Meghan Markle’s Curious Social Media Patterns: A Closer Look
Meghan Markle is at it again on social media. I know—I’ve opened a lot of recent videos this way, but she keeps giving us new material. This time might be the most revealing yet. Let’s walk through the latest post and all the odd details I spotted. Meghan can be… unusual online. That’s not new. But this one feels extra unusual.
First, we’ll watch the video. On the surface it’s pretty ordinary, but once I started scrubbing through, a bunch of strange little tells jumped out—call them “scammy vibes,” anomalies, abnormalities—pick your word. And no, I don’t mean the man she married; I’m talking about what’s happening on her social media.
These clips come from As Ever’s Instagram. Typically, the captions read “by Meghan,” followed by something like “I love you Meghan—here are flowers on my French toast.” She reposts those shout-outs as self-applause. Odd, right? I’ve shown before how many look like duplicates or come from inactive accounts that suddenly spring to life to post about Meghan Markle. I’m not buying it.
As you watch this one, keep an eye out for anyone using pink bakeware—pans, dishes, the works. Ready? Let’s roll.
Right away: pink dishes. Then the branded box on the left… and another on the right. Unboxing galore. A camera lens zoom effect pops up—yes, that old trend where the shot breathes in and out. It used to be popular, but you rarely see it now. Strangely, a lot of Meghan-adjacent reposts still use it. Could different creators be coincidentally using the same outdated trick? Maybe. More likely, someone on her team is pushing a template.
Next clip: someone making a “jam day” toast, sprinkles and all. Then a longer sequence: crepe batter, pans heating, and lots of delicious add-ons. Here’s the thing—the content looks great, but the recipes and plating belong to the creator’s cooking account, not Meghan’s As Ever products. The visuals sell Meghan’s box, while the tasty work is the creator’s own. And yes… more pink pans. More branded boxes. More wine glasses. Same visual language, repeated.
Let’s break it down.
I checked the first account. Not harassing anyone—please don’t do that. I’m only pointing out patterns. This user doesn’t even follow Meghan. That keeps happening: some profiles posting enthusiastic As Ever praise have no other Meghan content and don’t follow her. So why the sudden love?
Again, those are possibilities—not accusations.
Another example: @notskinnybutnotfat (Amanda Hirsch). She has a massive following—around the million mark. She received an As Ever box. You might remember a small dust-up where she made a light remark about Meghan, then reportedly got a handwritten note back. Suddenly, friendly vibes and cross-attention. Could be organic. Could also be mutually beneficial publicity. With a platform that big, it’s smart business for Meghan to nurture that relationship.
I did find one account that seems like a genuine Meghan fan—complete with the infamous flower sprinkles. Ironically, the most appetizing part wasn’t an As Ever item but a lemon dessert the creator made herself.
About those pink baking dishes: they pop up across different posts—even from separate dates. It’s not proof of coordination, but when combined with the same editing style, similar staging, and identical unboxing shots, the pattern is hard to ignore.
Side note: some early Tig loyalists (Meghan’s old blog) call themselves “Tiglets.” Make of that what you will.
When you line up the repeating props (pink pans, branded boxes), the same camera tricks, the sudden activity from older or unrelated accounts, and the promotional tone detached from the creators’ usual content, the whole thing reads less like organic fandom and more like a coordinated social media push around As Ever and Meghan Markle. That doesn’t make it illegal or even rare—it’s common in modern influencer marketing. But the pattern explains why so many viewers are getting… well, scammy vibes.
