Allegedly Golden

Not Actually Golden

Allegedly Golden is a podcast that breaks down high-profile civil lawsuits through the lens of a seasoned civil litigator with 25 years of experience. Instead of headlines, hot takes, or breaking news, this show focuses on what the legal documents actually say, how the civil justice system really works, and why media coverage so often gets it wrong. From celebrity defamation cases to corporate battles and civil rights lawsuits, Allegedly Golden helps you understand strategy, power, and the gray areas of the law without dumbing it down and without pretending the drama isn’t part of the appeal. If you want deeper dives, bonus episodes, and some very honest work-and-life talk, come hang out with me on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/cw/notactuallygolden/membership 

Episodes

  1. JAN 27

    What Actually Happened in Court: A Legal Breakdown of the Lively v. Wayfarer Arguments w/ @littlegirlattorney

    In this episode, @littlegirlattorney and I take you inside the courtroom for the highly anticipated Lively v. Wayfarer hearing. A nearly three-hour proceeding that revealed far more through the judge’s questions than through the arguments themselves. We walk through what it was like to be in the room, the sheer scale and seriousness of the hearing, and why this judge’s level of preparation matters more than anything else that happened that day. From sexual harassment and retaliation to independent contractor status, defamation, spoliation, and extraterritorial application of California law, this episode breaks down the real legal fault lines shaping the case. Tune in to hear: What stood out immediately inside the courtroomWhy the judge’s preparation changed the tone of the hearingThe key legal issues at stake and how each side approached themHow sexual harassment claims are evaluated in creative environmentsThe high-stakes debate over employee vs. independent contractor statusWhy the retaliation argument appeared especially vulnerableThe defamation claims and the line between opinion and factWhy the spoliation motion faced steep oddsWhat the judge’s final questions may reveal about his thinkingWant to go deeper? If you want deeper dives, bonus episodes, and some very honest work-and-life talk, come hang out with me on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/c/notactuallygolden/membership Connect on TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@notactuallygolden?lang=en and YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@notactuallygolden

    1h 27m
  2. JAN 20

    What Happens When Celebrity PR Collides With the Law? Inside the Lively Case

    In this episode, I am exploring why celebrity culture feels different now...not because the glamour is gone, but because we understand too much about how image-making works behind the scenes. That understanding becomes especially important when celebrity narratives collide with the courtroom. This week’s Civil Disorder segment focuses heavily on the ongoing Lively litigation, as the court prepares for a pivotal hearing that could dramatically reshape (or even end) the case. A major development precedes that hearing: the judge’s decision on what evidence will remain sealed and what the public will finally be allowed to see. The episode breaks down why sealing evidence is unusual, what the law actually says about public access to court records, and why the distinction between confidential and private information matters more than most people realize. From discovery disputes to deposition secrecy, this case raises serious questions about transparency, litigation strategy, and whether selective secrecy has been used to shape public perception. Tune In to Hear: Why celebrity culture feels less glamorous (and more strategic) than everWhat the Lively case reveals about sealing evidence and court transparencyThe legal difference between confidential and private informationWhy Blake Lively’s deposition matters  and why not seeing it is unusualHow judges decide what the public has a right to see in civil casesWhat deposition testimony reveals about credibility before trialWhy Ryan Reynolds and agency communications may become publicHow litigation can be misused to create headlines instead of justiceWhy free speech protects more than most Americans realizeHow defamation and discrimination claims fit into First Amendment lawWhy bad speech isn’t fixed by more laws but by more speechWhat to watch for ahead of the upcoming court hearingWant to go deeper? If you want deeper dives, bonus episodes, and some very honest work-and-life talk, come hang out with me on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/c/notactuallygolden/membership Connect on TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@notactuallygolden?lang=en and YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@notactuallygolden

    46 min
  3. JAN 13

    Lively v Wayfarer: The Legal Issues That Could End the Case

    In this episode, I’m walking you through what to expect from the upcoming January 22 court hearing in the Blake Lively v. Wayfarer case and, more importantly, what that hearing is not. This episode focuses on the dispositive motions that could end the case before it ever reaches a jury. While headlines frame these motions as an attempt to “deny Blake Lively her day in court,” the reality is far more routine. In civil litigation (especially employment cases) summary judgment and judgment-on-the-pleadings motions are not only common, they are expected. The episode breaks down the major legal questions the court must resolve, including whether California law can apply to conduct that occurred in New York, whether Blake Lively was legally an employee or an independent contractor, and whether procedural missteps before filing suit could be fatal to her claims. Tune in to hear: What dispositive motions are and why they’re filed in most civil casesWhy this hearing is unusual and why the judge likely requested oral argumentHow judges use oral argument to identify appeal-proof rulingsThe eight major legal issues the court must decideWhether California law can apply to a New York-based film productionWhy employment status (employee vs. independent contractor) matters so muchHow pre-suit filing requirements could eliminate the case entirelyWhy the unsigned actor loan-out agreement is central to nearly every issueHow damages limitations could undercut key claimsWhat the evidence spoliation motion is really trying to accomplishWhy this case could end without any factual findings at allWant to go deeper? If you want deeper dives, bonus episodes, and some very honest work-and-life talk, come hang out with me on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/c/notactuallygolden/membership Connect on TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@notactuallygolden?lang=en and YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@notactuallygolden

    1h 2m
  4. JAN 13

    A Full Legal Breakdown of the Blake Lively v. Wayfarer Case

    This episode is a comprehensive, lawyer-level walkthrough of the Blake Lively employment discrimination lawsuit, designed to help listeners finally understand what actually matters (legally) in a case that has been buried under headlines, hot takes, and viral misinformation. From the very beginning, this case has been publicly framed as something it is not. It is not a criminal case. It is not a social media trial. And it is not a referendum on whether Blake Lively is “likable.” At its core, this is an employment discrimination and retaliation lawsuit arising out of a workplace…the set of It Ends With Us. Tune in to hear: Why this case is an employment discrimination lawsuit, not a criminal caseThe legal difference between sexual assault and sexual harassmentHow retaliation claims work and why harassment does not have to be proven firstWhat makes this case highly unusual compared to typical workplace casesWhy leaked texts and emails are not “facts” in the legal senseHow the New York Times article and Vanzan subpoena changed public perceptionWhat discovery revealed and what remains sealed from public viewWhy online smear campaigns are not illegal on their ownHow causation determines whether a claim survives or failsWhat the upcoming dispositive motions could mean for the future of the caseWant to go deeper? If you want deeper dives, bonus episodes, and some very honest work-and-life talk, come hang out with me on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/c/notactuallygolden/membership Connect on TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@notactuallygolden?lang=en and YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@notactuallygolden

    1h 4m
  5. JAN 13

    Welcome to Allegedly Golden: Civil Law, Pop Culture, and the Truth Behind the Headlines

    Welcome to the very first episode of Allegedly Golden-the podcast where civil law, pop culture, and high-stakes drama collide. In this inaugural episode, I’m sharing why this podcast exists, who it’s for, and why the civil side of the legal system deserves far more attention than it gets. With 25 years of experience in civil litigation, I pull back the curtain on how lawsuits actually work, why headlines often mislead, and how powerful people and institutions use the civil system behind the scenes. This show isn’t about hot takes or breaking news. It’s about reading the actual legal documents, understanding strategy, and learning how to think critically about what you’re being told…especially when the media gets it wrong. Tune in to hear: Why civil law is fundamentally different from criminal law and why that mattersHow media coverage often distorts civil lawsuits to sell a narrativeWhy strategy, timing, and procedure matter more than “winning” a single motionWhat people misunderstand about discrimination, sexual harassment, and retaliation lawWhy civil cases unfold publicly and slowly…right in front of us!How lawyers think, why they make certain choices, and what ethics actually requireThe difference between evidence in criminal cases vs. civil casesWhy the law is far more gray than most people realizeWhat kinds of high-profile civil cases this podcast will follow Want to go deeper? If you want deeper dives, bonus episodes, and some very honest work-and-life talk, come hang out with me on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/c/notactuallygolden/membership Connect on TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@notactuallygolden?lang=en and YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@notactuallygolden

    32 min
5
out of 5
187 Ratings

About

Allegedly Golden is a podcast that breaks down high-profile civil lawsuits through the lens of a seasoned civil litigator with 25 years of experience. Instead of headlines, hot takes, or breaking news, this show focuses on what the legal documents actually say, how the civil justice system really works, and why media coverage so often gets it wrong. From celebrity defamation cases to corporate battles and civil rights lawsuits, Allegedly Golden helps you understand strategy, power, and the gray areas of the law without dumbing it down and without pretending the drama isn’t part of the appeal. If you want deeper dives, bonus episodes, and some very honest work-and-life talk, come hang out with me on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/cw/notactuallygolden/membership 

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