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Culture War Roundup for the week of December 19, 2022

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There's two things going on. First, the Royal Family is a real-life soap opera. Victoria, once she ascended the throne at the age of eighteen, worked very hard (especially when she got married, in concert with her husband) to rehabilitate the image of the royal family:

As Victoria's monarchy became more symbolic than political, it placed a strong emphasis on morality and family values, in contrast to the sexual, financial and personal scandals that had been associated with previous members of the House of Hanover and which had discredited the monarchy. The concept of the "family monarchy", with which the burgeoning middle classes could identify, was solidified.

So the tabloids love the royals as fodder for scandal stories which can be whipped up out of nothing. As remarked elsewhere, they were picking on Kate (William's wife) because that is how the media treats the celebrities: build them up, then bring them down. Kate is a commoner, so there were plenty of critics to provide mean-spirited little snippets to the press. Then Meghan came along, and it was a dream come true for the gossip mags: two royal wives who could be pitted against one another in a struggle for popularity! Half the stuff churned out about "sources close to" and "a close friend" and "palace insiders" was invented out of nothing. Like having body language experts watching TV coverage of the couple so they could analyse what Meghan and Harry were really feeling, it's all headline-grabbing nonsense that is the equivalent of the latest plot line in the soaps. Or if you prefer, DOUBLE CLAW GRABBING.

Second, there is indeed insider backstabbing, jostling for influence, and all the rest of it inside the palace. Meghan rocked the boat, and after Diana the monarchy had adapted to make sure they would not be caught out again by someone who cleverly used public opinion to elevate herself above the institution. Meghan didn't realise that there are duties as well that go along with being a royal, and that there is an order of precedence, and that a lot of it is dull, boring "go and shake hands and meet the ordinary people" trips. Her move to the US was a big step in the struggle for influence, and played to where her real base and strength lies: being a celeb on the chat-show circuit and being known in America. She can't do anything like that in Britain (and certainly not after Diana's interview with Martin Bashir) and doesn't have the same insider status.

As said, Kate put her head down and ploughed through the criticism and carping and got on with the job. Meghan behaved like a stereotypical Hollywood celeb.

Third, the kind of thing Clarkson said wasn't really meant to be taken seriously. He has a public image as being, well, a bit of a prick. He is not going to write a love-note to Meghan, and he is going to do something over the top (like the Game of Thrones reference). So it's to be read as being tongue-in-cheek, while also tapping into what irritates people about Meghan. If you honestly think he cares about Meghan Markle to the extent of "lying awake at night grinding [his] teeth", you mistake what he is writing, his persona, and why he is writing it. Like Piers Morgan (whom I utterly detest), he jumps aboard any bandwagon to snatch at popularity. The current bandwagon is "Meghan is an unutterable pain" so that's what he dishes up, with his trademark offensiveness. That's his persona: the guy who makes your blood boil because he doesn't give a fig for the liberal pieties and tells it like it is. But it is also intended to be just that bit over the top, so you shouldn't take him literally and you are certainly not meant to believe he really feels that strongly about Meghan.