Reports that Prince Harry and Meghan Markle are suing South Park’s producers over a recent episode that mocked the royal couple have been denied by the couple.

The parody of the Duke and Duchess of Sussex moved to South Park in an effort to find some solitude in the episode titled “The Global Privacy Tour,” although obviously courting attention by participating in press tours, shouting in public, and lighting off fireworks in their front lawn.

The Markle clone is referred to as the prince’s “Instagram-loving bitch wife” in one scene, while Harry’s cartoon alter ego advertises his new memoirs, named “Waaagh.”

The couple also carried “we want our privacy” banners as they traveled to several countries in the episode, parodying the opinion of many detractors who watched the ex-royals’ Netflix docuseries Harry & Meghan.

Markle was reportedly “upset and overwhelmed” by how she and her husband were portrayed after the episode’s broadcast on February 15. Following this, royal critics like Neil Sean claimed that Trey Parker and Matt Stone might face legal repercussions.

Sean said to Fox News that “it appears that, like so many things with Meghan and Harry, there may have legal repercussions connected, according to sources close to the ex-royals. Their legal team is reviewing the incident to determine what is wrong and what might be transformed into something more nefarious.

The Duke and Duchess’ spokeswoman, speaking to People, rejected rumors of a potential lawsuit, saying: “It’s all frankly nonsense. Boring, completely unfounded reports

The show received a lot of positive feedback from viewers, and the day after it aired, it was trending on Twitter.

The South Park trashing of Meghan and Harry is lethally great, tweeted Piers Morgan, who has been vocal about his distaste for Markle. I believe that this is how most Americans currently view them.

Trey Parker and Matt Stone, the creators of South Park, already acknowledged that their deep-fake movie about Donald Trump is temporarily “on pause.”

Peter Serafinowicz, Parker, and Stone previously collaborated on the popular web series Sassy Justice, which used deepfake technology to superimpose the faces of politicians and celebrities onto fictional characters. Among the famous individuals were Jared Kushner, Mark Zuckerberg, and Donald Trump.

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