The Duchess of Cambridge and I are officially colleagues - well, sort of. The Royal formerly known as Kate Middleton is moonlighting as guest editor at Huffington Post, highlighting the mental health of youth under the #YoungMindsMatter awareness campaign.
Cute as a button doesn't even begin to cover it. (And while we're on the subject of buttons... Buttons aren't cute so what's the deal there? Is this a reference to a button-shaped nose?)
They're at it again. Those golden Royals, Prince William and the Duchess of Cambridge, are expecting their second baby. An official statement was released, though Kate is not yet at the 12-week mark—which, as far as the monarchy goes, is something of a reckless move.
So much for pranks and false alarms. News breaking like a Duchess' waters. Kate is in labour at this very moment, and through forces of sheer abracadabra she and Prince William managed to arrive unescorted and undetected through the hospital's rear entrance.
You have to feel for the Duchess of Cambridge. Not only is she the most watched pregnant person on the planet (now that Kim Kardashian has given birth), already the British press is trying to give Kate unsolicited parenting advice, urging her to breastfeed publicly the royal baby.
Duchess Kate is shacking up with her parents following the birth of the royal heir. According to an article in USA Today, the move is a big deal, if only because the newborn is in line for the throne.
"Future monarch to start life in commoner's home in Berkshire instead of royal residence." That was the stuffy Daily Mail headline.
Though the Duchess of Cambridge may not have realized it at the time, Kate Middleton drew international attention to a condition about which little is known when she was hospitalized a few months ago. Though some were quick to dismiss the attention as 'princess treatment,' Hyperemesis Gravidarum (HG) can actually be fatal.
Having your portrait painted has got to be an honour, right? But what about when the rendition is less than flattering? Just ask the Duchess of Cambridge, Kate Middleton, whose first royal image is hardly a likeness of the beautiful 31-year-old wife to William and expectant mother to a British heir.
It started out as a prank. A phone call to the King Edward VII's Hospital where Duchess Kate was being treated for acute morning sickness ended with embarrassment, then tragedy. The nurse who answered the hoax call from Australian DJs was found dead just days later.