Their bubble has burst, where New Yorkers are concerned…
Two unwelcome imports arrived in New York this week. You may have heard about Harry and Meghan’s big night in the city.
According to the couple themselves they suffered the ordeal of a two-hour near catastrophic car chase with paparazzi tailing them all the way.
According to other sources, including the NYPD and the driver of the taxi, the truth was rather different.
Every New Yorker knows that any kind of car-chase — let alone a two-hour one — is literally impossible in this city.
You can sit in traffic for two hours, sure. But actually racing through the city?
Sorry, but no. Every New Yorker can call that out as BS.
And now we have the footage to prove it. Video of the exchange shows that the Sussexes were accompanied by the NYPD and that they moved at no speed at all. In fact they were moving so slowly that their driver got out of the car at one point.
So why lie?
In Harry and Meghan land, nothing can be done without drama, exaggeration and lies.
They are the most privacy-seeking publicity-seekers that even this city has seen.
Yet they chose the wrong place to do it in. One of the greatest things about New York and its inhabitants is that the city is so unimpressible.
But in New York that stuff doesn’t fly. Nobody has time for it.
So this was the wrong city for Meghan and Harry to set their big scene. Because most likely it was all staged for the next installment of their Netflix series. Meghan seems to be continuing her audition to be acclaimed as the most hard-done-by person on the planet. Whether it is not going to a coronation or not having enough houses, there is no sorrow that is like Meghan’s sorrow.
Meghan’s fallout with her own family and her in-laws is the fault of the couple themselves, who constantly try to plant stories, make outrageous claims and claim attention, only then to turn around and pretend to be outraged that anyone is paying attention to them.
Well sorry, but the trick doesn’t work anymore. The Sussex show has run out of gas and stalled, somewhere on the Upper East Side.

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