Blake Lively’s past interview moments are going viral amid the ‘It Ends With Us’ cast feud, as co-star Justin Baldoni speaks out.
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Blake Lively’s past interview moments are going viral amid the ‘It Ends With Us’ cast feud, as co-star Justin Baldoni speaks out.
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It’s like to get Marilyn Monroe to represent a battered woman. What a waste. We need glamour baby!
The profits will come due to her previous fame. These lads must be grateful to Blake!
1. Justin owned the rights to this movie and signed on Blake as an actor/ producer. He wanted her to direct some scenes in some aspect to give a more feminine perspective. That does not mean she should be allowed to bulldoze (which clearly she has) the PR marketing, the scenes implemented in the movie and the writing.
2. This movie is about DV and it’s so distasteful the way she’s moving ahead with this PR. She’s a woman and the only one talking about the DV is Justin, the male director.
3. She’s so calculating, she’s using this movie to promote her ALCOHOL company, Betty Buzz…. I mean be so fucking fr FOR A MOVIE AB DV. Is she dumb… like is her team dumb or is it just her? I don’t even need to get into that. She’s promoting her hair company, which is hilarious coz when stills came out for the movie the only thing people were talking about is her godawful hair/ wig and the clothes she wore which she’s hyping as the core part of this movie.
4. SHES HYPING THE FASHION OF THIS MOVIE. This DV movie. Be so fucking fr. the outfits were atrocious and the interview she’s getting thrashed for was coz she thought she was gonna have her feminist moment and call out being asked about wardrobe from an interview who is the director at a fashion academy…. Bro it’s literally her job and her subject of expertise. Also the interview was for a historical timepiece. THE WARDROBE AND SET was always going to be asked about.
5. Ryan Reynolds literally rewrote the rooftop scene for the movie and no one sees the problem about that. The actual screenwriter didn’t know until the actual premiere and it sounds like she’s been paid off to just not make a scene about it. The reason why I say that is that this movie ONLY WENT INTO PRODUCTION coz the scenes were written already and so it didn’t have a problem with the writers strike. Now the fact that Ryan rewrote the scene is a huge FUCK YOU to all the writers who did the strike and went unpaid for those months because Ryan literally did what they were striking against. They just want creative control and Ofc the Hollywood couple think they’re invincible.
6. This whole smear campaign against Justin is not going to work. Justin has directed amazing movies like Clouds, Five Feet Apart. He has strong connections with all his previous actors/ staff and his whole career has been about advocating against toxic masculinity and for feminism and now y’all wanna paint him in this light. Good fucking luck.
7. It’s funny that people don’t know initially there were two cuts of the movie one was Blake’s which was more light and funny and Justin’s which was more dark and ab DV. It became such a big thing coz Blake wouldn’t let it go that they ended up screening both versions to an audience and Justin’s version won out and became the movie although I can’t imagine it didn’t get tweaked to input Ryan’s scene and other things coz I’m sorry lilys acting was horrible in the movie she just acts ditzy and like everything’s so funny and giggly and doesn’t ever explain anything to Ryle like how she did in the book. If anything the only good part of the movie was the young versions of lily and atlas they rlly hit the spot with the storytelling. Do with that information as you may.
7. Side notes: Blake has always been a Nepo baby bitch. She’s always been rude and distasteful and quite frankly ugly coz of it and she got married on a frigging plantation. Like there were old slave cabins. And supposedly they didn’t know it was a plantation even tho it’s in the name… alr babe whatever u say.
Blake was really mean girl.
Hahaha trigger?
The interviewer was a fashion person of course she would talk about clothes
This isn't a film about real domestic abuse. Nobody is going to leave their abusive husbands over this film because they will recognise that nothing about this film is real. This is a love triangle romance that shamelessly uses domestic abuse as a backdrop to give the story a sense of excitement and momentum. But the shoes...oooh close up on the stilettos please!
No wonder Blake Lively is focusing her publicity on the floral prints and the girl's fun night out and the cocktails that go with it. That's exactly what this movie is for. (unless you're a woman with even the remotest love for good literature which is - most of us.)
The real violence here is women against women. Leave Blake Lively alone for the love of God in heaven. Leave Imane Khelif alone for the love of God in heaven. Leave Kamala Harris alone for the love of God in heaven. Seriously. Allow your sisters to succeed. Don't pretend this is about domestic abuse, physical safety and fairness at the Olympics or trustworthy leadership skills. This is about envy.
Can we be honest for a bloody minute? The controversy isn't that Blake Lively is being sarcastic and lighthearted and flippant about It Ends With Us and is using it all as a vehicle to promote her other products...the controversy is that she dares to be happily married, have four kids, have a net worth of 30 million or more, is notably philanthropic, and worst of all: she still maintains a supermodel figure. That's what we're really mad about, right, ladies? Right you bitchy little YouTubers? The case of Khelif and Harris is far more complex, but it's the same root: envy.
Envy is not my sin. My sin is gluttony, which is obvious. And despised. Why, the first person killed in the movie Seven was gluttony and his only sin was that he liked to eat spaghetti. Apparently he deserved to die.
Envy is horrible amongst women. We are terrible to each other. We are. Stop it. Stop it. Stop it. So X got a commission, so Y got a role, so Z got a promotion, so A met the love of her life so B is naturally slender, so C is making 130,000 a year and she even loves her job. Leave. Her. Alone.
The question underneath it all is: why? Why do women tear down other women? We tear each other down when we're suffering too. Generally speaking. When a woman has a miscarriage "Well, that's not a real baby" when a woman gets raped "are you sure you didn't just misunderstand the situation?" when a woman has PTSD "You need to pull yourself up by the boot straps young lady." When a woman is born assigned as male, don't get me started.
Leave. Her. Alone.
We're better than this, girls. We really are. Grabs some vagina and get a life. We are too often buying into the patriarchy that says we have no right to be powerful and we have no right to complain when we're abused. The truth is, we are powerful, we can change the world, especially when we have each other's backs. There are bigger fish to fry here: genocide, poverty, inequity, the world is on fire...you know. That stuff we'd rather not think about so we obsess about Blake Lively's interview faux pas.
She's probably had four hours of sleep and she's starving herself to fit in that red cat suit for her husband's premiere.
Leave. Her. Alone.
For the sake of everything else more important.
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