When a celebrity files a lawsuit citing harassment and a hostile work environment, her PR team is supposed to make her the sympathetic figure. Blake Lively's team did the opposite.
Everyone is covering the lawsuit. Molly is covering the PR collapse underneath it, and the numbers tell a story the legal coverage is missing entirely.
We dissect:
Why the "grab your friends, wear your florals" press tour was a five-alarm fire from week one
How cross-promoting Betty Buzz during a domestic violence film became the first crack in the foundation
What 22,000+ tracked articles reveal about who is actually winning this fight (it is not the plaintiff)
Why Ryan Reynolds' word cloud has more Wrexham than lawsuit, and what that means
The Met Gala moment that exposed who is really being protected in this marriage
Why "crisis publicist" is a contradiction in terms, and the mistake business owners keep repeating
What every public figure should learn from watching this strategy collapse in real time
This is not a recap of the case. It is a forensic look at the PR machine behind it. When publicity becomes the strategy instead of the byproduct, reputation is what pays.
What you'll learn:
How to spot the difference between a publicist and a crisis manager before you need one
Why winning the news cycle and losing the reputation are not mutually exclusive
What "narrative substitution" looks like when one spouse uses the other as a shield
How to read sentiment data and word clouds to know if your strategy is actually working
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