“KATE DIDN’T NEED A CAMERA CREW TO WIN THE CROWD, AND THAT’S WHAT MAKES MEGHAN’S FALL LOOK SO BRUTAL.” Catherine, Princess of Wales walked into Italy and instantly won over crowds, while Meghan Markle is facing new backlash for what many call a celebrity-style take on royal life. Kate’s warmth felt real. Meghan’s recent appearances, critics claim, came off as too polished, calculated, and painfully performative. One woman drew cheers without even trying. The other is being accused of turning royalty into a personal brand. And that’s the harsh comparison now blowing up online: Kate looked like the future Queen. Meghan, critics say, looked like someone still chasing a spotlight she no longer controls. READ MORE BELOW 💥💥👉

“KATE DIDN’T NEED A CAMERA CREW TO WIN THE CROWD — AND THAT’S WHAT MAKES MEGHAN’S FALL LOOK SO BRUTAL.” Catherine, Princess of Wales walked into Italy and effortlessly captivated crowds, while Meghan Markle is facing fresh criticism for what many call a celebrity-style imitation of royal life. Kate’s warmth looked natural. Meghan’s recent appearances, critics argue, felt overly polished, strategic, and painfully performative. One woman drew cheers without trying. The other is being accused of turning royalty into a personal brand. And that’s the brutal comparison now exploding online: Kate looked like the future Queen. Meghan, critics say, looked like someone still trying to recreate a spotlight she no longer controls. 👇 · 14/05/2026 · Comments off Princess Catherine stepped out in Reggio Emilia earlier today for the start of her hugely significant solo overseas visit focused on her Early Years campaign – but it was the public’s emotional reaction to the future Queen that truly stole the spotlight. The Princess of Wales, 44, did not need a glossy summit, a curated panel discussion or a carefully choreographed tour to win over the public in Italy. She simply stepped out of a car alone, smiled warmly at the crowds who gathered in the thousands and did what the Royal Family has always done best – connected with people naturally. In doing so, she quietly highlighted the exact problem that has continued to follow Meghan Markle ever since stepping away from royal life. While Meghan’s recent Australia visit carried all the optics of a royal tour, Catherine’s reception in Italy felt entirely organic. There were no awkward attempts to recreate the magic of monarchy. No carefully over-produced branding exercise masquerading as duty. Just a future Queen doing what comes instinctively to her. Get the latest news and gossip from the Royal Family plus selected offers and competitions Invalid email We use your sign-up to provide content in ways you’ve consented to and to improve our understanding of you. This may include adverts from us and 3rd parties based on our understanding. You can unsubscribe at any time. Read our Privacy Policy Princess Kate and Meghan Markle Princess Kate and Meghan Markle have both carried out tours on different sides of the globe (Image: Getty) Within minutes, the comparisons were impossible to ignore. People roared and cheered as the Princess of Wales arrived for her hugely significant solo overseas visit, hoping to catch even the briefest glimpse of the future Queen. People waved Union Jack flags from behind barriers, children stretched forward hoping she would stop to speak to them, and social media almost immediately erupted with one recurring phrase “The People’s Princess.” It was not manufactured. It was not forced. Nobody needed prompting. At several moments during the engagement, Catherine bent down to speak to young children at eye level – smiling, listening and chatting with them with the sort of ease that cannot be media-trained into someone. The images instantly sparked comparisons to Princess Diana, who famously transformed royal walkabouts from stiff formalities into something warmer and deeply human. Whether Kensington Palace likes it or not, the reality is becoming increasingly obvious: Catherine has quietly inherited Diana’s role in the public imagination. Not through imitation. But through instinct. Because what unfolded in Italy was not a celebrity status. It was royalty. There is a difference – and the public can feel it. Kate 1 Princess Catherine’s Italy triumph exposes Meghan Markle’s royal problem (Image: Getty) Catherine understands that royal engagements are not about becoming the centre of attention. They are about making the people you meet feel seen. And frankly, the contrast between Catherine’s reception in Italy and Meghan Markle’s recent tour of Australia could not have been more stark if it tried. While Catherine was being welcomed by enormous crowds who appeared genuinely thrilled to see her, Meghan’s trip carried the unmistakable feeling of a celebrity PR exercise awkwardly dressed up as a royal engagement. That is the fundamental problem the Sussexes continue to run into: you cannot recreate the aesthetics of monarchy without the monarchy itself. The Australia visit was presented with all the hallmarks of a royal tour – the walkabouts, the speeches, the carefully curated photographs, but without the public duty element that gives those moments meaning in the first place. Instead, it felt commercial. Strategic. Slightly uncomfortable. The Duke And Duchess Of Sussex Visit Australia – Day 4 Meghan Markle and Harry jetted to Australia to carry out a selection of personal engagements (Image: Getty) Reports surrounding the trip also sparked criticism locally, with some Australians frustrated at the idea of public resources and security costs helping facilitate what many viewed as a faux-royal exercise that ultimately benefited Harry and Meghan’s personal brand more than anyone else. And that criticism did not appear entirely unfair. Unlike working royals, Meghan and Harry no longer represent the Crown. They represent themselves, and there was financial gain. The Duchess 44, appeared at a women-only weekend retreat in Sydney, with tickets starting at A$2,699 (£1,400) per person. That distinction matters. Royal tours are traditionally funded and supported because they serve diplomacy, charity work, Commonwealth relations and the wider interests of the monarchy. When the Sussexes attempt to replicate the format independently, the optics inevitably become muddled. Kate 2 Princess Catherine looked effortlessly elegant in a powder blue tailored suit as she arrived in Reggio Emilia for her hugely significant solo overseas visit centred around her Early Years work. (Image: Getty) Especially when commercial deals, media projects and branding opportunities continue orbiting nearby. By contrast, Catherine’s Italy visit felt refreshingly straightforward. No glossy reinvention. No desperate attempt to dominate headlines. No carefully crafted ‘look at me’ moment disguised as humanitarian work. Just a future Queen quietly carrying out an issue she has spent years championing. And perhaps that is exactly why the public reaction was so overwhelming. After years of celebrity-style royal chaos, Catherine increasingly represents stability. Duty. Continuity. Calm. She respects the institution she married into rather than constantly appearing frustrated by it. She understands hierarchy. She understands diplomacy. Most importantly, she understands that being royal is not about personal validation – it is about service. Kate 4 Royal fans quickly hailed Catherine the “People’s Princess” after the future Queen warmly greeted crowds and stopped to speak with children during the landmark Italy engagement. (Image: Getty) That sounds old-fashioned in 2026. But the scenes in Italy proved the public still responds to it enormously. Thousands did not gather in Reggio Emilia because Catherine has a lifestyle brand to sell or a Netflix contract to promote. They gathered because she represents something bigger than herself. For years, many assumed Meghan Markle was positioning herself as Diana’s true successor – the glamorous outsider challenging royal convention while commanding global fascination. But over time, that comparison has started to feel increasingly hollow. Because Diana’s magic was never about celebrity. It was about emotional intelligence. She had warmth. Curiosity. Vulnerability. An ability to make people feel important. And increasingly, those are the exact qualities the public now sees in Catherine. Not loudly. Not theatrically. But consistently. Italy simply confirmed what many royal watchers have quietly suspected for some time: the Princess of Wales is no longer growing into the role of future Queen. She already looks like one. And judging by the roaring crowds welcoming her to Italy this week, the public knows it too.

 

Princess Catherine stepped out in Reggio Emilia earlier today for the start of her hugely significant solo overseas visit focused on her Early Years campaign – but it was the public’s emotional reaction to the future Queen that truly stole the spotlight. The Princess of Wales, 44, did not need a glossy summit, a curated panel discussion or a carefully choreographed tour to win over the public in Italy.

She simply stepped out of a car alone, smiled warmly at the crowds who gathered in the thousands and did what the Royal Family has always done best – connected with people naturally. In doing so, she quietly highlighted the exact problem that has continued to follow Meghan Markle ever since stepping away from royal life.

While Meghan’s recent Australia visit carried all the optics of a royal tour, Catherine’s reception in Italy felt entirely organic. There were no awkward attempts to recreate the magic of monarchy. No carefully over-produced branding exercise masquerading as duty. Just a future Queen doing what comes instinctively to her.

Get the latest news and gossip from the Royal Family plus selected offers and competitions Invalid email

We use your sign-up to provide content in ways you’ve consented to and to improve our understanding of you. This may include adverts from us and 3rd parties based on our understanding. You can unsubscribe at any time. Read our Privacy Policy

Princess Kate and Meghan MarklePrincess Kate and Meghan Markle have both carried out tours on different sides of the globe (Image: Getty) 

Within minutes, the comparisons were impossible to ignore. People roared and cheered as the Princess of Wales arrived for her hugely significant solo overseas visit, hoping to catch even the briefest glimpse of the future Queen. People waved Union Jack flags from behind barriers, children stretched forward hoping she would stop to speak to them, and social media almost immediately erupted with one recurring phrase “The People’s Princess.”

It was not manufactured. It was not forced. Nobody needed prompting. At several moments during the engagement, Catherine bent down to speak to young children at eye level – smiling, listening and chatting with them with the sort of ease that cannot be media-trained into someone.

The images instantly sparked comparisons to Princess Diana, who famously transformed royal walkabouts from stiff formalities into something warmer and deeply human. Whether Kensington Palace likes it or not, the reality is becoming increasingly obvious: Catherine has quietly inherited Diana’s role in the public imagination.

Not through imitation. But through instinct. Because what unfolded in Italy was not a celebrity status. It was royalty. There is a difference – and the public can feel it.

Kate 1Princess Catherine’s Italy triumph exposes Meghan Markle’s royal problem (Image: Getty) 

Catherine understands that royal engagements are not about becoming the centre of attention. They are about making the people you meet feel seen.

And frankly, the contrast between Catherine’s reception in Italy and Meghan Markle’s recent tour of Australia could not have been more stark if it tried.

While Catherine was being welcomed by enormous crowds who appeared genuinely thrilled to see her, Meghan’s trip carried the unmistakable feeling of a celebrity PR exercise awkwardly dressed up as a royal engagement.

That is the fundamental problem the Sussexes continue to run into: you cannot recreate the aesthetics of monarchy without the monarchy itself.

The Australia visit was presented with all the hallmarks of a royal tour – the walkabouts, the speeches, the carefully curated photographs, but without the public duty element that gives those moments meaning in the first place.

Instead, it felt commercial. Strategic. Slightly uncomfortable.

The Duke And Duchess Of Sussex Visit Australia - Day 4Meghan Markle and Harry jetted to Australia to carry out a selection of personal engagements (Image: Getty) 

Reports surrounding the trip also sparked criticism locally, with some Australians frustrated at the idea of public resources and security costs helping facilitate what many viewed as a faux-royal exercise that ultimately benefited Harry and Meghan’s personal brand more than anyone else.

And that criticism did not appear entirely unfair. Unlike working royals, Meghan and Harry no longer represent the Crown. They represent themselves, and there was financial gain. The Duchess 44, appeared at a women-only weekend retreat in Sydney, with tickets starting at A$2,699 (£1,400) per person.

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