After accusing Kardashians and Jenners of copying her fashion, Joseline Hernandez is now targeting the Duchess of Cambridge, Kate Middleton. The reality TV star said Kate wanted to be photographed topless.
Hernandez, who was the special guest co-host of the reality show The Real on Wednesday, explained her stand on the Kate topless photos controversy. While other hosts of the show supported Kate, Hernandez opined it was a deliberate attempt to be in the limelight like Princess Diana.
Also Read: Kate Middleton topless photos: Duke and Duchess seek $1.6 million in damages
"I say that if you are going outside naked, you want somebody to take a picture of you girl, cause who goes outside without no clothes on?!" Hernandez said on the show.
Adrienne Bailon, one of the hosts of The Real, disagreed with Hernandez and said Kate's privacy should be respected and she is allowed to have a normal life. "She just didn't want tan lines! I feel bad. I disagree because I think that although she's the heir to the throne she should be allowed to have a normal life and people should still respect her privacy," she said.
However, Hernandez stuck to her point and said, "She wants to make sure that she turns out like the other queen – what was the other princesses name? Diana – She wanted to get in that light. You cannot tell me, cause I'm from the streets. All that right there? I don't believe that. You mean to tell me that you went outside the window without a top and you don't want nobody to catch you? Girl you're trippin!"
The controversy, which Hernandez is talking about, erupted in September 2012 when Kate along with her husband Prince William was holidaying in the South of France in their villa and a French magazine photographer took topless photos of the Duchess. The magazine carried around 14 topless and private photos of Kate sunbathing with William, following which the royals launched a legal action.
The issue came to limelight over four years later, after the royal couple demanded $1.6 million (1.5 million Euros) in damages from the French magazine Closer. Six people associated with Closer magazine and the regional newspaper La Provence went on trial on Tuesday in connection with the case filed in 2012.