The celebrity blogger straight-up questioned why Meghan, who sees herself as a brave champion for women and the downtrodden, spent an entire podcast season exclusively platforming her uber-rich and famous friends. Ouch. You know it's bad when even professional tabloid pandering pundits like Perez are calling out the former D-lister's lack of self-awareness.
I guess even some of the most shameless royal psycho-F's are getting fed up with Meghan's perpetual posturing and victimhood signaling, all in the relentless pursuit of promoting Brand Meghan. At the end of the day, Archetypes was little more than a vanity project, allowing the worn-out former actress to repeatedly cry racism and misogyny from her Montecito mansion, all while being showered in praise by her celebrity besties.
From Mariah Carey to Serena Williams, not a single guest on Meghan's vanity project represented any kind of true diversity of perspective, background, or life experience. Nope, they were all just a rotating cast of fellow rich and famous personas, eagerly lapping up the duchess's deluge of rank hypocrisy and playing into her toxic brand of weaponized identitarianism.
Time and time again, Meghan would dramatically sermonize about patriarchy and racism holding back young women of color seeking their wildest dreams, only to then pivot to swooning over her bajillionaire pop star buddy Mariah K's struggles of also being biracial and relentlessly ambitious. Talk about a galaxy-brain level of delusion and elitism.
If Meghan truly wanted to highlight women overcoming real socioeconomic adversity to accomplish their goals, why not interview someone like, I don't know, maybe single mothers working grueling hours in American factories, restaurants, or farm fields? Oh, because that wouldn't indulge Meghan's precious Hollywood fantasies or feed her perpetual image rehab machine, of course.
Instead, we got Paris Hilton prattling on about being a trailblazer for pioneering getting famous for being already rich and famous, as if being born into borderline nobility and old money is some sort of hard-knock underdog story worth celebrating on a podcast ostensibly about shattering gender and racial barriers.