Prince Harry and Meghan Markle's Marriage is Doomed, Royal Insider Predicts
Former "Vanity Fair" editor lashes out at the couple once again.
Will Prince Harry and Meghan Markle live happily ever after? No, according to one high profile former magazine editor. In a new interview, Graydon Carter, who ran Vanity Fair for decades, blasts the couple's relationship and maintains it will last "years rather than decades."
According to Carter, Meghan Markle has already gotten everything she needs from Prince Harry and will likely be on her way soon.
"I would measure the duration of the marriage in years rather than decades," Carter told the Sunday Times.
"I think she has run rings around poor Harry and gotten what she wanted: notoriety, money, and a title. His usefulness to her diminishes daily," Carter continued.
While he doesn't think an acting comeback is in Meghan's future, he jokes that she would be perfect for a reality show. "If there is a Real Housewives of Montecito show in the works, she'd be a shoo-in," Carter said.
"Harry and Meghan are just fascinating concepts," Carter previously told The Telegraph. "They've done something they'll live to regret, which is their children have no relatives. They have no cousins that they see, or uncles or aunts, and they don't see grandparents, except for one."
Carter continued to say that the couple will eventually come to realize what a massive mistake they made. "That will come back to haunt them at a certain point," he says.
"Montecito is gorgeous but it's God's waiting room: there is nothing, nothing, nothing to do. It's a 40-minute drive from LA. There can't be many kids there because young families can't afford it. It's a lonely, beautiful place," Carter said.
Carter also questioned Harry and Meghan's version of their New York City "car chase" that happened earlier this year. "I've lived in New York for 50 years and you can't go faster than three miles an hour," he pointed out. "When I first read about it I thought, 'That doesn't look right.'"
Carter believes the couple is overexposed. "They have too much attention. For people like that, unavailability is your greatest asset. If you're out there too much, the public has a chance to get sick of you.
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"I think they've made every wrong move you can make," Carter concluded.