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Targeting the royal family seems to have become a selling point. Criticism of the kingdom and “revelations of rights violations” have become a yardstick for promoting memoirs, web series, etc.
In the latest case, the Royal Family Bash has been added to spice up the story of filming a Netflix blockbuster in Bradford.
The director of this blockbuster “Six Triple Eight” is Harry and Meghan’s friend Tyler Perry, says a Daily Mail report, adding that the 53-year-old appeared on the couple’s Netflix documentary to accuse the royal family of mistreating them.

The billionaire claimed the palace cut off the Sussexes’ money and ended their security – “all the things a violent man would do”.
Perry claimed he “knew the symptoms” of coercive control and abuse after watching his late mother Maxine being abused by his alcoholic father Emmitt.
Referring to Meghan and Harry, Perry said: “She was abused. And he was. I felt the symptoms, I saw it. I watched my mother be abused for years.
The British newspaper adds that Perry, speaking about how the palace behaved, said: “To use the institution to try to do all the things a violent man would do, for example here’s what we’re going to do, we’re going to cut off the money …, don’t leave you with certainty, we’ll do all those things to make you follow it and come back.
“And for them both to be able to say ‘I don’t care if it’s the palace, I’m out of here’, I applauded that.”
Perry revealed that he had contacted Meghan just before her wedding day to offer her support.
“It wasn’t until two years after Meghan’s marriage to Harry that she called Perry again to tell him she was scared.”
Perry revealed after this phone call that he offered his $18 million Beverly Hills home to the couple to use as their personal residence after they left the monarchy.
Perry has directed three previous films for Netflix, including A Fall From Grace, A Madea Homecoming and A Jazzman’s Blues.