I'm not a fan of the way this show sounds, but Sarah isn't going to say anything we haven't already heard hundreds of times before, including her dealings with Andrew and Beatrice and Eugenie. I also agree with IrishEyes, I'm sure Andrew is supporting Sarah in this, so I don't think she'll say anything that really puts the BRF in a poor light.
I'm kind of hoping the show has low ratings and unfavourable reviews (which I think it will) just so Sarah realizes that her story can get old even to American ears.
I remember how Oprah called Sarah a spiritually bankrupt woman in the interview this past summer, and Sarah referred to herself in the third person. This docu-series seems to be the brainchild of two women who have spent too much time reading pop psychology. I don't watch Oprah, but that seems to be her specialty, and when Sarah went to America in the 1990s, I believe she had therapists and people around her who hooked her on the "psychobabble" she sometimes uses. I don't imagine this docu-series will have a large audience by the end of it (if it's how it's portrayed) and I don't even see Oprah's new network as being successful. Sarah has other talents, so I'm hoping her time on this show will earn her the money she does need to pay off her debts, and then hopefully the reviews will be lukewarm enough that she realizes she needs to move on to things other than telling her own story over and over again.
I know, some of you will say that's a pipe dream
If the public delights in her plight, then Sarah's the one performing for their delight. She doesn't have to do it, nobody's put a gun to her head to force her to make a further humiliating spectacle of herself. Sarah has willingly chose this herself. It sounds like it's going to be a repeat of what we've heard for the past eon of years from her, more "poor, pitiful me."
But you have to remember, telling the world about her "plight" was hugely successful for Sarah before. This is how she paid off her first mountain of debts, so even though we may say we've heard it all before, it makes sense that Sarah, when in dire financial straits, would turn to a tactic that worked before.