Royal regrets, they will have several.
Prince Harry and Meghan Markle ‘will wish they’d relatives for his or her children, Archie and Lilibet, former editor of Vanity Fair Graydon Carter told The Telegraph on Friday.
“It should come back to haunt them sooner or later,” he said. “They haven’t any cousins, uncles or aunts, and so they don’t see their grandparents apart from one.”
Carter, 73, also criticized Montecito, California, where the exiled royal family selected to lift their children in a stately $14.6 million estate, saying there was “nothing, nothing, nothing to do” in what he called “God’s waiting room”.
“It is a 40 minute drive from LA. There cannot be many children there, because young families cannot afford it,” he explained.
The Canadian journalist and longtime Latest Yorker also referred to the couple’s infamous “automobile chase” through Manhattan last month.
The couple and their representatives described the May 16 ordeal as an “almost catastrophic” and “relentless” two-hour paparazzi chase. returned to a friend’s apartment after the Women of Vision Awards at the Ziegfeld Ballroom where Markle was honored by Gloria Steinem for her advocacy.
Carter said the high-profile couple’s allegations about the pursuit sounded superficial.
“I’ve lived in Latest York for 50 years and you’ll be able to’t go faster than 3 mph,” he said. “Once I first examine it, I believed, ‘This does not look good.’
Police sources confirmed after the incident that “there was no high-speed chase at any point”, nevertheless, two wheels of the vehicle went over the curb and two uniformed cops reported that they “almost missed them” as the paparazzi took off.
Carter, who has said he has “no interest” in the British monarchy, told the Telegraph that he enjoys watching royal family drama.
“I like it when things go fallacious. When things are going well, it’s boring.”
But he did offer some words of wisdom for the notoriously dramatic Prince Harry and Markle – stay out of the public glare.
“They’ve an excessive amount of attention,” he said. “For such people, inaccessibility is their best asset. In case you’re there too often, the public may get fed up with you.
“I feel they made every fallacious move you’ll be able to make.”