Celebrity lifestyle brands face significant challenges when attempting to transform personal identity into commercial ventures, as the gap between curated public image and actual business reality can lead to public skepticism and financial strain, particularly when the brand's narrative of success becomes disconnected from actual sales performance.
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“She’s Gross!” Meghan Markle’s Bizarre Attempts to Transform 'As Ever’ into a luxury lifestyle!Added:
Meghan's out here trying to, um, promote herself through as ever as the most elegant, refined, etiquette, and hostess expert going.
Meghan Markle, she posted this very weird, sultry video. She's been posting all these videos where she's like rubbing her chest, and she's looking real dramatic. And whenever you look at these clips, you can see why Meghan Markle never made it in Hollywood. Like, [laughter] you know what I'm saying? You never made it in Hollywood. Meghan Markle's increasingly bizarre attempts to transform as ever into a luxury lifestyle empire are now raising deeper questions about money, relevance, and whether the Sussex brand is quietly entering another unstable phase behind the scenes. As criticism surrounding Meghan Markle's public image continues building, The News' Maureen Callahan joins Kinsey Schofield to question how the growing perception that Meghan's lifestyle branding feels increasingly manufactured behind the scenes. She's rolling around that Montecito mansion that they are going to be in arrears for. Okay, she'll make Dorit Kemsley of The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills look like a a financial genius. She's she's rattling around there with a videographer going, "Let's catch me Let's catch an a surprise moment. It's totally organic and unscripted of me fully made up uh reclining on a lounge chair, a chaise lounge, or whatever. And you're just going to catch me, you know, with my hands to my the nape of my neck, and I'm looking I'm looking over at you, and I'm in repose, and I don't under I don't understand the point of any of it." I mean, this is really what this is is a frustrated >> According to Page Six sources, Meghan has effectively become the breadwinner inside the Sussex household, while Harry's philanthropic projects reportedly bring in very little income despite remaining central to his public identity. The journalist Tom Sykes joins Dan Wootton to address the mounting questions surrounding Harry and Meghan's finances. I mean, they are so broke. I mean, maybe they can eke out 5 years in in California. I mean, I I think that's being generous and being friendly. And the problem is is that if they're spending the capital, as anybody knows, the last thing you can do is you can spend your capital. All that capital needs to be invested generating a little bit of income. But, you know, the reality is yeah, they they financially they're they're a joke out there. That detail changes the entire picture surrounding as ever because this is no longer being presented as a simple passion project or celebrity hobby. It is increasingly being described as something the couple may genuinely need to work financially. And yet, at the exact same time reports of tight money emerged. Meghan released another carefully curated promotional video featuring herself softly eating strawberries beside a window while wearing a reported $63,000 diamond necklace. Meanwhile, Meghan has expanded into new commercial ventures including the AI-powered shopping platform 1 Off, where followers can now browse and purchase outfits connected to her public appearances and Australian tour wardrobe. Her Best Life Retreat in Sydney quickly became controversial after reports claimed guests paid up to $3,199 despite Meghan only appearing for roughly 2 hours during the event. And then came another major development.
Netflix reportedly severed its as ever partnership after With Love, Meghan failed to move forward for a third season with insiders claiming Meghan had been left to carry the whole thing by herself. Now, the narrative surrounding the Duchess appears to be shifting again. Not toward royal tensions this time, but toward a growing perception that nearly every reinvention eventually returns to the same problem: enormous visibility and heavy branding. Those concerns became even sharper after fresh claims emerged suggesting that everything sold-out narrative surrounding as ever may no longer fully reflect reality. One source speaking to the Mail went even further, reportedly claiming Meghan was spiraling badly because she knows nothing is working.
While another suggested both she and Harry had truly lost the plot. And what makes these comments more significant is not simply the criticism itself. It is the pattern beginning to form around them. To understand why Meghan Markle's attempts to transform as ever into a luxury lifestyle empire are now facing such intense scrutiny, it is important to go back to the beginning of the Sussex's post-royal strategy. Because the current criticism did not appear overnight. It developed gradually through years of branding, public conflict, commercial deals, and constant reinvention attempts that increasingly started looking disconnected from reality. The first major turning point came in January 2020 when Prince Harry and Meghan announced they were stepping back as senior working royals. At the time, the decision was framed as a search for privacy, independence, and freedom from institutional pressure inside the monarchy. But almost immediately, the couple began building a business model that depended heavily on publicity, media attention, and commercial storytelling. That contradiction followed them from the very beginning. They claimed to want distance from royal life while simultaneously monetizing nearly every aspect of their royal experience. By late 2020, Netflix signed a massive deal with the Sussexes, followed by Spotify soon after. The couple positioned themselves as global media figures capable of producing documentaries, podcasts, and socially conscious entertainment outside palace control.
For a while, the strategy worked. The Oprah interview in March 2021 generated worldwide headlines after Harry and Meghan publicly accused the royal family of failing to protect them emotionally and institutionally. Harry also revealed during that interview that he had been financially cut off after leaving royal life and relied on money inherited from Princess Diana to secure his family's future. And he says that the inheritance money from Princess Diana has pretty much run out. Now, of course, there was a further inheritance from uh the Queen Mother, which Harry received when he was 40.
But, given their outgoings, even that isn't really going to touch the sides for all that long.
>> But over time, the sympathy phase slowly began changing into fatigue. And much of that shift came from repetition. In December 2022, Netflix released Harry and Meghan, a documentary series centered almost entirely around royal tensions, media battles, and the couple's treatment by the institution.
Then came Spare in January 2023, where Harry publicly detailed private family arguments, resentment toward Prince William, frustrations with King Charles, and deeply personal memories from royal life. Initially, those projects generated enormous commercial attention, but they also created a growing perception that Harry and Meghan no longer had a public identity separate from royal conflict itself. That perception became increasingly damaging once Hollywood enthusiasm started cooling. Spotify ended its partnership with the Sussexes after producing limited content. At the same time, Meghan's personal branding became noticeably more aggressive. Instead of stepping away from celebrity culture, she appeared to move deeper into curated image management, luxury aesthetics, and carefully staged social media visibility. This is where As Ever entered the picture. The lifestyle brand was pre- sented as elegant, calming, aspirational, and deeply personal to Meghan's identity. But critics quickly noticed how heavily manufactured the entire image felt. Supporters described the move as modern influencer marketing.
Critics viewed it very differently, especially because the Sussexes originally built much of their public identity around compassion and distancing themselves from the celebrity show-offs. That is where the criticism surrounding her PR tactics has become particularly harsh. Meanwhile, Harry appeared to be chasing relevance through a completely different route. While Meghan focused on branding, fashion partnerships, and celebrity networking, Harry continued leaning heavily into public activism, emotional speeches, and international appearances. One recent example involved his heavily publicized Ukraine-related visit and broader European security discussions surrounding Invictus. And financially, those appearances do not appear to solve the deeper problem. According to Page Six sources, Harry was reportedly unpaid for a speaking engagement during the Australia trip connected to the Inter Age Summit. That backdrop matters because it reinforces the growing perception that much of Harry's post-royal career remains symbolic rather than commercially stable. And that becomes dangerous when paired with the enormous costs attached to their California lifestyle. According to insiders, the Sussex household reportedly requires at least $6 million annually simply to maintain operating expenses in Montecito. That figure reportedly includes staffing, security, travel, property costs, and the overall infrastructure attached to maintaining elite celebrity status. Suddenly, many of Meghan's business decisions begin looking less like empowerment projects and more like survival strategies. The constant launches, the curated Instagram videos, the affiliate shopping platforms, the celebrity networking, the commercial reinventions, all of it starts looking increasingly tied to financial pressure. And now, as ever appears to be entering that same cycle, because even the claims surrounding products selling out are reportedly facing skepticism. One insider bluntly claimed that the whole thing about her stuff selling out isn't true anymore.
That statement directly challenges one of the core narratives Meghan's team has consistently pushed around the brand success and demand. If true, it creates a much larger problem than disappointing sales numbers. It suggests the image surrounding as ever may be stronger than the actual business reality behind it.
And perhaps that is the deeper issue now surrounding Harry and Meghan altogether.
For years, they carefully constructed an image of independence, influence, compassion, success, and freedom outside the monarchy. The irony is difficult to ignore. The couple left the monarchy seeking freedom from institutional control, yet now appear trapped inside an endless cycle of publicity management simply to maintain the lifestyle and relevance they built afterward. And the more aggressively they chase visibility, the more the public seems to question the authenticity behind it. Because eventually, carefully staged strawberries, luxury branding, and strategic family imagery stop looking aspirational and start looking performative. Hit like, comment, and share this video if you found this breakdown interesting. Do you think Meghan Markle's as ever empire is genuinely struggling behind the scenes or are critics exaggerating the pressure surrounding Harry and Meghan's finances and public image? And after years of interviews, documentaries, and publicity campaigns, do the Sussexes still have a clear long-term strategy left at all?
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