Chrissy Teigen is getting flamed by fans after she made a candid confession while appearing on the second season of Meghan Markle’s Netflix show, With Love, Meghan.
The model, 39, appeared on the second episode of the show, which premiered last week to dismal ratings.
However, while the two ladies pressed flowers and made sourdough crackers, they began talking about their lives and kids – and Teigen confessed that she had to have her four children’s birthdates tattooed on her arm, as she doesn’t remember them otherwise.
Teigen shares four children with her husband, famed singer John Legend – daughters Luna, nine, and Esti, two, and sons Miles, seven, and Wren, one.
‘Look, I had to get a tattoo of their birthdays, ’cause I don’t remember,’ Teigen said to Meghan during the show, as she rolled up her sleeve to display the tattoo on her forearm.
‘Sweet!’ Meghan said in response.
‘Yeah, so April 14, May… wait, is that a 16 or an 18?’ Teigen continued, as she struggled to read the numbers tattooed on her arm.
The cookbook author then called her husband into the room to help decipher whether the number was a 16 or an 18.

Chrissy Teigen is getting flamed by fans after she made a candid confession while appearing on the second season of Meghan Markle’s Netflix show, With Love, Meghan

The model, 39, appeared on the second episode of the show, which premiered last week to dismal ratings

Teigen shares four children with her husband, famed singer John Legend – daughters Luna, nine, and Esti, two, and sons Miles, seven, and Wren, one
‘Who is this? Myles is…’ Teigen said, as John came in to tell her that her son was indeed born on May 16, 2018.
The clip has gone viral on TikTok, with user @nataliejeffries2 posting the moment from the show.
‘Tell me your children are just a prop without telling me they are,’ Jeffries wrote in purple text over the clip, which has gained over 369,000 views since it was posted.
In the comments section, fans couldn’t believe what they had just watched.
‘I have never seen a mother not know her kids birthday. Ever in my life,’ one person wrote.
Another agreed, ‘Who would freely admit this??’
‘Not memorizing the social security numbers I can excuse. Forgetting your kids birthdays is insane and really sad!!!’ someone else typed.
A user agreed, ‘Wow. I remember the birthday of my kids closest friends. If it matters to you, you’ll remember.’

‘I have never seen a mother not know her kids birthday. Ever in my life,’ one person wrote

‘Who is this? Myles is…’ Teigen said, as John came in to tell her that her son was indeed born on May 16, 2018

Chrissy then jumped in to add how all the models had to deposit their eyelashes ‘in a Ziploc bag’ after the shoot was over

The awkward clip comes just as the dismal reviews have rolled in for the second season of With Love, Meghan
‘As someone that has extreme ADHD and some memory loss, I still remember my kids BIRTHDAYS,’ another chimed in.
Someone else joked, ‘Even Meghan was shook.’
During the show, she and Teigen bonded over their time as ‘briefcase girls’ on Deal or No Deal.
They exchanged together, as Meghan said: ‘I remember us all having to stand in line to get our lashes put in.’
Chrissy then jumped in to add how all the models had to deposit their eyelashes ‘in a Ziploc bag’ after the shoot was over.
During the show, the Duchess also shares intimate details of her family life – from her early dates with Prince Harry and when she fell in love, to their children Archie and Lilibet’s favorite foods and colors.
The awkward clip comes just as the dismal reviews have rolled in for the second season of With Love, Meghan.
The Times of London branded it as ‘the sweet spot where irrelevant meets intolerable,’ while The Guardian’s review described it as ‘so boring’ and ‘so contrived.’
On Rotten Tomatoes, the second season gets a 1.8 out of five stars – while the first season was rated slightly higher at 2.1.
The Daily Mail’s very own Maureen Callahan wrote that The Duchess is ‘incapable of making a joke at her own expense.’
‘The only thing authentic about her is her inauthenticity, which at this point seems pathological,’ Callahan wrote.