Meghan Markle isn’t taking any chances after that paparazzi car chase, we guess.
17.05.2023 - 20:25 / nypost.com
Women of Vision Awards and headed to a private residence on the Upper East Side. “Last night, the Duke and Duchess of Sussex and Ms.
Ragland were involved in a near catastrophic car chase at the hands of a ring of highly aggressive paparazzi,” a spokesperson for the couple claimed. “This relentless pursuit, lasting over two hours, resulted in multiple near collisions involving other drivers on the road, pedestrians and two NYPD officers,” they added, However, the car chase claims raised eyebrows with some Sussex critics, including Morgan, who bluntly tweeted: “There was no 2-hour chase, their story is unraveling by the minute.”Kelly, meanwhile, also expressed doubts that it would take 120 minutes for the Sussexes to travel from Midtown to the neighboring Upper East Side.
“I lived in Manhattan for 17 yrs & it is not possible to have a 2hr ‘car chase’ there,'” she wrote. “Too many street lights/stop signs, too much foot/car traffic & hundreds of places you could safely pull over to protect yourself.”Jenner, who is no stranger to being chased by paparazzi, also tweeted: “I have been party to paps following me in NY (definitely not 2 hrs and plenty of evidence – kind of the point since they have cameras), LA (even in a city with lots of driving and long distances between destinations, not 2 hours, and AGAIN LOTS OF EVIDENCE) it comes with the territory.
Whine whine whine is all these 2 seem to do.”Yes she looks terrified at the near fatal experience…. No seatbelts, grinning away….
Meghan Markle isn’t taking any chances after that paparazzi car chase, we guess.
embellishing their recent car “chase” caper — but Prince Harry and Meghan Markle may soon be putting their imaginations to use for a new project with Netflix. The Mirror reports that the royal couple — who signed a multimillion-dollar deal with the streaming service back in 2020 — could be developing a feature-length film inspired by their time living in the UK.
car chase claims, according to a new report.“They insist their account of the car chase was absolutely not exaggerated, and for people to say otherwise is so hurtful and out of line,” a source exclusively told Us Weekly.The Duke and Duchess of Sussex have received plenty of backlash in response to their car chase allegations, but they’re not letting that stop them from talking about it.“As far as staying out of sight and being scared to show their faces, that’s not going to happen,” the source told the outlet. “[This has] just strengthened their resolve to keep standing up for themselves and speaking out when they feel wronged.”The couple’s rep also shut down speculation that the crash was exaggerated for publicity.“Respectfully, considering the duke’s family history, one would have to think nothing of the couple or anybody associated with them to believe this was any sort of PR stunt,” publicist Ashley Hansen told Page Six, referencing Princess Diana’s fatal car crash while fleeing paparazzi in 1997.
reports Daily Express US, where the Duke and Duchess of Sussex said they were chased by paparazzi. Despite her absence, she was honoured alongside a raft of big Hollywood stars, including Amanda Seyfried, Christina Applegate, and Drew Barrymore. The event LA event recognises women's achievements in media and entertainment.
Piers Morgan said he was "very troubled" by Gayle King's comments on Prince Harry and Meghan Markle's car chase incident in an op-ed for the New York Post. In the Monday piece, headlined, "I’m very troubled by Gullible Gayle buying Harry and Meghan’s fables," Morgan noted a comment King made to "Page Six" about the Prince Harry and Meghan Markle's car incident. "I think it was a very unfortunate incident," King told Page Six on Saturday.
Her two cents. Gayle King chimed in on the debate surrounding Prince Harry and Meghan Markle‘s car chase in New York City.
CBS News' Gayle King said she finds it "troubling" that media figures and members of the public are "downplaying" the paparazzi car chase involving Prince Harry and Meghan Markle that occurred last week in New York City. "I think it was a very unfortunate incident," King told Page Six on Saturday.
Piers Morgan had a rather bizarre response to fans suggestion that he should replace Phillip Schofield on This Morning, following his departure from the show. As fans of the daytime TV show have been left wondering who will take over, some have suggested former Good Morning Britain presenter Piers Morgan, 58, who stepped down in 2021 after claiming he felt "censored" by ITV over comments on Meghan Markle.
As an attorney and retired NYPD Inspector, I’ve been told some stories in my day. This one lands someplace between "Beowulf"and Monty Python. So let us now uncover these mysteries, hidden deep in the tale. As we’ve all heard by now, the Duke and Duchess of Sussex (wasn’t he recently banished from the realm or something?) are claiming that on Tuesday night, after leaving an event in Manhattan’s midtown, they were pursued by paparazzi in a "near catastrophic" car chase that went on for two hours. A high-speed chase. In midtown Manhattan. For two hours. With an NYPD escort.
Experts say Prince Harry and Meghan Markle could have avoided security troubles and what they claim was a "near catastrophic car chase" by staying at a hotel in New York City Tuesday night. A spokesperson for the royal couple told Fox News Digital the Duke and Duchess of Sussex were involved in a chase "at the hands of a ring of highly aggressive paparazzi" that lasted over two hours. The NYPD told Fox News Digital the photographers "made their transport challenging" but they arrived at their destination safely.
“near-catastrophic” car chase on Tuesday night. The Sussex’s spokesperson released a statement saying the couple was hounded by “a ring of highly aggressive paparazzi” after they left the Women of Vision awards in Manhattan, resulting in a “relentless pursuit” with “multiple near collisions” that lasted more than 2 hours.
Prince Harry and Meghan Markle’s wedding anniversary "will not be ignored" by the Royal Family, King Charles’ former butler has claimed. Grant Harrold, who worked for the King for seven years, said that The Firm tends to acknowledge such occasions privately - unless it is a landmark number of years. Harry, 38, and Meghan, 41, were celebrating their fifth wedding anniversary on Friday, 19 May.The couple - who decided to step back from senior royal duties in 2020 - married in a lavish occasion at Windsor at Windsor on Saturday 19 May, 2018.
Prince Harry and Meghan Markle have reportedly failed in their attempt to get a photo agency to hand over images from Tuesday’s “near catastrophic” paparazzi incident.
Who could have predicted the events that have unfurled in the five years since the marriage of the Duke and Duchess of Sussex? On that sunny day in May 2018 the nation watched as Prince Harry and Meghan Markle tied the knot at St George’s Chapel, Windsor, following weeks of wedding drama surrounding the bride’s family. Since then we’ve seen the couple step back from their royal duties, move to California, take part in tell-all interviews, and make a number of deeply personal claims about members of his family. But as Harry and Meghan prepare to celebrate their wedding anniversary this week, royal expert Jennie Bond said it would be best for everyone if the coming months included some elements of forgiveness which would start to heal some of the deep divisions within the royal family.
Prince Harry and Meghan Markle are going after a photo agency that was involved in their paparazzi car chase!
“near-catastrophic” two-hour car chase in New York City on Tuesday night. The Duke and Duchess of Sussex released a statement on Wednesday morning saying that they were hounded by “a ring of highly aggressive paparazzi” after they left the Women of Vision awards in Manhattan, resulting in a “relentless pursuit” with “multiple near collisions.”Whoopi Goldberg hit out at the Sussex’s spokesperson during a segment on Thursday’s edition of “The View,” saying the word “chase” implied that the alleged caper took place at high-speed.
Well, this is kinda heartless, isn’t it?
The "near catastrophic car chase" involving paparazzi and the Duke and Duchess of Sussex in New York could have been "extremely dangerous", according to the city's mayor. Eric Adams spoke out on Wednesday to condemn the photographers involved in the pursuit on Tuesday, 16 May.
Prince Harry and Meghan Markle switching from a chauffeured, protected SUV to a New York City taxicab during an alleged chase involving paparazzi photographers Tuesday night makes "zero sense," a security expert told Fox News Digital Wednesday. It makes zero sense," AllSTAR Security President Mark Selden told Fox News Digital in a phone interview. "Completely zero sense.
U.K. Royals expert Neil Sean cast doubts on Prince Harry and Meghan Markle’s claim that they were involved in a "near catastrophic car chase" involving paparazzi in New York City, telling Fox News Wednesday that the couple has "proven to be liars." "The difficulty is with Harry and Meghan, they've proven to be liars previously.