Taylor Swift Faces ‘Nightmare' as Blake Lively Texts Are Now Evidence, Claims ‘Source'
Taylor Swift is reportedly 'furious' after the private texts between her and Blake Lively have now become evidence material in court. The multiple Grammy Award-winning singer is allegedly in disbelief that a federal judge ruled the texts admissible in the legal case between Justin Baldoni and Lively.
According to Rob Shuter, a source told them that Swift feels 'blindsided and betrayed' by the situation, as she 'trusted' her friend. 'This is a nightmare,' the insider said. 'Taylor never thought her words would be court evidence — and she blames Blake for not protecting her.'
Taylor Swift reportedly won't have to testify in the Blake Lively and Justin Baldoni case. However, the director's team can allegedly access the two friends' private texts. The messages reportedly discuss rewrites, casting feuds, and power moves behind the scenes. It also includes the singer's alleged role in Lively's reported attempt to seize creative control from Baldoni. As per the news outlet, a legal insider said, 'This could absolutely be twisted into support for Baldoni's claims.'
The source also claimed that Taylor Swift 'wanted to be supportive,' but 'now she's collateral damage.' They further emphasized, 'Taylor is furious. She's already rethinking her entire inner circle.' However, it must be noted that these claims have been made by multiple insiders. Neither Swift nor Livley has commented on the matter publicly.
Originally reported by Nikita Nath on Reality Tea.
The post Taylor Swift Faces 'Nightmare' as Blake Lively Texts Are Now Evidence, Claims 'Source' appeared first on Mandatory.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


News24
11 minutes ago
- News24
Rapper Da L.E.S opens up about his stroke recovery and new music - ‘I am grateful to be alive'
He can stand on his own and walk for a short distance, but the movement on his left arm still needs care. Rapper Leslie Jonathan 'Da L.E.S' Mampe is seeing life through a new lens and grateful after surviving a life-threatening stroke on his 39th birthday in July 2024. The stroke took one month of his life, during which he was hospitalised and could not move. 'I woke up a month later,' he says. It's almost a year now since he has been recovering, and he hopes this birthday this year will be different from last year and be filled with good news. 'I am so grateful to be alive to tell the tale,' Da L.E.S says. 'There are days when it becomes frustrating, but every day comes with a new challenge to overcome.' He has documented his recovery process and started a YouTube channel where he will be sharing his story and journey to recovery. 'The channel is to document what happened and just share with my supporters the process of recovery,' he adds. 'I feel good and I am happy to be here.' Currently in the US, getting the best medical care with family. He is also back in the studio, navigating his way into making music again, and plans to release soon. 'This has inspired me to go back to what I love, my passion, and I will be releasing music.' View this post on Instagram A post shared by Da L.E.S (@2freshles)

Wall Street Journal
25 minutes ago
- Wall Street Journal
The Grammys Chief on How AI Will Change Music
An AI-generated song using fake vocals from Drake and the Weeknd went viral two years ago, racking up millions of listens across Spotify, YouTube and TikTok before being removed. The episode rattled the music business, demonstrating how the rapidly progressing technology could upend long-held standards, protections and processes. Since then, the music industry has been grappling with how to use AI to generate growth while battling with tech giants who say they should be able to freely train their models on record companies' vast intellectual property. Harvey Mason Jr., chief executive of the Recording Academy, which presents the Grammy Awards, is among those on the front lines as the industry pushes for legislation aimed at protecting artists from having their voices, images and likenesses used in AI-generated digital replicas without their consent. Mason, a songwriter and producer who has worked with Whitney Houston, Beyoncé and Justin Bieber and written music for hit movies, looks toward the future both as a music executive and a musician. 'AI's here; it's not going anywhere,' Mason says. 'At the end of the day, we have to make stuff that the computer can't make.' He spoke with The Wall Street Journal about his hopes and fears for AI in the record business.


The Verge
36 minutes ago
- The Verge
Helldivers 2 is the first PlayStation-published Xbox game
Arrowhead Game Studios' Helldivers 2 will make the jump to the Xbox Series X and S consoles on August 26th, costing $39.99. This is the first PlayStation-published title to launch on Xbox. The title will ship with cross play between all platforms. The cooperative PvE third-person shooter was an unexpected hit when it first launched simultaneously on PlayStation 5 and PC in early 2023. It soared in popularity on Steam, where it earned an 'overwhelmingly positive' rating, which flipped to 'overwhelmingly negative' when Sony introduced (then swiftly reversed) a decision to require a PSN login for PC players. Xbox's press release makes no mention of a PSN login, so it likely won't be required here. Helldivers 2 is a gem of a game that's high on hijinx. What initially seems like a serious sci-fi title often gives way to funny, emergent moments, thanks in part to its Strategem system, which requires you to input complex button combos while facing down swarms of enemies. There are a variety of missions you can take on against aliens, robots, and a newer Illuminate species. And, since it's a live-service title, the lore and the stakes are always evolving (and the developers often troll players). It's a fun world to be immersed in, even if you're just grinding the free battle pass for weapon upgrades. My former Polygon colleague Cass Marshall wrote some incredible Helldivers 2 coverage, which have the power to convince just about anyone that they were missing out on a good time. I mean, just look at these headlines below.