logo
Blake Lively is sued by Texas crisis specialist in latest ‘It Ends With Us' lawsuit

Blake Lively is sued by Texas crisis specialist in latest ‘It Ends With Us' lawsuit

MTV Lebanon06-02-2025

A Texas crisis communications specialist has sued Blake Lively for defamation after the actor pulled him into her legal fight with co-star and director Justin Baldoni over their film, 'It Ends With Us.'
Jed Wallace and his company, Street Relations, filed the $7 million lawsuit in federal court in Texas on Tuesday. It says he had nothing to do with any campaign to harm Lively's reputation as she alleged in a court filing.
Wallace is not among the defendants in Lively's federal lawsuit against Baldoni, his production company and publicists, in which she alleges sexual and other harassment during the production and a campaign to smear her after it. The crisis specialist is named in the court papers and the New York Times story published on the day the series of legal battles began in December when Lively filed a complaint.
Lively's lawyers said in a statement that Wallace's lawsuit 'is not just a publicity stunt.'
'It is transparent retaliation in response to allegations contained within a sexual harassment and retaliation complaint that Ms. Lively filed with the California Civil Rights Department,' the statement said. 'While this lawsuit will be dismissed, we are pleased that Mr. Wallace has finally emerged from the shadows, and that he too will be held accountable in federal court.'
In a filing last week in Hays County, Texas, that seeks a deposition from Wallace, Lively alleges he was used by publicists working with Baldoni to weaponize 'a digital army around the country, including in New York and Los Angeles, to create, seed, manipulate, and advance disparaging content that appeared to be authentic on social media platforms and internet chat forums.'
Wallace's lawsuit says neither he nor his company 'had anything to do with the alleged sexual harassment, retaliation, failure to investigate or aiding and abetting the alleged harassment or alleged retaliation.'
It says the actor's Texas filing 'conceded that Lively has no facts supporting the allegations she made against Wallace and Street,' which is why she now seeks to investigate the extent of his conduct.
After Lively sued Baldoni, he filed his own federal lawsuit against her and her husband, 'Deadpool' star Ryan Reynolds, accusing them of defamation and extortion and seeking at least $400 million in damages.
Baldoni had already sued The New York Times for libel, and his former publicist filed a lawsuit taking Lively's side.
'It Ends With Us,' an adaptation of Colleen Hoover's bestselling 2016 novel that begins as a romance but takes a dark turn into domestic violence, was released in August, exceeding box office expectations with a domestic total of nearly $150 million. The success was followed by near constant turmoil over its production and promotion.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Tourist helicopter crashes into New York's Hudson River, killing all six aboard
Tourist helicopter crashes into New York's Hudson River, killing all six aboard

LBCI

time11-04-2025

  • LBCI

Tourist helicopter crashes into New York's Hudson River, killing all six aboard

A tourist helicopter plummeted upside down into New York City's Hudson River on Thursday, killing all six people on board, including a Spanish family with three children and the pilot, Mayor Eric Adams said. Agustin Escobar, an executive at Germany-based technology company Siemens was among those killed, according to the New York Times, which cited unnamed law enforcement sources. New York City police referred requests for confirmation that Escobar was aboard the helicopter to the U.S. Coast Guard. The Coast Guard said in a statement that it did not yet have the names of the victims. Siemens did not immediately respond to a request for comment outside normal business hours. Video of the crash showed what appeared to be a large object plunging into the river, followed seconds later by what appeared to be a helicopter blade. Afterwards, emergency and police boats were seen circling a patch of river where the helicopter was submerged, with only what seemed to be the aircraft's landing gear poking above the water's surface. Reuters

Val Kilmer, star of 'Top Gun' and 'Batman Forever,' dies at 65 — report
Val Kilmer, star of 'Top Gun' and 'Batman Forever,' dies at 65 — report

LBCI

time02-04-2025

  • LBCI

Val Kilmer, star of 'Top Gun' and 'Batman Forever,' dies at 65 — report

Val Kilmer, who starred in films such as "Top Gun," "The Doors," and "Batman Forever" while earning a reputation as a Hollywood bad boy, has died, the New York Times reported. He was 65. The cause of death was pneumonia, the paper said, citing his daughter Mercedes Kilmer. The California-born, Juilliard-trained actor was one of Hollywood's most prominent leading men in the 1990s before numerous spats with directors and co-stars and a series of flops dented his career. Over the years, Kilmer gained a reputation as temperamental, intense, perfectionistic and sometimes egotistical. Kilmer starred in director Ron Howard's fantasy "Willow" (1988) and married his British co-star Joanne Whalley, with whom he had two children before divorcing. Kilmer was diagnosed with throat cancer in 2014 and underwent radiation and chemotherapy treatments, as well as a tracheostomy that permanently gave him a raspy speaking voice. Post-cancer, his films included a "Top Gun" sequel, "The Snowman" (2017) and "Paydirt" (2020), which also featured his daughter Mercedes. Born in Los Angeles on Dec. 31, 1959, Kilmer began acting in high school and became the youngest student accepted into the drama division of the famed Juilliard School in New York. Reuters

Actor Gene Hackman and wife found dead alongside dog at home
Actor Gene Hackman and wife found dead alongside dog at home

MTV Lebanon

time27-02-2025

  • MTV Lebanon

Actor Gene Hackman and wife found dead alongside dog at home

Gene Hackman, the intense character actor who won two Oscars in a more than 60-year career, has died alongside his wife, pianist Betsy Arakawa, and their dog at home, the sheriff's office in Santa Fe, New Mexico, said on Thursday. A statement from the sheriff said deputies had found the 95-year-old actor and Arakawa, 64, deceased on Wednesday afternoon at around 1:45 pm. "Foul play is not suspected as a factor in those deaths at this time, however exact cause of death has not been determined. This is an active and ongoing investigation by the Santa Fe County Sheriff's Office," it said. Hackman, a former Marine known for his raspy voice, appeared in more than 80 films, as well as on television and the stage during a lengthy career that started in the early 1960s. He earned his first Oscar nomination for his breakout role as the brother of bank robber Clyde Barrow in 1967's "Bonnie and Clyde." He was also nominated for best supporting actor in 1971 for "I Never Sang for My Father". It was his turn as Popeye Doyle, the rumpled New York detective chasing international drug dealers in director William Friedkin's thriller "The French Connection", that assured his stardom and a best actor Academy Award. He also won a best supporting actor Oscar in 1993 as a mean sheriff in the Clint Eastwood western "Unforgiven", and was nominated for an Academy Award for his turn as an FBI agent in the 1988 historical drama "Mississippi Burning". Hackman could come across on the screen as menacing or friendly, working with a face that he described to the New York Times in 1989 as that of "your everyday mine worker". DYSFUNCTIONAL BACKGROUND Born in San Bernardino, California, on January 30, 1930, Hackman's family moved to Illinois when he was a child. His father, a newspaper press operator, abandoned the family when Hackman was a teenager. The future actor remembered seeing his father wave as he drove away, instinctively knowing he would not come back. His mother later died in a fire. "Dysfunctional families have sired a number of pretty good actors," he once said. He joined the Marines at 16, lying about his age so he could get in, and later studied journalism at the University of Illinois. After a short stint as a television technician and administrator, he studied acting at the Pasadena Playhouse in California alongside Dustin Hoffman. Both actors, who were voted least likely to succeed, eventually moved to New York where they worked odd jobs, chased parts and palled around with another then-struggling actor named Robert Duvall. Hackman appeared on Broadway in "Barefoot in the Park", and "Any Wednesday". A bit part in a low-budget movie, "Mad Dog Coll" (1961), was followed by a critically acclaimed supporting role in "Lilith" (1964), starring Warren Beatty. The actor, who shunned celebrity, starred in "Hawaii" (1966) and three lesser-known films before Beatty cast him in "Bonnie and Clyde". He varied his roles from a ski coach in "Downhill Racer" (1969) and a skydiver in "The Gypsy Moths" (1969) to an astronaut in "Marooned" (1969). A method actor, he drew from his personal experience to flesh out a role. His characters were sometimes raw and violent and ranged from a small-town basketball coach in the 1986 sports film "Hoosiers" to Superman's archrival Lex Luthor. Acting honors apparently did not mean much to Hackman. In 2011, he told Time magazine he was unsure where his Oscar statuettes were.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store