Meghan may upstage the Kardashians in being 'famous for doing nothing' if she moves to LA, jokes David Spade
While giving his scathing opinion on Megxit, comedian David Spade said that Meghan Markle was no better than the Kardashians as she became "famous for doing nothing" and had no achievements to her name.
During his appearance on 'The Kelly Clarkson Show,' the 'Just Shoot Me!' actor also thinks that the former 'Suits' actress got cold feet after realizing that it was not the action-packed life that she thought she was signing up for when she agreed to marry Harry.
“I feel like she gets swept off her feet like the dream. She goes over to England and she has this crazy wedding and she’s literally royalty but then it gets a little mundane and she’s like, ‘All right, let’s head back to LA. I’ve got to go to my Cold Reading class on Pico again and just get back into acting.’ I think the fun part was over and now she sort of got a little bored," he said.
The actor went on to joke that Meghan soon started feeling that the Buckingham Palaces was perhaps “too big." Imitating the Duchess of Sussex, Spade mockingly said: "I was just looking. There’s a two-bedroom condo over in Toluca Lake."
At this, comedian Ron Funches, who was also on the show, chimed in, saying Meghan will probably be known only for her surname, much like the Kardashians, more than anything else she has done in her career.
Spade agreed, jokingly adding that Kardashians have the sole proprietorship in the United States of being famous for the sake of being famous. So they might have a problem if Meghan vies for that title.
“They’re stepping on the Kardashians of being famous for doing nothing," he said. "The Kardashians are mad. They don’t want ‘em here.”
It was recently reported that Meghan and Harry planned to buy a house in Los Angeles, California, as they look forward to starting a new life after Megxit officially goes into effect on March 31. "This is what Meghan and Harry have always wanted — to create their own life. It's got to feel like an immense relief to get out of the UK and go down their own path," a source told People Magazine.