Monday, December 29, 2025
Is This Thing On? A Review
With Love, Meghan Episode Fourteen: Just for the Halibut
WITH LOVE, MEGHAN: JUST FOR THE HALIBUT
Original Airdate: August 26, 2025
Special Guest: Claire Smyth
Mentions of "Joy": 0
Mentions of Edible Flower Sprinkles: Yes
Passive-Aggressive Moments: 2
Gushing Praise for Markle: "I just love all this stuff that you do. You just make everything so beautiful".
"Teacher's pet. I want to be Teacher's Pet. I want to be huddled, and cuddled, as close to you as I can get. (That's the lesson we're guessin' you're best in)". So sang Doris Day in the title song to her film Teacher's Pet. That song came to mind while watching Just for the Halibut, the fourteenth of sixteen With Love, Meghan episodes. I do not think that Her Royal Highness Meghan, Duchess of Sussex actually wants to cuddle with her guest. However, as Just for the Halibut played on, I felt something that I have never felt before as we get close to closing out this lifestyle series. I felt genuine sorrow for Mrs. Saxe-Coburg & Gotha, watching her desperate efforts for approval go repeatedly rejected and ignored.
It is time for fish stories as Meghan Markle eagerly awaits her guest, chef Claire Smyth. Smyth catered Markle's wedding reception to her spouse, almost always referred to as "my husband" and occasionally known as "Aitch". She will make some juice for Smyth even if the Duchess Hostess with the Mostess has not juiced in 20 years. She will make a travel kit for Smyth, appreciating that the flight from London to Montecito is over twelve hours. "A carry-on size of love", Mrs. Sussex declares. In preparation for Smyth's arrival, we also get How to Make Salt and Vinegar Crisps.
"What is more satisfying than the smell of fried potatoes?", the Duchess of Sussex asks. I'm still trying to figure out why a crepe feels more special than a pancake, so I cannot answer that question.
Now, Smyth is here to give us her Michelin-star culinary skills. The Norther Irish chef catered the Duke and Duchess' wedding reception and anniversary party. Smyth will prepare Parker House Rolls. She is also highly interested in the kind of fish that California has. Therefore, they go to the Santa Barbara Fish Market. Here, Brian Colgate guides them through the various items until they find a perfect halibut, which is the most plentiful fish in the area.
Meghan judges the weight of their selected halibut at 23 pounds, about the same weight as her daughter, Princess Lilibet. The actual weight of the halibut is 8 pounds exactly.
Once selected, Meghan and Clare return to check on the rolls and prepare the halibut. We get My Guide to Compound Butter, which will include Mrs. Sussex's beloved edible flower sprinkles. "Make a cinnamon sugar butter with pressed flowers. We know I like my edible flowers" she tells the camera crew. At last, the meal is finished, one that Clare and Meghan can enjoy; Meghan presents the chef with various gifts and we get a picture of a "surprise visit" from "my husband", whom no one knows what the Aitch his name is.
One of the delights in Just for the Halibut is how Meghan clearly cuts no ice with Clare Smyth. No matter how pleasing the Duchess tries to be, no matter how much enthusiasm and sugary sweetness she throws at her, Smyth is having none of it. The more that Meghan tries to butter up or put Clare down, the more Clare pushes against it. Just for the Halibut is cringe watching, but in a positive way.
Take this exchange between the chef and the Duchess. Smyth has instructed that the roll dough be covered. Meghan, attempting to be chatty and friendly (and maybe a little shady and superior), says, "What do you guys say? Aluminium instead of aluminum foil? Aluminium?" Smyth, clearly displeased that her British pronunciations are being mocked, replies, "Tin foil", visibly put off by Meghan's haughty manner. "Tin. Great," Mrs. Sussex replies in a surprisingly disappointed tone.
I think Markle expected Smyth to play along with Meghan's manner. However, Smyth is not amused by any of this. It seems that the whole "aluminium/aluminum/tin" exchange was a semi-subconscious way for Meghan to make fun of the differences in language. Smyth, I think, took it as this American attempting to show herself as superior. Smyth seemed quite put off by it and would not play along. It is odd that Just for the Halibut had a lot about British vs. American pronunciations. We had "aluminium vs. aluminum". We had "herbs vs. 'erbs". I do not know why that was, but it was.
Clare Smyth gave as good as she got when she talked about the wedding reception catering. She remarked how she had to prepare fried chicken. Smyth, I think, found making the fried chicken a chore, a dish outside her palate. She mentioned that the fried chicken is now part of her off-menu at Smyth's restaurants. However, the impression Smyth left, intention or not, is that she found fried chicken an "American" dish that was wholly unsuitable for a British meal.
Throughout Just for the Halibut, Meghan Markle grows more and more desperate to ingratiate herself to Clare Smyth. Throughout Just for the Halibut, Clare Smyth gently but firmly rejects the overtures. Smyth clearly loves cooking. The times that she expressed both joy and interest is when she is preparing or guiding the meal prep. Smyth was having a good time in the tour of the Santa Barbara Fish Market. It was not because she was with Meghan Saxe-Coburg & Gotha. It was because she genuinely wanted to learn about what types of fish California waters had to offer.
This segment inadvertently revealed Meghan Markle's stupidity. She holds this halibut and judges it to be 23 pounds. The fish ends up weighing 8 pounds. How can someone misjudge weight to such a degree? How does someone not know the difference between 8 pounds and 23 pounds? If you go to the gym, you can see a 5 pound and a 25-pound dumbbell. You would know that they would be different in terms of heaviness. Yet, somehow, in some way, Meghan Markle, who prides herself on her sociopolitical acumen and culinary craftsmanship, cannot distinguish between those two weights.
Worse, she claims to think that the halibut is 23 pounds based on how the fish feels in comparison to her daughter. Does she then think that Princess Lilibet weights 23 pounds? Lili is four years old. I would imagine that a four-year-old would weigh more than 23 pounds. That Markle thinks Lili apparently weighs the equivalent of eight pounds is strange and alarming. How does someone wildly misjudge something like that?
Just for the Halibut contains some oddball comments and statements that would make those awake for it howl with laughter. As Her Royal Highness prepares this travel kit, she muses that it is "a carry-on size of love". In her growing desperation to keep a warm conversation going with Smyth, she waxes rhapsodic on bread. "But no one thinks about the level of focus and love that goes into a dinner roll", the Duchess of Sussex tells Smyth.
I am simply astounded that such words of deep wisdom are expressed publicly. I am more astounded that Her Royal Highness Meghan, Duchess of Sussex, did not think that they sound odd to insipid. Does one really have a level of love when making dinner rolls? This might be news to my baker. Markle, when pushing down on the dough, remarks that the rolls are "squidgy". This turn of phrase brings to mind "Squidgygate", the infamous telephone recording of Aitch's late mother discussing her misery within the House of Windsor. In this case, I think it was an unintentional callback. It is, unfortunately, a very odd thing to say. I would imagine that we Americans would say "squishy" versus "squidgy".
Just for the Halibut has a couple of moments where Meghan Markle does not appear pleased. There is the "aluminium/tin foil" slap-down. Another is in the My Guide to Compound Butter segment. She tells us that "my husband" mocks her for how she pronounces "herbs". Most Americans drop the "h" and say "erbs". The British pronounce it as "herbs" (Smyth and apparently Mr. Sussex do). "You're so American. 'Erbs. 'Erbs", her generation's Wallis Simpson tells her television crew (as Meghan never looks into the camera). Yes, it may be my own sense of things. However, there seemed to be a veiled sense of hostility in what she I think wanted to make sound as amusing. This "herbs/'erbs" difference came across in Markle's telling as almost a source of irritation. Somehow, it suggested, at least to me, that she thought that "my husband" was wrong to pick on her for how she pronounces a word.
It is, however, fine when Meghan Markle does it.
Just for the Halibut is best when Clare Smyth is our guide. Smyth has a clear love and passion and dare I say, "joy" for cooking. She takes it seriously and is a total professional. She came across as warm and engaging when in the kitchen. She also came across as barely tolerant of Her Royal Highness. Both those qualities elevated Just for the Halibut. The episodes where Markle is pushed off to the side, where the genuine cooks do their thing, are the ones that work.
Markle is aware that her children pronounce the word as "zeh-bra" instead of "zee-bra". Markle, however, makes no mention of whether her children pronounce the word as "aluminium" or "aluminum". Meghan Markle drops the "h" in "herbs". "Aitch" has yet to drop Markle, not even for the halibut.
5/10
Next Episode: A Weekend Away
Sunday, December 28, 2025
With Love, Meghan Episode Thirteen: Spice Up Your Life
Saturday, December 27, 2025
Wallis & Edward: The Television Movie
It is not long, however, before the Prince Edward looks upon the brassy American as more than a friend. Wallis is conflicted. She loves Ernest and the security that he provides. However, Edward is besotted with her, and she soon falls to his charms. Wallis' aunt Bessie Merryman (Miriam Margolyes) advises her niece to not let His Royal Highness' attention and affection go to her head. Wallis is convinced that her liaison will be a temporary thing. Edward, she knows, will find a younger and prettier woman to romance and perhaps marry.
Friday, December 26, 2025
Riefenstahl: A Review (Review #2100)
I think, in the end, this is why Leni Riefenstahl still holds such power over people to love or hate her. She, I think, has become the embodiment of and to that generation of Germans who feel perpetually blamed and condemned for the horrors of the Third Reich. Leni Riefenstahl is so much: a cinematic craftsman, a manipulative liar, someone who probably supported National Socialism but who also may have been made a scapegoat for everything that the Nazis did. Riefenstahl makes the case that she bears responsibility for her actions during the Nazi era and went to her grave not accepting it. Exactly how much responsibility, how much blame she can and should bear, however, is a harder question.
Thursday, December 25, 2025
Miracle on Main Street: A Review
MIRACLE ON MAIN STREET
Welcome to Rick's Texan Reviews annual Christmas movie review, where I look at a Christmas-themed film. This year, one that blends film noir elements with themes of redemption and hope.
1939 is heralded as the greatest year in film history. The epic Gone with the Wind would probably have been enough to make that year illustrious. However, we not only had that Southern spectacle, but among other films released that year were Mr. Smith Goes to Washington, The Women, The Wizard of Oz, Stagecoach, Love Affair, Beau Geste, Ninotchka, and The Hunchback of Notre Dame. 1939 was such a grand year for film that even Poverty Row got in on the act. Miracle on Main Street is a little-known film that has no major stars or big budget. What it does have is a lot of heart and a moving story.
In the Spanish Quarter of Los Angeles, there is the traditional posada Christmas celebration. There is also a seedy sideshow, overseen by shady carnie Dick Porter (Lyle Talbot). Among the various dancers is Florita and her Seven Veils. Florita is really Maria (billed simply as Margo), who happens to be Dick's wife. Maria is unhappy in her demimonde but can't find a way out of it. Without being overt, it is understood that she, through Dick's assistance, sells her charms. They make the mistake of trying that with an undercover cop, but both manage to escape.
In the flight, Maria flees into a church, where she is stunned to discover a newborn in the church creche. Impulsively taking the baby to help in her cover, Maria manages to get back to her apartment. Despite herself and common sense, Maria soon falls in love with the abandoned baby, whom she names Donatio. Aided by gruff but loving landlady Mrs. Herman (Jane Darwell) and drunk Dr. Miles better known as "Doc" (William Collier, Sr.), Maria soon starts a new life.
She also starts a relationship with Jim Foreman (Walter Able), recently divorced who wants a traditional wife and children. They fall in love, but Maria is reluctant to share the truth about her past or Donatio's origins. Though struggling financially, she is happy in her new life as a single mother and seamstress. The past, however, finds her in a quandary. Will she have to go back to dancing? Will Dick, now back, cause her more issues? How will she get out from under Dick's thumb and start anew with Jim?
Miracle on Main Street runs a surprisingly short 78 minutes long yet packs a lot of story within its runtime. Frederick Jackson's screenplay gives us an engaging story with flawed but decent characters to care about. We see early on that Maria really is not suited to be this erotic dancer, but she is also self-aware on her lack of virtues. "Well, say you're pretty nice. And a good-looking kid at that," the undercover cop tells her. "I'm not as good as I look," she replies, the double meaning clear. This is a pretty noir line that would evoke a shady lady. In Miracle on Main Street, it reveals Maria as a good girl trying to be bad.
Almost all the characters, particularly the females, are not saintly or wicked, but complicated and contradictory. Darwell, for example, is gruff and not afraid to push for the rent money, threatening to kick Maria and the child out. However, she also provides cover for Maria and Donatio when Child Protective Services threatens late in the film to separate them, insisting that Maria is Donatio's mother. Maria's two fellow dancers, who also escaped during the raid, end up finding more respectable work. One of them even bizarrely manages to pass herself off as a posh erudite British nanny, with her strong New York accent occasionally breaking through.
This provide some of Miracle on Main Street's comic relief, particularly when she, Maria and Jim are at the beach (though why they are all wearing dresses and suits there is strange). Collier, Sr. is also wonderful as Doc with his comic efforts at both drinking and sobriety. He, however, has surprisingly tender moments too. "A woman will do a lot when she's in love," Doc wisely observes to Maria when she frets over her complicated past.
Major credit should go not just to Jackson's screenplay but to Steve Sekely's directing. He got most of his actors to play the parts in a genuine manner. Darwell and Collier, Sr. were absolutely wonderful in their roles, showing a caring if again, flawed character. Margo and Talbot were a bit melodramatic in their performances, but nothing so wildly out-of-tune. To their credit, especially Margo's, they did bring genuine emotion when sharing scenes.
Seleky also had some creative visual moments. The entry from outside the Streets of Cairo sideshow to the dance erotique show inside had great camera work. Miracle on Main Street had a surprisingly integrated male audience at the striptease, with black, Asian and Hispanic male patrons alongside white men enjoying the beautiful women dancing their Ripple Dances.
The film is not perfect. One wonders why the subplot of Jim's first marriage was even there when having him be single would have worked just as well. One also wonders why Maria did not just reveal Dick's blackmail threats instead of trying to drive Jim away with a false story.
A child is at the heart of both the Christmas Story and Miracle on Main Street. While Miracle on Main Street is a Poverty Row production, the film is mostly so well-acted, well-written and well-directed that the low-rent production oddly enhances the film. This is a hidden Christmas gem, one that might be worth remaking and updating. I was deeply moved by Miracle on Main Street, a film that hopefully will be better-known.
2024 Christmas Film: The Holiday Sitter
2023 Christmas Film: Journey to Bethlehem
2022 Christmas Film: Santa Claus (1959)
2021 Christmas Film: It Happened on Fifth Avenue
2020 Christmas Film: Roots: The Gift
2019 Christmas Film: Last Christmas
2018 Christmas Film: Christmas with the Kranks
2017 Christmas Film: The Man Who Invented Christmas
2016 Christmas Film: Batman Returns
2015 Christmas Film: A Madea Christmas
2014 Christmas Film: Prancer
2013 Christmas Film: A Christmas Carol (1951)
2012 Christmas Film: Arthur Christmas
Wednesday, December 24, 2025
Women in Love: A Review
The performances overall were acceptable. Glenda Jackson, as mentioned, won the first of her two Best Actress Oscars for Women in Love. I am puzzled over what exactly in her performance got her a nomination, let alone the win. Was it a weak year in the Best Actress race? It was not a terrible performance. Gudrun could be blunt with people. Did she win the Oscar for dancing with bulls? At a climactic moment, I was awake enough to shout, "KILL GLENDA JACKSON! PLEASE!", so I suppose that made her interesting to watch if I cared enough to see Gudrun strangled. Again, I do not think it was a terrible performance. It was acceptable. However, I do not think it is memorable or interesting.

















