logo
The secret note Meghan Markle left cabin crew on a napkin during commercial flight has gone viral

The secret note Meghan Markle left cabin crew on a napkin during commercial flight has gone viral

Scottish Sun24-05-2025

Plus, Meghan's heartfelt mood board she created for her wedding anniversary
MARKED GESTURE The secret note Meghan Markle left cabin crew on a napkin during commercial flight has gone viral
MEGHAN Markle made a cabin crew member's day after leaving a sweet handwritten note on a napkin.
The Duchess of Sussex, 43, recently flew on an American Airlines commercial flight and had received a note from the staff when she got on the flight.
5
Meghan Markle reportedly left a handwritten note for American Airlines cabin crew during a flight
Credit: Getty
5
Flight attendant Nina Vida was delighted when she received the note
Credit: TikTok/Ninavidavlogs
5
Nina had initially left a sweet note to Meghan from the 'AA girls'
Credit: TikTok/Ninavidavlogs
5
It hasn't been confirmed when Meghan took the commericial flight. Pictured with Prince Harry landing in Australia in 2018
Credit: AFP
Flight attendant Nina Vida uploaded a video sharing the story, and said she had initially given Meghan a note which read: 'It's a pleasure serving you! Love you real bad – AA girlies.'
Nina was delighted when Prince Harry's wife responded and left a heartwarming note of her own.
Writing in her beautiful calligraphy handwriting, Meghan penned: 'Dear AA girlies, thank you for the love, hospitality and handwritten note — you know me well.
'All love right back to you. As ever, Meghan.'
Nina was delighted at the personal touch, and told fans: 'You guys will not believe who I just had on my flight—who I had the pleasure of serving: the Queen. The Princess. The Duchess of Sussex. Sussex.
'The Meghan Markle was on my flight, and she's so beautiful in person.
'She was so sweet. Um, she wrote us a little handwritten note back.
'You know, I can barely read this cursive. But look at this! Handwriting is giving rich. It's giving expensive. It's giving Princess.'
New York-based Nina, who was dressed in her uniform in the clip, said Meghan even gave her a personal complement.
The cabin crew member revealed: 'She also said she loved my nails.
Meghan Markle reveals the reason why she always refers to Prince Harry as 'H'
'And the captain on my last flight said they were intense.
'So, sir, it doesn't matter what you think. The Queen says she likes them.'
Meghan is known for her love of handwritten notes and recently sent one to Not Skinny But Not Fat podcast host Amanda Hirsch.
Amanda had left a comment in January on a trailer for Meghan's new Netflix series, With Love, Meghan, admitting she was "scared for Meghan".
In response, the Duchess had mailed a handwritten letter which read: "Dear Amanda, I heard you were feeling scared.
'Don't be! This is the fun part – let's enjoy it."
Following the note, Amanda said she is now a 'fan' of Meghan 'for life.'
Meghan and Harry, 40, often like to travel by private jet, but have flown commercial on a number of occasions.
The Duke of Sussex opted to travel by an American Airlines commercial flight to King Charles' coronation in 2023 to the shock of fellow passengers.
It isn't clear when Meghan left the note to staff on the American Airlines flight, but she recently attended the Time100 summit in New York and watched a Broadway show.
Meghan's mood board
5
Meghan recently made a mood board to celebrate her seventh wedding anniversary with Prince Harry
Credit: Instagram
This week, Meghan shared a "love story" mood board to mark her and Harry's seven-year anniversary.
In a post on Instagram, the Duchess of Sussex thanked all those who have been by the pair's side.
Snaps of Archie and Lilibet can be seen during happy family picnics and activities.
One adorable photo appears to show big brother Archie kissing his little sister, while another appears to show his baby scan.
Handwritten lyrics of Ben E King's Stand by Me are also displayed, along with what appears to be the coat of arms approved by the late Queen when Meghan became a Duchess on her wedding in May 2018.
Meghan worked with the College of Arms to finalise the design, representing her American roots, before the Queen signed it off.
The duchess captioned the post: "Seven years of marriage. A lifetime of stories.
"Thanks to all of you (whether by our side, or from afar) who have loved and supported us throughout our love story - we appreciate you.
"Happy anniversary!"

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Draco Malfoy actor Tom Felton to reprise role in Harry Potter and the Cursed Child
Draco Malfoy actor Tom Felton to reprise role in Harry Potter and the Cursed Child

The Guardian

time28 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

Draco Malfoy actor Tom Felton to reprise role in Harry Potter and the Cursed Child

Tom Felton is to reprise his role as Draco Malfoy for the Harry Potter and the Cursed Child play. The actor, who starred in all the film adaptations of JK Rowling's fantasy novels, will make a comeback as Harry Potter's school bully on Broadway at the Lyric theatre in New York later this year. The production said he was the first actor from the films to reprise their role on stage, in what will be Felton's Broadway debut. He said: 'Being a part of the Harry Potter films has been one of the greatest honours of my life. Joining this production will be a full-circle moment for me, because when I begin performances in Cursed Child this fall, I'll also be the exact age Draco is in the play. 'It's surreal to be stepping back into his shoes – and of course his iconic platinum blond hair – and I am thrilled to be able to see his story through and to share it with the greatest fan community in the world. I look forward to joining this incredible company and being a part of the Broadway community.' Felton, 37, made his West End debut in the supernatural thriller 2:22: A Ghost Story in 2022. He would begin his run in Harry Potter and the Cursed Child on 11 November for a limited 19 weeks, the production said on Thursday. The show's producers, Sonia Friedman and Colin Callender, said: 'Tom's return to Hogwarts bridges generations of fans and breathes new life into a beloved story. We're beyond thrilled to welcome Tom back 'home' but also into a new family: our Broadway company.' The play, written by Jack Thorne – co-creator of this year's hit Netflix drama Adolescence – opened in 2016 in London and has had a Broadway run since 2018. It was co-devised by Rowling and is set 19 years after the events of the final book, with Potter now a Ministry of Magic employee who, along with his wife, Ginny Weasley, must send their youngest son, Albus Severus, off to school. In the two-part play, which stretches over five hours, Albus struggles with the weight of his family legacy at Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry and goes to extreme and dangerous lengths to right the wrongs of the past. Sign up to The Guide Get our weekly pop culture email, free in your inbox every Friday after newsletter promotion Since the ending of the film franchise, Felton has been in 2011's Rise of the Planet of the Apes and had recurring roles in the TV series Murder in the First, The Flash and Origin. The seven Harry Potter books are being brought to the small screen by HBO, with production beginning this summer at Warner Bros Studios Leavesden in the UK.

Manhattan's West Village Girl plague has already spread to Scotland
Manhattan's West Village Girl plague has already spread to Scotland

The Herald Scotland

timean hour ago

  • The Herald Scotland

Manhattan's West Village Girl plague has already spread to Scotland

The West Village Girl, dissected by journalist Brock Colyar in the latest cover story for New York Magazine, is a new generation that has taken over Manhattan's West Village, the old stomping ground of Sex and the City's Carrie Bradshaw. There are attributes that set her apart from her Glasgow sister, but they are minor (there's no Aritzia in Glasgow from which to buy a Super Puff). The rest of her defining characteristics are shared, so let's hereby refer to her as the West End Girl: Blank Street, dachshunds, Pilates, sweatshirts from Adanola, Sambas, slick ponytails, Aperol spritzes, Sabrina Carpenter, contrast therapy, TikTok, queueing for croissants. You get the gist. Thanks to social media, it may seem like I'm describing the well-heeled Gen Z girl. The 'I'm not an influencer, I'm a content creator' girl. The gym-instead-of-pub, no-makeup-makeup girl. But the stereotype that has flooded Byres Road and beyond has roots. Millennial roots, actually. Does it really belong in Glasgow, though? Will it last? Is this Glasgow culture now? (Image: Gordon Terris, Newsquest) You see, a decade ago, when I moved to Glasgow from Vancouver, the land of Lululemon, passive aggression and orthorexia, I was this girl. I bemoaned the lack of bars I frequented at home: matcha bars, Pilates bars, smoothie bars, salad bars, trendy bars. At the time, Glasgow was mostly pubs, chippies, burger joints, betting shops and Gregg's. People eyed my culture of rampant individualism and optimisation suspiciously. The culture here was unpretentious. It was awkward to take oneself so seriously. Friends mocked my affinity for salads mercilessly (some still do). Their faces contorted with disgust at the mention of going for a run on the weekend. Weekends were for spending time with your friends and family. Socialising. Over pints. Within two years, I had all but abandoned my fragile wellness persona. I started drinking beer again. I let beige food back into my diet. I must admit, I felt holistically better in Glasgow, not striving for perfection. Though I subtly relished slipping back into my old ways whenever I returned to North America, giddy at the thought of slurping down an iced matcha latte the size of my head after a barre class. READ MORE MARISSA MACWHIRTER Then, a few years ago, something funny happened. Little echoes of the past started cropping up throughout the city. A hip salad bar here. A chic fitness studio there. Thanks to TikTok, the wellness girlie plague spread to Glasgow, a place I never thought it would touch. Reformer Pilates studios, boutique wellness spaces offering ice baths and infrared saunas, and running clubs. And then, bang! The pièce de résistance. This spring, not one, but two Blank Street Coffee locations opened within a few weeks of each other. One on Gordon Street, one on Byres Road (two Edinburgh locations opened in January and February). The brand was founded in Brooklyn in 2020, but a cup from the coffee chain is as ubiquitous in the manus of a West Village Girl as a Cartier Love Bracelet. And now, thanks to the brand's confidence in the Glasgow market, our West End Girls can have them too. No need to board the Global Airlines Airbus A380 to JFK. Blank Street was so confident in Glasgow's West End Girls that the chain opened up on the corner of Ruthven Street and Byres Road just shy of two weeks after the council refused planning permission for the site. A spokesperson for the brand said they didn't really need approval anyway and are able to operate 'under the previous tenant's use'. One local called it 'absolutely brass-necked'. A comment on the application from the Architectural Heritage Society of Scotland and an objection from Friends of Glasgow West alluded to resistance in the area for a Blank Street, and perhaps the type of Gen Z-coded customer it attracts? Blank Street Coffee is now ubiquitous The erosion of originality on Byres Road has been in the post for years. The new Blank Street unit was previously occupied by Greggs. Chains were perverting the affluent boho ethos of the West End long before Blank Street came along. Can the pushback be simplified as a resistance to the new monoculture? This exercise and health obsession that characterises mainstream Gen Zers trickled in from America. It's far removed from the European-adjacent culture of the Glasgow that I came to in 2015. If you speak to people in the nighttime industry, they will tell you this new culture has upended nightlife in the city. Queues for designer iced drinks have replaced queues for the Berkeley Suite. Pubs and bars losing their status as our first choice, third place is a shake-up of Glasgow's cultural identity. Each time I passed the Blank Street queue, my brain nearly exploded. At first, I saw a flashing recession indicator warning that matcha making its way to Glasgow was a grave sign we were one step closer to an atomised society. We better get those Gen Zers on the pints, fast, before it's too late, I thought. Then, milky green with envy, I saw a generation younger than me, healthy like I once was, glossy with youth and languishing in the sunny queue for a cute little beverage, not a care in the world. I would like to be her again. Maybe if I get in line behind the sea of Hayley Bieber lookalikes and buy myself an Iced Daydream Matcha, I can turn the clock back a few years. There is, after all, nothing wrong with caring about your health. It's good for you, in fact. Questioning whether the affluent West End Girl mentality belongs in Glasgow is redundant. She is clearly already here. And will it last? I've always thought American wellness culture was rooted in the country's cruel and costly privatised health care system. So if the weekly warnings about the dire state of Scotland's NHS are anything to go on, I reckon we could see a few more Blank Streets in the city this year. Marissa MacWhirter is a columnist and feature writer at The Herald, and the editor of The Glasgow Wrap. The newsletter is curated between 5-7am each morning, bringing the best of local news to your inbox each morning without ads, clickbait, or hyperbole. Oh, and it's free. She can be found on X @marissaamayy1

Ex-England international wants more female role models in sport
Ex-England international wants more female role models in sport

South Wales Guardian

timean hour ago

  • South Wales Guardian

Ex-England international wants more female role models in sport

Telford, from County Durham, achieved 27 caps in an England shirt and appeared in three FA Cup finals with Leeds United, Chelsea and Notts County. She lacked visible representation during her youth but since taking on her post-playing role working at Chelsea Women as a Commercial Manager, she can see new opportunities for young girls. 'I basically didn't have any female role models until I was a lot older,' she said. 'If I was asked that question as a youngster, I would have said David Beckham or David Ginola. 'I was in a school last week, and we were doing the trophy tour for the FA Cup. I sat down next to a group of girls, and I said, 'Oh, who are your role models?' and they said Sam Kerr, Millie Bright, Lauren James and that is just so normal for them. 'To see them writing their names down, wishing them good luck, it's just so inspiring for them to be like, I see myself in her, or I want to be like her one day.' A study by Sure in 2024 found that 58% of girls say that having a female role model strengthens their passion for football. Telford, who was part of a panel discussing the issue at Stamford Bridge this week, has been able to become the role model for others that she never had, spending eight years at WSL heavyweights Chelsea during her career. 'It's mad. I sometimes forget it, until someone's like, 'Can you sign my T-shirt? Can you sign my boot?','' she said. 'It's almost like a responsibility as well in the best kind of way. I didn't want to be a footballer for any other reason, I just loved it. I genuinely do. If you ask most of the girls who play the game, it's all for the love of it. 'The responsibility that comes with that is to always turn up as who you are, because there's always going to be a young girl, a group of girls that will be like, 'Oh, I sound like her, I look like her, I play the position she does.' 'Not all of us have a smooth journey. Just because when you get to the top, it looks like it's all great, and Instagram and TikTok can make it look all fun, actually it's a difficult role. 'There's a lot of rejection, sometimes confidence is low, you're not selected. There's a lot of things that you have to deal with but that also helps you prepare for life outside.' For Telford, that authenticity is key in allowing girls to connect with players and create role models who speak to wider aspects of life beyond elite football. 'Role models should allow girls to aspire to be Lionesses and want to be the best of the best, but also empower them to feel confident, to feel like they can do it, and that gives them life skills in the longer term as well,' she added. Visibility plays a vital role in inspiring young girls in sports, but it alone isn't enough. Increased visibility needs to be paired with real world grassroots investment – like Sure's Breaking Limits Programme – find out more here

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store