Baldoni did not pose with the actress or their fellow cast members at the time.GC Images
In order to “avoid even a chance of interaction with Lively or her guests,” he claimed to have been “confined to a makeshift holding area surrounded by concession stand stock, with only fold-out tables and chairs arranged in a square.”
The suit read, “Surrounded by close friends, family, soda bottles, and a lot of love, the irony of being held in a basement on what was arguably one of the most important nights of Baldoni’s career thus far, was not lost on anyone.”
Elsewhere, the “Man Enough” podcast co-host claimed to have organized a separate after-party since he was allegedly excluded from the “official celebrity” one.
Baldoni claimed that his production company, Wayfarer Studios, was “forc[ed] to cover the costs for two events — one for Lively and everyone else, and one for Baldoni and Wayfarer’s own friends, family, crew, and team.”
Lively, who is being sued alongside Reynolds and publicist Leslie Sloane, slammed Baldoni’s lawsuit on Thursday, calling it “another chapter in the abuser playbook” via her attorneys.
“This is what experts call DARVO. Deny. Attack. Reverse Victim Offender,” the statement read.
The “Gossip Girl” alum, for her part, filed a complaint against Baldoni in December 2024 and a lawsuit weeks later accusing him of sexual harassment, as well as a social media smear campaign.
Earlier this month, Baldoni’s lawyer, Bryan Freedman, promised NBC News that his client would “absolutely” sue Lively.
At that point, Baldoni had only sued the New York Times for $250 million over their coverage of Lively’s complaint — which the outlet stood by as “meticulous.”