
Some people buy the idea that a women receiving top medical help could not get assistance for depression during pregnancy. Good on you. For me, and maybe for anyone else who has actually received prenatal medical care, that weepy claim carries a big whiff of horseshit. |
Oh pardon me, I didn’t know you were part of the royal family. |
I guess it was hard for a young woman who's an actress and a graduate of Northwestern University to express her feelings and suicidal thoughts to her physician, pastor, or husband so that she could get help. Unbelievably, she did find the words when her communication skills were used to broadcast her thoughts on a variety of personal issues on worldwide television to millions of people. Perhaps $$$ was a motivator? |
Looks like you have her figured out. Let’s wrap it up folks! |
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Does anyone here think 100+ million? |
Considering they just roped in the PRIME. MINISTER. of the entire United Kingdom to give a statement on the trial they lost, I can't see how it could be anything else. |
Interesting. Three days after they just lost the most pivotal trial in the Daily Fail's existence...for the SECOND time...the CEO of the MailOnline has been fired. MailOnline is the publication that published Meghan's letter in the first place.
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Martin Clarke is also the one who would have had to inform Lord Rothermere just how many millions his newspaper now owed Meghan Markle after losing that trial. ![]() The head of the Daily Mail’s online offshoot is stepping down in the latest management upheaval at the publisher of Britain’s best-selling daily newspaper. Martin Clarke, who built MailOnline into one of the world’s most-read newspaper websites, is to leave at the end of February after 12 years at the helm. Insiders said they were surprised by the departure of Clarke, who had been widely seen internally as a beneficiary of recent senior personnel changes — notably the exit of the Daily Mail’s editor Geordie Greig. ![]() |
Hmm, 250 million users a month. Times 36 months since the 5 articles specifically including the letter were published. Not including the fact that each USER would have visited the site multiple times a day, a week, a month. This is going to be the biggest settlement in publication history. The site attracts 250m unique users a month, 90m of whom are in the US, according to the [Daily Mail] company. |
Isn’t it rather delusional and narcissistic to assume everyone who reads DM flocks to the site specifically for MM gossip? I skim DM daily, and I rarely click on articles about the royals. |
Not really. Rota has been whining non-stop that their golden goose has flown the coop since 2020. The publication follows wherever the money leads - there's a reason they were publishing 10-15 articles a day non-stop about Meghan Markle and Prince Harry while they were UK residents. There's a reason they also ADMITTED they knew they broke the law by publishing the article and did it anyway. $$$. |