- calendar_today August 28, 2025
A Podcast That Sounds Like Something Real
Tennessee doesn’t fall for fluff. We’re storytellers here—we can tell when someone’s being honest, and when they’re just talking. So it’s a bit surprising that Meghan Markle podcast 2025 is resonating in the Smokies and in studios off Music Row.
But it is. Because from the very first episode of Confessions of a Female Founder, Meghan does something rare: she tells the truth. She doesn’t coat it in branding or bury it in strategy. She says, “I was scared,” and she means it.
That kind of plainspoken honesty? That goes a long way here.
Not What We Expected—And That’s Why It Works
When folks first heard Meghan Markle had a podcast about women in business, a lot of people shrugged. Another celebrity show, right?
But Confessions of a Female Founder doesn’t sound like celebrity. It sounds like someone sorting through their doubts, out loud, and letting us listen in. She talks about launching her new brand while recovering from postpartum complications. About Zoom calls with her toddler climbing into view. About not knowing if people would take her seriously.
And for female entrepreneurs in media—and for women anywhere trying to build something from scratch—that hits hard.
In Tennessee, We Know What It Means to Start From the Ground Up
Whether it’s music, ministry, farming, or a new kind of hustle, we don’t wait for permission to begin. We get our hands dirty. We work odd hours. We make things work with what we’ve got.
That’s what makes Meghan Markle podcast 2025 so surprising—it gets that. It’s not flashy. It’s not about success stories with perfect endings. It’s about beginnings. Shaky, doubt-filled, still-going beginnings.
That’s a language Tennessee understands.
These Conversations Don’t Preach—They Sit With You
There’s something soft about how Meghan speaks. Something thoughtful. She doesn’t talk over her guests. She listens. She lets them fumble a bit. She gives them time.
Guests like Whitney Wolfe Herd talk about real struggles—about rejection, fear, burnout. No corporate spin. Just hard-earned lessons.
That’s why Confessions of a Female Founder feels like it belongs here. It doesn’t perform. It invites.
It’s Showing Up in Quiet Moments All Across the State
You’ll hear it while walking the dog in Chattanooga. On drives through the backroads of Franklin. In cafes in Knoxville, playing softly in the background. Women are sending it to each other with a simple text: “This one made me tear up.”
Because when someone like Meghan Markle stops trying to be impressive and starts being human, that’s when we really hear her.
A Line That Sounds Like Something We’d Say
In one episode, she says, “I didn’t think I could do this… but I did it anyway.”
She doesn’t say it like a punchline. She says it like a truth she’s still sitting with. And that kind of honesty? It lingers.
Especially in Tennessee, where we don’t talk big unless we can back it up—and we always know what it feels like to keep going even when we’re scared.
That’s Why We’re Still Listening
It’s not about fame. It’s not about titles. It’s about showing up messy and hopeful and tired—and still daring to build something anyway.
Confessions of a Female Founder won’t fix your life. But it might make you feel less alone while you figure it out.
And here in Tennessee, where we’ve always done a lot with a little, that kind of voice feels like something worth holding onto.




