Thursday, October 24

Harry and Meghan referred to as ‘grifters’ by Spotify government after podcast deal ends

A Spotify government has spoken out in regards to the scrapping of Harry and Meghan’s $20m (£15m) take care of the streaming service, calling the royal couple “f****** grifters”.

Bill Simmons, who’s head of podcast innovation and monetisation, criticised the pair after it was introduced they had been being dropped by Spotify for reportedly not creating sufficient content material.

Meghan’s podcast Archetypes was described on Spotify as “a podcast where we investigate, dissect, and subvert the labels that try to hold women back”.

Guests on the present have included Paris Hilton, Mindy Kaling, Mariah Carey and Serena Williams.

But solely 12 episodes have been made because the multi-million greenback deal was signed in 2020 and none have aired for greater than 9 months.

“Meghan is continuing to develop more content for the Archetypes audience on another platform,” a spokeswoman for the couple’s Archewell media firm advised the Wall Street Journal.

Speaking on his personal podcast, Mr Simmons stated: “The f****** grifters. That’s the podcast we should have launched with them.”

He went on to say: “I have got to get drunk one night and tell the story of the Zoom I had with Harry to try and help him with a podcast idea. It’s one of my best stories… F*** them. The grifters.”

Sky News has contacted Archewell for a remark.

Read extra:
Prince Harry and Meghan ‘paparazzi automobile chase’ was not ‘close to catastrophic’
Meghan wrote to King Charles expressing concern about unconscious bias within the Royal Family

Along with Spotify, the couple additionally signed offers with Netflix, which launched an eponymous documentary sequence about them final yr, and Penguin Random House, the writer of Prince Harry’s controversial memoir, Spare.

The information comes after Spotify introduced this month it would reduce 200 jobs because it adjustments its method to podcasts.

Prince Harry is presently suing the writer of the Daily Mirror for damages, claiming journalists had been linked to illegal strategies used to acquire data, fees Mirror Group Newspapers deny.

Content Source: information.sky.com