Buckingham Palace released the latest portrait of Charles III and emphasized the royal family's "core four" ( Charles , Camilla, William and Kate ), Prince Harry and Meghan Markle , who are far away in the United States, also responded quickly. They used the social media account of Misan Harriman, a photographer of Nigerian , to show their portraits.
According to " Daily Mail ", the Megan in the photo looks full of "resistance", and she is also very similar to Mrs. Simpson who "killed" Edward VIII back then.
British media and netizens also made various speculations about the time when Meghan posted the photo. Some people think she was "striking back", while others think she was stealing the limelight, because Charles III and Queen Camilla made their first official visit after assuming the throne on the day the photo was released.
Judging from the fact that Meghan restarted her podcast program on October 4th local time, posting photos is likely to create momentum for the program. After all, no matter how much you fight with the royal family, it is not as important as economic interests.
Because Queen Elizabeth II passed away, Meghan's podcast program "Archetypes" on "Sound Field" was suspended. With the end of the "mourning period", she can start "opening business" again. This time she focused on matters related to Asian women, focusing on the theme of " Hollywood 's stereotype of Asian women".
Meghan, 41, first made a monologue, and she told the audience that " is bound by any social framework or the loud voice from a small place tells you what you should do, be yourself." Her words were suspected to be secretly criticizing the royal family . Given that she had talked about the bad things of the royal family again and again before and suggested that she could not work and live with other royal members, this may have a different meaning.
After the official opening, Meghan first talked about his relationship with Asian culture .
Megan recalls his first trip to a Korean spa in Los Angeles. In her teens, she traveled with her mother, Doria Lagran, “It was a very shy experience for a girl who was puberty because you walked into a room with women aged 9 to 90, all of whom were walking around naked, sitting on rows of tables wiping their bodies”, “I wanted just a swimsuit, but it wasn’t allowed here.”
"Once I overcome the embarrassment of adolescence, my mom and I will go upstairs, we will sit in the same room, we will have a bowl of steaming hot and delicious noodles," said Megan, as the host.
Megan said that this is what she knows about Asian culture, "no common stereotypes."
Then Megan talked with two Asian women, reporter Lisa Ling (Lisa Ling) and comedian Margaret Cho about Hollywood's stereotype of Asian women (Dragon Lady) (Dragon Lady) .
They criticized two movies together, "The Ace Spy" starring Mike Meiers and Quentin Tarantino 's classic " Kill Bill ". Meghan then connected with Nancy Wang Yuen, who, in the view of the American sociologist, "(in Hollywood) Asian women are either lotus or femme fatales. They are not the protagonists in the movie and are easily trapped in these stereotypes."
After criticizing Hollywood movies, Lisa Lin and Margaret Zhao, who are guests, also talk about their own feelings of being "ignored" or on the "fringement of society" as Asians.
Meghan's response to this was that it was an "elimination" of culture and said that "this happens to Asian American women often."