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The alleged online smear campaign against Blake Lively is a reminder of how eager society is to ‘hate on women’

By
Emma Hinchliffe
Emma Hinchliffe
and
Nina Ajemian
Nina Ajemian
Down Arrow Button Icon
By
Emma Hinchliffe
Emma Hinchliffe
and
Nina Ajemian
Nina Ajemian
Down Arrow Button Icon
December 23, 2024, 9:15 AM ET
Blake Lively
Blake Lively was likely the victim of an online smear campaign during the release of her film "It Ends With Us." Gareth Cattermole/Getty Images

Good morning! Netflix acquires the FIFA Women’s World Cup broadcast rights, Paramount Global and Skydance Media’s merger is challenged, and Blake Lively is the latest victim of tactics long used to discredit women.

– Hollywood drama. If you spend any time on TikTok or Instagram, you probably saw lots of talk about Blake Lively a few months ago. Around the time of her film It Ends With Us‘s release in August, a conversation started on social media: people noticed that Lively and her costar and director Justin Baldoni avoided each other during the film’s press tour and began speculating about who was at fault for the rift. From Lively’s upbeat tone during interviews (the film is about domestic violence) to her new haircare brand, many found things to object to about the actress and were quick to jump on the hate bandwagon.

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Turns out, they may have had some help. New reporting from the New York Times finds that Lively was likely the victim of a coordinated online smear campaign executed by a crisis PR firm hired by Baldoni. The pair indeed had issues on the set of the movie; she had accused him and his film studio Wayfarer’s CEO Jamey Heath of misconduct, from improvising intimate kissing and dialogue out of character, to entering her trailer while she was nude, to discussing their sex lives in front of her, to hiring a friend for a role as an OB/GYN who would be close to a nude Lively during a birth scene. Baldoni, who hosted a podcast about gender equity and toxic masculinity, allegedly hired a crisis PR firm because he worried she would bring these allegations to light during the film’s release.

Blake Lively was likely the victim of an online smear campaign during the release of her film “It Ends With Us.”
Gareth Cattermole/Getty Images

Lively filed a legal complaint alleging all of this on Friday. A lawyer for Baldoni and Heath’s studio Wayfarer called the claims “completely false” and the complaint an attempt by Lively to mend her reputation.

Hollywood drama aside, the alleged smear campaign serves as an illustrative example of the tools that can now be deployed against women and victims of abuse. Crisis management expert Melissa Nathan had also worked for Johnny Depp; Amber Heard, who accused Depp of abuse, was suspected to be the victim of a similar online campaign that decimated her reputation.

The extent to which these tactics work is scary—especially the fact that so few seem to realize that the content they’re mindlessly consuming has an ulterior motive. TikTok videos and Instagram comments add up to have real consequences. In one message uncovered as part of the complaint, Nathan acknowledged the societal factors that allows these campaigns to succeed: “It’s actually sad because it just shows you have people really want to hate on women,” the PR strategist wrote. Even she was surprised at the extent of social media outrage toward Lively.

In many people’s eyes, Lively was not a “perfect victim”—not that there is such a thing. Compared to Baldoni, she was the bigger star, with an A-list husband in actor Ryan Reynolds. And still her 20-year career took a real hit after a few months of coordinated online reputational damage. Sales of her new brand were affected, reportedly dropping as much as 87% a month after its debut.

Even for one of Hollywood’s biggest stars, this effort came close to taking her down. A woman with fewer resources would have been “buried,” to use the crisis PR firm’s term, by this—just look at the state of Heard’s reputation today. The episode is a reminder to consume social media content with skepticism. New platforms can be part of an age-old desire: to see powerful women fall.

Emma Hinchliffe
emma.hinchliffe@fortune.com

MPW Daily will return to your inbox Friday, Dec. 27. Happy Holidays!

The Most Powerful Women Daily newsletter is Fortune’s daily briefing for and about the women leading the business world. Today’s edition was curated by Nina Ajemian. Subscribe here.

ALSO IN THE HEADLINES

- Streaming service scores.Netflix secured the U.S. broadcast rights to the FIFA Women’s World Cup in 2027 and 2031. This is the first competition that the company has acquired in full, as it continues to move into the live sports space. Variety

- Calling out concerns.The $8.4 billion merger between Paramount Global, chaired by Shari Redstone, and Skydance Media is being challenged by the Center for American Rights. The law firm is concerned about a Chinese holding company’s stake in Skydance, as well as CBS News’ history of “ideological bias and news manipulation” and CBS Television’s  “racial discrimination in hiring and promotion.” Skydance did not respond to a request for comment and Paramount declined to comment. Reuters

- More AI.Accenture CEO Julie Sweet spoke with 30 CEOs around the world over the past two months, sharing, “[P]retty consistently, clients are seeking to do more in AI, but they are in such different places.” Accenture itself has leaned into AI, and in the first quarter of 2024 brought in $1.2 billion in AI bookings. Fortune

- Wish list.Tech journalist and podcast host Kara Swisher wants to buy the Washington Post and is gathering a group of investors to make a bid. While current owner Jeff Bezos has not expressed an interest in selling, Swisher thinks this could change. Axios

MOVERS AND SHAKERS

Leslie Meaux Pordzik is retiring from Ginnie Mae, where she served as SVP of the office of issuer and portfolio management after 13 years at the agency.

Inkhouse, a strategic communications firm, appointed Amanda Kelley as executive vice president and New York general manager. She was previously director of global PR and content at Cambridge Innovation Center.

HCA Healthcare named Wendy Warren senior vice president and chief ethics and compliance officer, succeeding Kathi Whalen who is retiring after 27 years at HCA. Warren was previously associate general counsel and vice president of payer contracting and alignment and Parallon at the company.

Planet Home Lending, a mortgage lender, named Candice McNaught SVP, business development and strategic initiatives. Most recently, she was SVP of national sales at Supreme Lending.

Eaton, a power management company, named Lucy Clark Dougherty general counsel. She will later serve as executive vice president and chief legal officer. Previously, Dougherty was SVP, general counsel and secretary at Polaris.

ON MY RADAR

How will Australia’s under-16 social media ban work? We asked the law’s enforcerNPR

How J.Crew’s CEO is bringing preppy backFast Company

The Goop wifePuck

PARTING WORDS

“I really do have to be centered and grounded in my craft and what I want, not what other people want from me, not from what is the glitziest and glam-est version of it, but what makes me happy.”

—Euphoria actor Barbie Ferreira on choosing her next projects and making her Broadway debut

This is the web version of MPW Daily, a daily newsletter for and about the world’s most powerful women. Sign up to get it delivered free to your inbox.
About the Authors
Emma Hinchliffe
By Emma HinchliffeMost Powerful Women Editor
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Emma Hinchliffe is Fortune’s Most Powerful Women editor, overseeing editorial for the longstanding franchise. As a senior writer at Fortune, Emma has covered women in business and gender-lens news across business, politics, and culture. She is the lead author of the Most Powerful Women Daily newsletter (formerly the Broadsheet), Fortune’s daily missive for and about the women leading the business world.

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By Nina AjemianNewsletter Curation Fellow

Nina Ajemian is the newsletter curation fellow at Fortune and works on the Term Sheet and MPW Daily newsletters.

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