Differences in the lawsuits filed by JB
Anyone else noticing differences in the two lawsuits he filed? I noticed these two seem to be different
New Lawsuit -page 53 88. In support of what Lively positioned as the impetus for these demands, she alleges Baldoni personally added "graphic content, including a scene in which Ms. Lively was to orgasm on camera." This is false. During a creative meeting, which Lively requested to take place in her home, Baldoni read to her his notes from the intimacy coordinator, including a suggestion that Lively's character orgasm during the scene, similar to the book. Lively remarked, "oh no, l'm too old for that" and Baldoni offered another suggestion instead, also from his notes from the meeting with the intimacy coordinator. Baldoni then moved on.
Lawsuit against the NYT- page 47 68. Baldoni's dated, hand-written notes from his meetings with the intimacy coordinator, which again, Lively declined attending, were read to Lively at her penthouse, where she insisted she and Baldoni meet to write sex scenes together. As it was, the sex scenes were not written and it was always Baldoni's intention for them to be written with input from both the intimacy coordinator and Lively (the "female gaze" that Lively distorts in her CRD Complaint, which the Times then publishes). In response to a proposal from the intimacy coordinator that "Ryle" not orgasm after he satisfied "Lily," Lively remarked: "I'd be mortified if that happened to me", to which Baldoni, following Lively's lead in what seemed like an attempt to connect and develop their characters, remarked that "those have been some of the most beautiful moments with [my wife] and I". Lively again distorts this both in the "Protections for Return to Production" she made Wayfarer, Heath, and Baldoni sign, and in the CRD Complaint, which the Times publishes as fact without any investigation whatsoever. First, this suggestion did not originate with Baldoni, and Lively knew this. Second, it was Lively who first personalized the scenes. And third, and perhaps most importantly, they were writing scenes for their characters.