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Meghan Markle should be celebrating a huge milestone - instead Hollywood's humiliated her
Reach Daily Express | March 4, 2026 6:40 PM CST

Meghan Markle should be celebrating a major career milestone - it's been one year since With Love, Meghan launched on Netflix and marked her high-profile pivot into reality television. Instead, there's no renewal announcement, no confirmed third season and a noticeable silence surrounding the series, which has gone cold.

What should have been a victory lap now reads more like a footnote. While the Duchess of Sussex secured two seasons and a holiday special with one of the world's biggest streaming giants, the structure told its own story. Episodes ran to just 35 minutes, and both seasons were filmed back-to-back in a single production cycle - hardly the blueprint of a long-term streaming powerhouse.

Reports suggested viewership fell by at least 20% between season one and season two, not the trajectory of a cultural juggernaut.

It points instead to a project that struggled to hold attention, let alone build momentum. In that context, the silence around a third season feels less shocking and more inevitable.

When Meghan announced she was stepping away from acting and pivoting into reality television, it was framed as bold.

Another reinvention in an ever-evolving narrative. She had shaken the globe before - first with her royal wedding, then with her bombshell exit from the Royal Family, then with the tell-all interviews and streaming deals.

This, we were told, was simply the next chapter. However, it was not all it was cracked up to be.

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The promise was intimate access. Carefully curated glimpses into a California life of wellness, friendships and female empowerment.

The execution felt cautious. Controlled. At times, oddly flat. For someone whose brand rests on authenticity, the series often felt like it was straining to manufacture warmth rather than naturally exuding it.

And that is the crux of the problem. Meghan should be celebrating a year since launch - a marker of survival in the brutal streaming landscape.

Instead, she faces a more uncomfortable reality: there are no confirmed plans for a third season.

Her podcast, Confessions of a Female Founder, was not renewed either. Another project, another quiet ending.

For a couple who reportedly signed deals worth tens of millions following their 2020 royal exit, this is not the narrative they would have envisioned.

The Sussexes branched out into documentaries, podcasts, publishing and lifestyle ventures with the clear aim of building a formidable American media empire.

The dream, many assumed, was to rake in hundreds of millions while controlling their own image.

Yet it increasingly appears that those ambitions have met resistance.

Last year was positioned as Meghan's grand comeback. She returned to Instagram, offering carefully curated glimpses into the private life she and Prince Harry once insisted they craved - the very reason they swapped the British countryside on the King's estate close to the Prince and Princess of Wales for a sprawling Montecito mansion.

Privacy, it seemed, was no longer the priority - presentation was.

We have seen Meghan attend high-profile Hollywood events, including Kris Jenner's 70th birthday celebration. She launched her As Ever lifestyle range and jetted to Paris for fashion week with Balenciaga.

The messaging was clear: she was stepping back into society on her own terms. But instead of a triumphant re-entry, it has felt like a year of recalibration.

None of this is to say Meghan has failed outright. Two seasons and a festive special are nothing. Many streaming projects do not make it past the pilot stage.

But context matters. When you are a former working royal with global name recognition, the bar is not simply participation. It is dominance.

The numbers and the silence around future instalments suggest that dominance has proved elusive.

There is also the question of identity. Is Meghan a humanitarian? A media executive? A lifestyle guru? A feminist founder? The constant pivots can look dynamic from one angle and directionless from another.

Reinvention only works when each new chapter feels like a natural evolution rather than a reaction.

What makes this moment particularly striking is that it should have been celebratory. One year since launch. One year of proving doubters wrong. And six years of carving out independence.

Instead, the headlines circle around dwindling viewership and stalled renewals.


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