Indeed, it's Brimming with Nonsense, Extreme Hosting and Self-Help Jargon. However, I Honestly Love Meghan's Christmas Special.

No concerned with the season, it's constantly hunting season for commentary on the Duchess of Sussex's TV show, With Love, Meghan. Critics, expert and amateur alike, have seldom found such common ground as when gleefully ripping the program's first and second seasons to pieces. The general consensus seemed to be a more egregious regal scandal had hardly ever taken place than the notorious pretzel-bagging incident.

Presently, like a merry renegade master, she is back once again with a "Festive Special" (or a yuletide episode). Yet now, the dynamic has changed. The usual elements we've come to expect – meaningless jargon salads, intense hospitality – remain, but within the context of a holiday show, the purpose becomes clear. The elements have slid together; it's a flawless festive blizzard.

By this point, Meghan is like the oddball family member at most festive family gatherings – dispensing unsolicited, unnecessary advice, and supplying the odd random outburst. ("I love spinach!" … "A tradition has to have a beginning." … "A tree is part of my memory and love of the holiday season.") She's a bit of a character, but her aura is known and oddly reassuring. And she appears content; she's not doing a bit of damage.

She understands her all subtle gestures, syllable and glance will be picked apart and scrutinized, but nonetheless looks carefree and serenely untroubled.

Perhaps this is the first occasion in history where that well-worn saying – "Pay no mind, it's only envy" – could actually be true. Since, in all honesty, all aspects in Meghan's Holiday Celebration honestly feels lovely. Granted, it's all awkwardly over-the-top, silliness and over the top – but doesn't that represent exactly what Christmas is for? And the words she speaks might be ridiculous, but the example she sets seems authentically beautifully curated.

Whatever she sets her mind to, she accomplishes with panache. Her recipes looks tasty, the wreath she makes is breathtaking, her presents are practically too exquisite to tear into. Nothing is ordinary or aesthetically displeasing – including the way she fastens her apron is artful and chic. She doesn't throw a meal in the oven, it "has a moment", and she creases gift paper like an paper-folding expert. She also seems to be thoroughly enjoying herself from start to finish. How could any hate-watcher not be won over, overcome by seasonal cheer and left with a powerful yearning for handmade crackers or a crudites platter where broccoli is arranged in the shape of a festive circle?

Meghan was once an actress for a living, naturally, but even so, after the intensity of scrutiny she has endured since she started dating Prince Harry, even a hypothetical offspring of two legendary actresses would have difficulty behaving this genuinely. Her unwillingness to modify or even soften her shtick, even though it being so relentlessly, globally mocked, is strangely reassuring. In our uncertain world, here is one thing we can rely on: Meghan will be like this, whatever happens. We will forever know what to expect with her.

If you're remaining skeptical of her brand, a point that will surely come as a relief: you aren't required to. The UK has abolished mandatory conscription anymore, and should it be reinstated, it would be improbable to include streaming With Love, Meghan: Holiday Celebration. If, however, you willingly check it out and are overcome with envy about her idyllic Christmas, there is hope either. Be you a royal or a office worker, few children fully understands the time and energy their mother does in December. So you can find comfort by envisioning the young royals' faces when they unfold a beautifully scripted letter that says, 'I love you because you are brave,' from a DIY festive calendar, in place of a sweet treat.

Micheal Hayes
Micheal Hayes

A professional gaming analyst with over a decade of experience in online casinos, specializing in slot machine mechanics and player psychology.