Meghan Markle challenged over claim she was ‘silenced’ by Palace amid royal ‘swipe’

Meghan Markle has been the subject of criticism from royal family members for her long-held belief that she was “silenced” by the royal family. Robert Hardman criticized her for her numerous media and business ventures, which keep her in the spotlight.

Meghan in a podcast interview (Image: Emma Grede/Youtube)

A royal expert has hit back at Meghan Markle’s eyebrow-raising claims that she was ever ‘silenced’ by the Palace, claiming that we never stop hearing from her and her newest projects. Esteemed royal author Robert Hardman, who has a long history writing about the Royal Family, believes that the Duchess of Sussex was overplaying her belief that she was kept quiet during her time as a working royal, given her regular TV and social media presence.

Meghan first made the declaration that she was “silenced” by the Firm during her bombshell interview with Oprah in 2021, as she recounted her two years as a senior working royal between her 2018 wedding to Prince Harry, and stepping back from royal life in 2020.

Meghan Markle and Prince Harry
Meghan claimed that the royal family “sheltered” her during the explosive interview with Oprah in 2021.

Oprah questioned Meghan about whether she was “silent or silenced” during the enthralling interview, to which she responded that it was the latter. Given that she had been advocating for women for so long that they should use their voices, she was quick to point out how ironic it was.

Meghan also mentioned on the Emma Grede podcast last week that she would “ask people to tell the truth” if she could completely rewrite her public narrative. Meghan claimed in her 2021 Oprah interview that she could not possibly expect to remain silent if “the Firm” is “perpetuating falsehoods” about Harry and her.

However, royal author Robert Hardman claims that Meghan never was silenced despite her claims that the Firm had stifled her. Meghan is also a silent person in the Firm and the media.

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Speaking candidly on True Royalty TV’s The Royal Beat, Hardman shared that ever since Harry and Meghan quit their roles as working royals and relocated to California in 2020, the couple have hardly kept out of the spotlight.

He continued, citing the wide range of television and PR opportunities that they have offered since their departure from the company, even those that came at a difficult time for the royal family as a whole.

Meghan Markle
Robert Hardman believes “If Meghan wanted to say something, she could”(Image: Jack Plunkett/Invision/AP)

Hardman said: “The idea that [Meghan] has ever been silenced, I mean, I just sort of think back to, you know, the end of 2022, just after the death of the late Queen, and within weeks we had the first trailers for the six-part Harry and Meghan [ Netflix series], and then as it all came out… followed by Harry’s book and all the interviews and other stuff. I don’t really feel there’s been a time when we haven’t been hearing from Meghan.”

He added that “she could say anything if she wanted to,” and that she has not been forced to publicly criticize the royal family or promote her own businesses.

Meghan continues to speak her mind while also being open about her family, her family, and “telling the truth,” according to royal expert Katie Nicholl, who also spoke on the show. This was most recently demonstrated on the Emma Grede podcast.

Nicholl noted that Meghan has been adopting an edgier mindset and has perhaps accepted the fact that she will never win everyone over by accepting her nonchalant approach to popularity.

Meghan has been portraying that narrative as a victim for so long, according to Nicholl. And I was considering the direction she’s going in. Because of her toughness, she was privately known as Teflon, and I believe that’s what we’re seeing in her right now.

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She actually has reached the point where she doesn’t care, and I believe it almost feels like she’s just putting up a little shield. She is aware of her divisions and causes controversy. You might enjoy or detest her podcast. She is Marmite, and I believe that this new direction is because she is “just not cares.”

True Royalty TV has The Royal Beat available.

Jay Z makes awkward dig at Kanye West during shock appearance at Beyonce’s show in Paris

Jay Z took to the stage with fellow music star Kanye West for the first time in seven years and changed the lyrics to a well-known song.

Jay Z’s awkward rant against Kanye West during a shock performance at a Parisian Beyonce concert

Jay Z has dished out an awkward dig to fellow music star Kanye West during a surprise appearance at Beyoncé’s latest performance in Paris, which marks Beyoncé’s third Cowboy Carter Tour show in the city.

As Beyoncé performed one of her greatest hits, Crazy in Love, she stepped aside to welcome her husband, Jay Z, who sang his part of the song. The shock appearance marked the couple’s first time performing together in seven years and fans went wild.

Following Jay Z and Beyoncé’s original musical mash-up of 2013’s Drunk in Love, Partition and N***** in Paris, Jay Z and Kanye West performed a musical duo.

Jay Z has dished out an awkward dig to fellow music star Kanye West during a surprise appearance at Beyoncé’s latest performance
Jay Z has dished out an awkward dig to fellow music star Kanye West during a surprise appearance at Beyoncé’s latest performance (Image: PA)

Fans were quick to realize that Jay Z had changed the lyrics to “Ye” and used “Bey” instead of “Ye” in response to his wife’s vile public outbursts.

Jay Z rapped, “Gold bottles, scold models, Spillin’ Ace on my sick J’s,” while performing the song live. (Ball so hard) B***h, behave. Just might allow you to meet Bey.

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The change of name didn’t go unnoticed by fans who quickly shared their thoughts on X, formerly known as Twitter. One person wrote: “JAYZ changing the lyrics to “I just might let u meet bey””, while another added: “After the way Kanye talked about his kids .jay is done with ye for good’”.

As Beyoncé performed one of her greatest hits, Crazy in Love, she stepped aside to welcome her husband, Jay Z
As Beyoncé performed one of her greatest hits, Crazy in Love, she stepped aside to welcome her husband, Jay Z(Image: @iamcardib/Instagram)

Another fan pointed out: “You see he’s over Kanye & his mess he changed the lyrics”. It follows claims Beyoncé and Jay-Z were considering taking legal action against the rapper after he shared controversial tweets about Jay-Z and Beyoncé’s youngest children, Rumi and Sir.

Jay-Z and Beyoncé were discussing “how to handle the situation,” according to a source who claimed Jay-Z and Beyonce were discussing “how to handle the situation” because Jay-Z won’t stand up for the comments.

A source told Page Six: “[They are] discussing how they want to handle this situation, whether that be privately and/or in a legal matter.” They stressed that Jay-Z ‘will absolutely not stand for’ how Kane ‘has spoken about their children’, and that the couple found the comments ‘vulgar and offensive’

Beyoncé and Jay Z performed a musical mash-up of 2013's Drunk in Love, Partition and N***** in Paris
Beyoncé and Jay Z performed a musical mash-up of 2013’s Drunk in Love, Partition and N***** in Paris(Image: Variety via Getty Images)
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Following the news that Blue Ivy wants to follow her superstar mother’s lead and start releasing her own music, Cowboy Carter will play her final concert in Paris.

An insider told the Daily Mail that the teenager ‘is considering starting her own career in music’ and that some of ‘Beyoncé’s favourite writers’ are already working on some demos for her.

David Beckham’s heartbreaking Brooklyn fear left him losing sleep and ‘paranoid’

David Beckham once claimed that his estranged son Brooklyn’s fears were so great that he became completely “paranoid” and unable to sleep as their feud progressed.

David called himself “paranoid” because of his worries about his eldest son.

The ongoing feud between David and Victoria Beckham and their eldest son Brooklyn shows no sign of slowing down anytime soon.

Brooklyn, 26, and wife Nicola Peltz, 30, were no-shows at David’s lavish and star-studded 50th birthday party a few weeks ago, and the couple have remained silent since the news that the former England player has finally been awarded his long-sought-after knighthood.

Friends of the actress reacted to the “one-sided and false claims” made by insiders close to the Beckham camp over the weekend by criticizing Nicola as the daughter of billionaire Nelson Peltz as “spoiled”.

Speaking exclusively to the Mirror, pals said, “Nicola doesn’t deny she’s had a fortunate life, and she’s grateful for it. But she’s also been working for over 20 years, and now writes, directs, and produces her own projects. Her parents are proud to support their children, and the idea that this reflects poorly on them simply doesn’t hold up.

David Beckham, in a black suit, Victoria Beckham, in a white suit, and Brooklyn Beckham, in a black suit, at an event in 2019.
Brooklyn and his wife Nicola are said to be in a bitter feud with David and Victoria (Image: Dave Benett/Getty Images for Hugo Boss)

“Calling her spoiled is false. For her wedding, she requested donations to support Ukraine instead of gifts, and she runs Yogi’s House, a rescue that saves dogs from euthanasia in shelters. These one-sided and false attacks have gotten out of hand.”

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Conflicting reports exist as to where the conflict started, with some reporting claiming that the conflict first started when Nicola and Brooklyn’s wedding in 2022 occurred.

According to sources, Brooklyn and Nicola recently made a “dagger in the heart” of Victoria and David when they purchased a new home in Los Angeles.

Nicola and Brooklyn
The accusations that Nicola is “spoiled” were denounced by her friends.

However, in the 2023 Netflix documentary – Beckham – the former footballer made a heartbreaking admission about his eldest son long before the space between them widened, and it showed just how deep his love for Brooklyn runs.

When Brooklyn was born in 1999, David was discussing a significant turning point in his professional life. People blamed David for the team’s defeat in a high-stakes match at the World Cup in 1998 when England was playing Argentina and he famously received a red card for kickoff.

He admitted that the incident, which actually happened right after Victoria revealed to him that she was expecting their first child, left him “clinically depressed.”

Victoria and Brooklyn
David was struggling when Victoria gave birth to Brooklyn(Image: Getty Images)

Some months after the birth of Brooklyn, David was still struggling and worried about the negative reaction the public had toward his newborn son and that something would happen to Brooklyn.

What I experienced was so extreme. I was hated by the entire nation. I was afraid. My life was completely altered by it. I felt very alone and vulnerable. Every day, wherever I went, I was subjected to abuse,” David explained.

People spit at you, abuse you, come up to you, and say some of what they said. That was challenging.

Because he was so worried that someone would harm the baby in retribution against him, he couldn’t sleep or even be close to his wife and the newborn the night of his birth.

Brooklyn and Victoria slept next to each other, and Victoria said, “No, absolutely not,” and Victoria said, “come and squeeze on the bed with me.”

Continue reading the article.

Because I was afraid someone would steal him, I’m sleeping with my head against the door. I was concerned because it was supposed to be a happy moment, which it was, of course. I didn’t want him to enter this life while I was experiencing what I was going through.

The Welsh Way – Inside the ‘Harvard of coaching’

FAW
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Listen to Steve Crossman’s BBC Sounds-on-demand podcast The Welsh Way: Inside “Harvard for football coaches.”

Gael Clichy puts on his virtual reality headset, gets up and walks around the room, the former Arsenal and Manchester City defender careful not to bump into two-time World Cup winner Brandi Chastain, who is wearing the same gear and trying to figure out how best to counter Brighton’s press.

On the other side of the room, where Stoke’s sporting director Jonathan Walters is contemplating his next move, former France and Newcastle midfielder Yohan Cabaye is looking for a solution.

Welcome to the Celtic Manor hotel near Newport, where the Football Association of Wales is holding some of its final sessions for the sport’s highest coaching qualification, the Uefa Pro Licence.

This is the job description of a top-level manager, and graduates like Thierry Henry, Yaya Toure, Roberto Martinez, and Mikel Arteta are a few of the biggest names in the game, as evidenced by a list of graduates.

The current crop are as diverse as they are recognisable, from former Borussia Dortmund and Liverpool midfielder Nuri Sahin to Wales manager Rhian Wilkinson, and from Caernarfon Town boss Richard Davies to his new friend, Nice captain and Brazil international Dante.

This group, which was thrown together two years ago, now “feels like a family,” Dante claims.

Having completed their B and A Licences, the class of 2025 are entering the closing stages of their Pro Licence and ready to take the next step on their burgeoning coaching journeys.

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From All Blacks rugby to training with the army

Former Turkish international Sahin feels at home in prestigious football surroundings after managing and playing for Real Madrid and Dortmund.

He also has experience of world-leading educational institutions, having studied sports management at Harvard Business School.

Therefore, Sahin uses a place of authority to evaluate the FAW Pro Licence course.

“I’ve learned so much”, he says. This will help me get ready for both my coaching career and the rest of my life.

” I had this when I was in Harvard, and this is like Harvard for coaching.

Jonathan Walters (left), Brandi Chastain (second left), Gael Clichy (second right) and Andy King sit wearing virtual reality headsets in front of a large screen. BBC Sport

Candidates must work long hours, both at home (which could be anywhere in the world) and during their time of contact with the FAW, to pass this rigorous course.

During this extended weekend in May, they are required to do practical tests and training sessions on the pitch at Dragon Park in Newport, while work at the nearby Celtic Manor includes the aforementioned virtual reality seminars, tactical theory tasks and individual presentations.

Sahin claims, “I wrote about the All Blacks in my special report.” “For me it was important to study a team not in football, about the culture and living the culture. I have no idea about rugby, but they are the best illustration of this.

” What I learned is the culture and protecting the country, the jersey, the values, being good people. I want to compete against goodwill.

While the football knowledge required is extensive – and the technical detail granular – candidates are often taken out of their comfort zone on this course.

Clichy, a member of Arsenal’s Invincibles of 2004, says, “We went on a trip to work with the army for three days where they deprived us of sleep and we had to do missions because we were so exhausted.”

” The food we had was in very small portions and you realise that you’re affected by this, how you make a decision related to football.

Gael Clichy takes a coaching session during the FAW Pro Licence courseFAW

forming unlikely friendships and sharing heartache

Tasks such as working with the army are levellers for this group.

There is a striking sense of equality here, whether you have managed semi-professional teams or played at the highest level.

“People like to hear stories about Pep]Guardiola] and Arsene Wenger but I’m aiming to be a top coach”, says Clichy.

“I am aware that I have a good chance of starting somewhere else.” And these guys, who started in amateur football and been in a job for the last 20 years, have got a lot to offer me because what I know, my career, is probably three or 5% of what football is.

Playing for clubs like Arsenal and City for more than 20 years is not real football, they say. It’s rare, and you have to understand it. If I’m lucky to start there one day, that would be fantastic as a coach. But I know I’ll have to start at the bottom and these guys can tell me how it is. “

There are countless valuable lessons that these people can learn from one another in terms of football.

On a more human level, the experience has been profound.

Your four Hs are your history, your heartache, your heroes, and your hopes, according to Adie Harvey, who coaches Wales Under-16 boys, “around the first couple of days, last March or April when we started the course.”

” Everyone had to deliver that to the group, which was quite daunting really, with the level of expertise of people in the group. But it also completely unbalanced any group hierarchy or ego, and it made us feel whole.

Dante (centre) points to a whiteboard as Richard Davies (right) and former Wales and Leicester midfielder Andy King (left) sit at a table watching BBC Sport

The result is that these are more than just working relationships, but real friendships.

As a semi-professional team in Wales’ top flight, Caernarfon, says Davies, “It feels like a family so we’ll definitely keep in touch.”

“We are like a family”, Dante agrees. We practice together, and we pursue joint endeavors.

” Richard is passionate. Every coach needs this emotion inside, in my opinion, and I was surprised by the emotion he expressed.

Stood next to the towering former Bayern Munich defender, Davies adds:” For me, it’s the knowledge Dante has. He is still playing at his best level, and the results he’s seen in the game are astounding.

“To be able to have these conversations and tap into his mindset, how he sees the game, is so valuable for me. We’re talking about a manager of the Welsh Prem who has experience managing the Champions League and World Cup. Without this course, I’d never come across people like Dante”.

Changing the game, from Chastain to Wilkinson

Rhian Wilkinson takes a coaching session during the FAW's Pro Licence courseFAW

Some of the people here are already full-fledged managers, while the majority are just beginning their coaching careers.

One of those, Wales women’s boss Rhian Wilkinson, is juggling her studies with preparations for this summer’s Euros.

“It’s a lot, but I’ll never miss these,” he said. Firstly, catching up with people but, equally, that excitement around learning. You can never stop learning, says Wilkinson.

“Someone will say ‘ Well, Pep used to do this ‘ or ‘ Jurgen Klopp would do this ‘ and then you’ve got Brandi Chastain here as well. We’re moving things with the FAW toward this point.

” This is an environment where top men in the game want to come and learn but equally this has to be something that we start looking more seriously at with the women. This is a fantastic development for women’s soccer.

“We can’t lie. This career and sport are dominated by men. It is what it is. It’s my responsibility to ensure that I continue to try to forge a path or provide examples of women who can succeed in the game. And I can only do that because of women like Brandi Chastain, who did it before me”.

Chastain’s presence is a true par-pass. With two World Cups and two Olympic gold medals to her name, the 192-cap former United States international is one of the most recognisable faces in the women’s game.

Chastain participates in the Pro Licence sessions along with those on the course in addition to giving a speech at the FAW National Coaching Conference.

“I’ve been in football for 50 years and I know the lessons and the learnings that go out to young girls and women”, she says.

Young girls can find their voice, strength, and potential thanks to sport, and we are aware that young girls who play become women who lead.

” The statistics say that they go on to be executives and they become decision-makers and that’s truly impactful for the world.

Brandi Chastain (second left) shares a joke during the FAW's Pro Licence courseFAW

Craig Bellamy, the head coach of Wales’ men’s soccer team, and Russell Martin, the new manager of the Rangers, give their footballing philosophies to a crowded hall of 100s at the Celtic Manor.

“This is my life”, says Bellamy. “I’m always open to views from everyone, and this game connects you with so many people.” I look at everything like a puzzle and I try to steal ideas from other people to fit into a puzzle.

Can you speak passionately? I was lucky I had a manager like Sir Bobby Robson who gave me that. You would follow him regardless of whether he was correct or incorrect, and you would play with that enthusiasm.

The old school and the new Welsh Way

Bellamy and Martin represent the progressive trends of modern football in their own unique ways: possession-based play and back-building strategies.

Most young coaches want to follow that path, as you can see when watching this year’s crop of FAW Pro Licence candidates working on and off the field.

On this course, the old-fashioned spirit still exists.

On the final day, former Stoke manager Tony Pulis is invited to host a masterclass on set-pieces. Tuesday is wet and windy. This is meant to be.

He presents his career to the Pro Licence group before his practical session on the pitch in a rain-lashed Dragon Park, which is pure gold.

Pulis is in his element as he reels off stories about his humble beginnings as a player and coach, before getting on to his various managerial tenures, complementing each piece of advice with at least a couple of entertaining anecdotes that could earn him a second career on the after dinner speaking circuit.

As he tries to understand Pulis’ broad Newport accent and industrial language, the 67-year-old Welshman frequently requests a little translation assistance from those next to him. The room is howling with laughter.

Among the jokes are a number of useful lessons, as Pulis answers questions on various topics, from the help he got from his peers (Sir Alex Ferguson and Carlo Ancelotti get a mention) to balancing family life with the exhaustive travelling that comes with management.

Then he ventures onto the field to participate in the practical session while a group of young players are soaked in the rain as Pulis orders them to prepare for a Rory Delap long-throw.

“It’s always nice to come back to Wales and Newport. This is my town, Pulis says, and it’s special.

“I loved playing football for my local club, or just on the streets. It’s always nice to come and play football, helping newcomers in their careers.

” Set-plays have always been an important part of football and I think they’ve been undervalued. It has been revived by Mikel [Arteta] doing it with Arsenal, a sizable club both domestically and internationally.

“I’ve had such a tremendous career and the world’s changed, the game’s changed. We had to take the goals off the main pitch for our first training session at Gillingham, travel there with people and their dogs, and practice there while they were passing. Then you look at this and the facilities we’ve got today… it’s the greatest sport in the world and it’s our sport”.

At the back of the room is Dave Adams, the instructor who oversees the course, with whom you can listen as intently as the young coaches and laugh just as hard at the jokes.

As the FAW’s chief football officer, Adams is responsible for the men’s and women’s game at all levels in Wales.

He served as the head coach of the senior national team last year, and he also serves as the head coach of the Pro Licence program.

“I’m standing on the work of other people in some respects. According to Adams, the former FAW technical director, Olympia Roberts did a fantastic job of developing a top-notch program.

“What I tried to do with it when I started in 2019 was to go into the market and speak to head coaches because, fundamentally, you want a course that reflects the needs of head coaches, which are really complex and multi-faceted. It is primarily based on actual experience learning. We don’t want things to be abstract because coaching is a vocational skill.

Every two years, we receive about 400 applications for [Pro Licence] positions. It’s highly competitive. We must support Welsh coaches like Chris Gunter and those who work for our national association. But equally, we recognise that by having people like Nuri Sahin and Mikel Arteta, Chris Wilder, Roberto Martinez, Steve Cooper before that – the names are extensive – they bring a different lens and, as much as we help them, they actually help us as well.

They have engaged in the best training and experience. There’s a recognition on our side that when we bring people like that, it’s also about taking from them, and that helps us grows an association. We gain new knowledge that we can use to improve our programs or our national teams, and that also aids in our development.

At the heart of the FAW’s work is the concept of the Welsh Way, an ethos underpinning everything from the elite level to grassroots – a vision for football in Wales, how to develop the game and foster its sense of national pride.

Together Stronger is our company motto. In any department, being small, being agile, being dynamic and everyone feeling a part of something is really important”, Adams adds.

That sense of togetherness is “really important” in any high-performance coaching environment. Whether you’re the head coach or the masseur or the chef, you’ve all got a vital part to play and got to buy into the vision of the head coach.

Related topics

  • Welsh Football
  • European Football
  • Women’s Football Team from Wales
  • Wales Men’s Football Team
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Colombia’s army says 57 soldiers kidnapped in restive southwest

The Colombian army says more than 50 soldiers have been seized by civilians in a southwest mountainous area.

A platoon of soldiers was the first to be seized on Saturday during an operation in El Tambo, a municipality that is part of an area known as the Micay Canyon, a key zone for cocaine production and one of the most tense in the country’s ongoing security crisis.

On Sunday, another group of soldiers was surrounded by at least 200 residents as they headed towards the town of El Plateado, in the same region.

“As a result of both events]both kidnappings], a total of four noncommissioned officers and 53 professional soldiers remain deprived of their liberty”, the army said on Sunday.

General Federico Alberto Mejia, who leads military operations in the southwest, added in a video that it was a “kidnapping” by rebels who had “infiltrated” the community.

The Colombian army has maintained that the civilians in the region receive orders from the Central General Staff (EMC), the main dissident group of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) that refused to be part of a peace deal with the government in 2016.

President Gustavo Petro, who has pledged to bring peace to the country, said on social media that freeing the soldiers “is imperative”.

The left-wing leader has been trying for months to ensure that the country’s armed forces gain access to Micay Canyon.

But his government has struggled to contain violence in urban and rural areas as several rebel groups try to take over territory abandoned by the FARC after the peace deal.

This has made many Colombians fearful of a return to the bloody violence of the 1980s and 90s, when cartel attacks and political assassinations were frequent.