Jams, cookbooks and cutlery are all part of the Duchess of Sussex's latest bid to rebrand following a string of disappointing ventures with Spotify and Netflix.
Amidst increasing scrutiny and rumours surrounding the whereabouts of the Princess of Wales and the disinformation tactics used by Kensington Palace with a manipulated image which has severely dented their reputation, comes more royal news.
Meghan, the Duchess of Sussex, has made her first social media post since 2020 by returning to Instagram to tease a new project, American Riviera Orchard. It appears to be a new lifestyle brand.
The former Suits actress left Instagram when she got engaged to Prince Harry, and as recently as last week, spoke about the dangers of social media during a panel at the South By Southwest Festival – in which Meghan said she experienced “bullying and abuse” online when pregnant with her two children.
However, a new account called American Riviera Orchard appeared on Instagram yesterday, saying it was created by Meghan.
The unverified account included photos of a logo and link to a website to join a waitlist to learn more details. The bio section of the Instagram account simply says "by Meghan, The Duchess of Sussex" and "Established 2024".
Few details about the new brand are available.
Here’s what we know:
This lifestyle brand is something of a return to form for Meghan, 42, who previously interviewed celebrity friends, shared recipes and blogged about travel and food on The Tig (2014 – 2017), a lifestyle website she shut down before marrying Harry. She described The Tig as “a hub for the discerning palate.”
American Riviera Orchard comes off the back of several enterprises for Meghan and Harry, who had a podcasting partnership with Spotify that ended last year due to disappointing audiences, and a multiyear deal with Netflix, which is due to expire at the end of 2025. A contract renewal seems unlikely.
Apparently, jams, cookbooks and tableware is the new bid to rebrand following these disappointing ventures.
Still, there does appear to be an eager audience for garlic-based spreads – 300,000 followers in the space of a few hours isn’t half bad. Let's just hope a Netflix series isn't in the works.
Source: EuroNews