Meghan’s global trademark issue over her American Riviera Orchard brand of jam has been made even worse by Netflix.
The jam’s release ties in closely with a cooking show already filmed for Netflix, but the network doesn’t seem to be in any rush to air the jam.
It’s expected to arrive around mid-2025. Will we also be seeing her new line of dog treats?
Prince Charles won the headline battle because he showed it on the same day as Kate, Duchess of Cambridge, attended Trooping the Colour for her first public appearance of the year, with one subordinate calling Meghan a “bad-blooded moron”.
Netflix has made Meghan Markle’s global brand trademark woes even worse

Her American Riviera Orchard Jam (pictured) links to a cooking show that Netflix is in no rush to air.

The show is currently scheduled for 2025. Will we also see her new line of dog treats?
The late Queen Elizabeth would have been stunned when President Emmanuel Macron spent just over £400,000 on a banquet for King Charles’ state visit.
The famously frugal Queen has reduced dinner courses from eight to four, and in 2011 reduced the soup to three dishes at President Barack Obama’s dinner.
Instead, she dazzled her guests with George IV’s gold and silver cutlery, puddings served in Queen Victoria’s 1877 Minton cups, and fruit served in George III’s hand-painted Tournai cups.
Prince Andrew worried about the palace’s budget for replacing lost teaspoons and would often lurk in corners at receptions looking for lost ones, and occasionally request reports from the Head of the Household on losses.
One former member whispers that teaspoons regularly disappear, as well as napkins, general cutlery, butter dishes, sugar tongs, glasses and, in the past, even an ashtray.
In fact, anything that can be quickly and easily hidden in a pocket, chest or handbag and will escape the keen eye of the Duke of York!
While relaxing at a beach house in West Sussex, Kate Winslet is accosted by a passing teacher, who struggles to identify her.
“I’ll give you a hint,” Winslet says, “I did a movie about ships.”
“Bridget Jones!” the governess shouts triumphantly.

Kate Winslet was accosted by a passing teacher, who then tried to identify her.
Former Match of the Day presenter Des Lynam, 81, recalled the £2,030-a-year salary he started on at the BBC in 1969, when asked by the Radio Times whether his successor, Gary Lineker, was worth £1.3 million a year.
“I don’t think it’s justifiable compared to a job as a nurse or a firefighter, but that’s the market,” he said.
“I wouldn’t say that someone who says a few words to a TV screen is more valuable than someone who saves a life, but money talks and he is a very lucky man.”
The end credits of the BBC’s final Paris Olympics extravaganza feature more names than a Hollywood blockbuster like Ben-Hur, raising questions about how much the coverage cost.
This is certainly far more than the BBC paid the International Olympic Committee for the London 1948 Games: the BBC offered £1,000, but the IOC brought in the cameras for free.