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So, in fact, he was in the basement and a separate screening room. We agree. |
That’s part of the defamation case. |
NP. I just listened to it. Pretty astounding that the NYT gave all of them just 14 hours to respond. You can argue Baldoni would have a lawyer on call, but the PR people? So weird that they felt the need to rush this story. There was nothing urgent about it that I can see. |
I think his defamation case related to the SH claims from Blake is in SDNY. But I believe he filed the NYT case in CA. |
I get that he watched the movie with the execs, the people with real power in hollywood. And was put in a different location when the rest of the cast walked the carpet, including the author, at their request. again:
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Duh, if they feared losing, they would not publicize it further, now would they? |
No, we don't. Because you are skipping over the part where he arrived at the red carpet, took photos, enjoyed the experience with his wife and their friends, did press interviews, etc. He did all of that and then went inside. And then they waited in that basement area while Lively and the rest of the cast did the exact same thing he had just finished doing. Then they all went into screening rooms and watched the movie. The only differences in their experience is that Lively and others waited in vehicles outside the venue until Baldoni was done with his red carpet, versus waiting in the basement. But if they'd reversed the order so that it was Lively et al who were in the basement, it would have been worse for Baldoni because some press would not have bothered to stick around for his red carpet once all the actual famous people had already gone inside. By going first, Baldoni got better exposure and more press there for his portion of the event. If he wanted to walk the red carpet with the cast, he should have been a better director which might have led any member of the cast to actually want to be there with him. They didn't. That is on him, I'm sorry. |
Nah, it’s not unusual to double down on reporting |
Also different is that Baldoni was backed up by the studio execs and Blake was not. |
That doesn't strike me as "astounding." It sounds pretty typical. If a newspaper does a deeply researched piece on your wrongdoing which includes actual text messages they have verified as true, they aren't going to give you days to get ahead of that narrative and undermine their reporting. They are going to give you enough time to respond and then publish. But in any case, Baldoni actually responded with a statement within just a couple hours, so it turns out that 14 hours was more than enough. I don't think we know how much time they gave the PR people, actually. It's not like Baldoni lives with Melissa Nathan. Presumably they contacted people separately. |
Rights and so when he wasn’t in the screening room, he was in the basement and it was not for a super short period of time as you are trying to suggest. |
They asked him to confirm or deny an entire article, add he denied it and that ended their inquiry. I’d like Twomey to explain how she “meticulously investigated” the article but not a whiff of that in the 30 minute puff piece. Which is why it’s a joke, |
Obviously not, it would open them up to further damages. Quite the signal from their lawyers re: strength of case today. |
| It’s been over a month and The NY Times still has done no additional investigation. |
He walked the red carpet and watched the screening with the execs. I'm sorry this doesn't help back your case but these are facts. I guess he had to wait in some antechamber at the bottom of some stairs for a bit. It wasn't just BLAKE who said they didn't want to be around him. The cast was with her! Hoover supported her! And the guys with the money supported him. And that tells me a lot. |