The future of Meghan Markle's Spotify podcast is unclear after one of the show's producers is reported to be leaving her role.
Rebecca Sananes is said to be quitting as head of audio at Meghan and Prince Harry's Archewell foundation after being hired to work on the Archetypes podcast last year.
Meghan's podcast Archetypes has just finished its first season with the aim of the show to investigate "labels that try to hold women back".
It has seen the duchess chat to historians, experts and women who have experienced being typecast, including celebrities Paris Hilton, Serena Williams and Mariah Carey.
However, the Daily Telegraph reports that Ms Sananes has now quit 18 months into her role as producer.
She has been replaced by media executive Serena Regan but there is still no confirmation that a second series has been commissioned.
And now according to Hello!, busy Meghan is yet to decide if she wants to do a second season.
Ms Sananes wrote on Instagram after Meghan's first episode of Archetypes was released how proud she was.
She said: "I am so proud of our work together and the space Meghan has opened in this podcast series. I'm awed by the authenticity, vulnerability and intimacy that she, and all our guests, share."
Meanwhile, on Sunday, it was revealed that Mandana Dayani would also be leaving her post as Archewell president.
It is understood Harry and Meghan will take on full leadership of the foundation.
The Mirror has approached Archewell for comment.
It all comes as the couple are bracing themselves for the fall-out of their Netflix docuseries Harry & Meghan.
In the latest trailer for the series called Harry & Meghan, the duke discusses the "pain and suffering of women marrying into this institution”, with his words accompanied by footage of both his mother Diana, Princess of Wales, and Kate, before she married Prince William, being surrounded by photographers.
Harry tells how he was “terrified, saying: “I didn’t want history to repeat itself” and “no-one knows the full truth. We know the full truth”.
Billed as a Netflix global event, the streaming giant has promised an “unprecedented and in-depth documentary series” where Harry and Meghan “share the other side of their high-profile love story”. The first episodes are launched on Thursday (December 8).
Against a backdrop of Harry’s long-reported rift with brother William and troubled relationship with Charles, Meghan’s accusations that Kate made her cry in a disagreement over a flower girl dress and claims from both that an unnamed royal made a racist remark about their unborn son and the institution failed to help a suicidal Meghan, the series is expected to further damage the Sussexes’ relationship with the King and his family.
Directed by two-time Academy Award-nominated and Emmy-winning director Liz Garbus, the series will explore “the clandestine days of their early courtship and the challenges that led to them feeling forced to step back from their full-time roles in the institution”.
Harry and Meghan signed lucrative deals – thought to be worth well over £100 million – with Netflix and Spotify after quitting the monarchy and moving to the US in 2020.