Tom Bower Slams Meghan Markle After 1997 Magazine Sparks Questions About Her Real Age!

 Royal biographer Tom Bower has unleashed a ferocious takedown of Meghan Markle, branding her a serial fabricator after a resurfaced 1997 Seventeen magazine feature lists her as 21 years old—six years older than her official timeline suggests. The March issue's "Megazees" page names "Meghan Markle, 21, Los Angeles," when an August 1981 birthdate would place her at just 15, igniting a firestorm that Bower calls the "smoking gun" of her calculated reinvention.



Bower's blistering book excerpts, splashed across tabloids, pile on the receipts: an IMDb page allegedly scrubbed from 1977 to 1981 birth years, Northwestern classmates swearing she seemed "mid-20s" in early 2000s lectures, and Thomas Markle dodging direct birth-year queries with evasive shrugs. "She's not 44; she's pushing 50, airbrushed for Hollywood and Harry's halo," Bower thundered on GB News, linking it to Vegas wedding ghosts, secret daughter whispers, and Archie timeline tweaks that scream systemic sleight-of-hand.


Meghan's Montecito camp? Crickets—silence fueling the inferno as #MeghanAgeLie racks billions. Insiders spill of her vase-smashing rages, Harry pacing with "Spare" regrets, Netflix execs sweating her toxicity amid jam-jar flops. Palace predators pounce: William blocks transatlantic pleas, Charles freezes titles post-DNA purges, Kate's cancer-free glow untarnished. Samantha Markle crows validation from Florida exile, waving family albums where teen Meghan "looks suspiciously seasoned."


Bower doesn't mince: this isn't typo territory—it's fraud adjacent, potentially tainting marriage docs, contracts, even surrogacy oaths. From Deal or No Deal ditz to duchess, shaving years vaulted her as ingenue bait, snagging prince and $100M deals. Legal eagles whisper perjury probes if records falsified; fans dissect gap-year gaps and Suits auditions smelling of "mature poise."


The investigative hitman who torched Diana's butlers now eviscerates Sussex Inc.: "Patterns persist—lies layer like makeup." Social media memes mock "grandma Duchess" amid Lilibet scams and Epstein echoes.

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