Wales and not used to having the limelight taken from him,” she says. “That caused huge problems. Kate is being very careful to ensure she doesn’t outstrip William. She is not on an ego trip, and her head has not been turned by celebrity.”

Junor concluded: “Kate is a working woman doing a job. She didn’t leave the human race when she joined Planet Windsor.”
Good article. This is the kind of positive publicity you want. Not fawning or sugary but thoughtful and realistic with both good and bad points. The Times was once more of a bastion of Sussex support than Cambridge, how times have changed.

William should definitely not do an answering interview. We saw how it worked out for his Dad and Uncle, better to let his actions speak for themselves and let the broadsheets and tabloids both dig into the murky depths of Markledom. Megs/Oprah/Gayle WANT this to be a slanging match.
 
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No one in the RF should say a word, it's just oxygen to Smeg. Anyone with half a brain already knows that most of what comes out of H&Ms mouth are lies and the ones that don't aren't going to change their mind because of anything the RF say. There are enough youtubers out there doing the Lords work on those 2.
I wasn't going to post this as I don't know if all Tattlers have sick-buckets at the ready... but in a really cloying and smarmy article the other day, Minge was reported to have said to the interviewer, while grasping her bump "I feel the embryonic kick of a feminist" 🤮💩 Maybe Tattlers can share buckets.?
 
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I wasn't going to post this as I don't know if all Tattlers have sick-buckets at the ready... but in a really cloying and smarmy article the other day, Minge was reported to have said to the interviewer, while grasping her bump "I feel the embryonic kick of a feminist" 🤮💩 Maybe Tattlers can share buckets.?
She's an absolute bleeping idiot!
 
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I wasn't going to post this as I don't know if all Tattlers have sick-buckets at the ready... but in a really cloying and smarmy article the other day, Minge was reported to have said to the interviewer, while grasping her bump "I feel the embryonic kick of a feminist" 🤮💩 Maybe Tattlers can share buckets.?
FFS........ it's not a bucket we need...... it's a bleeping skip.
 
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