TMC
05-16-2018, 12:42 AM
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/05/15/arts/meghan-markle-prince-harry-tv-specials.html
"Avoid all of these shows," Margaret Lyons says after watching seven of them, from TLC's When Harry Met Meghan: A Royal Engagement to Lifetime's Harry & Meghan: A Royal Romance to CBS' Meghan Markle: American Princess. "The convergence of history, celebrity and glamour should be a fertile area for one-off TV specials, and there’s plenty of genuine information — about rituals, about rites, about politics, about tiaras, about dads — worth acknowledging or exploring," says Lyons. "Also, come on: Weddings are fun! At times, these shows are giddy and fizzy and dorky, and I learned a few historical tidbits along the way. But the claims to personal intimacy ranged from visibly untrue to quietly sad, and the shows all used many of the same talking heads, the same clips and the same dumb, dubious claims (no, Suits is not a celebrity-making show). A boring tabloid is a sin. Worse, the contrived narrative that the shows collectively push — the idea that Harry and Meghan’s romance is 'a fairy tale' — is jarringly backward."
ALSO:
UK Channel 4 documentary Meet the Markles looks at the Meghan Markle relatives accused of exploiting their connection to her (http://www.radiotimes.com/news/tv/2018-05-15/this-channel-4-documentary-shows-a-new-side-to-meghan-markles-family-and-its-presenter-amelia-dimoldenberg/)
Binge-watching Suits is the best way to prepare for the royal wedding (http://observer.com/2018/05/meghan-markle-suits-reasons-to-binge-watch-before-royal-wedding/)
TMZ is at the center of the "soap opera" over whether Meghan Markle's dad will attend the wedding (https://www.thedailybeast.com/how-tmz-crashed-meghan-markle-and-prince-harrys-wedding-devastatingly)
"Avoid all of these shows," Margaret Lyons says after watching seven of them, from TLC's When Harry Met Meghan: A Royal Engagement to Lifetime's Harry & Meghan: A Royal Romance to CBS' Meghan Markle: American Princess. "The convergence of history, celebrity and glamour should be a fertile area for one-off TV specials, and there’s plenty of genuine information — about rituals, about rites, about politics, about tiaras, about dads — worth acknowledging or exploring," says Lyons. "Also, come on: Weddings are fun! At times, these shows are giddy and fizzy and dorky, and I learned a few historical tidbits along the way. But the claims to personal intimacy ranged from visibly untrue to quietly sad, and the shows all used many of the same talking heads, the same clips and the same dumb, dubious claims (no, Suits is not a celebrity-making show). A boring tabloid is a sin. Worse, the contrived narrative that the shows collectively push — the idea that Harry and Meghan’s romance is 'a fairy tale' — is jarringly backward."
ALSO:
UK Channel 4 documentary Meet the Markles looks at the Meghan Markle relatives accused of exploiting their connection to her (http://www.radiotimes.com/news/tv/2018-05-15/this-channel-4-documentary-shows-a-new-side-to-meghan-markles-family-and-its-presenter-amelia-dimoldenberg/)
Binge-watching Suits is the best way to prepare for the royal wedding (http://observer.com/2018/05/meghan-markle-suits-reasons-to-binge-watch-before-royal-wedding/)
TMZ is at the center of the "soap opera" over whether Meghan Markle's dad will attend the wedding (https://www.thedailybeast.com/how-tmz-crashed-meghan-markle-and-prince-harrys-wedding-devastatingly)