The Jewish creator of Tiktok says she was accused of being hit by anti-Semitistic hatred and taking part in a smear campaign against Blake Lively.
She claims this started later Break LiveThe legal team of cited her social media post in the actress’s famous lawsuit against her co-stars in “It Ending with Us” Justin Bardoni.
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The Jewish creator of Tiktok speaks out after Blake’s lively lawsuit, after Fallout caused online hatred and rejection of work

Nikki Lieberman, 26, posted under his username “ThickJewishgirl.” Daily Mail She detailed the unexpected backlash she endured since her name appeared on a court declaration due to Lively’s delinquent and sexual harassment complaints.
Lieberman originally posted a video of Tiktok last August. Blake promotes Colleen Hoover’s adaptation while keeping silent about domestic violence and criticizing Blake for being silent live.
“In interviews with the large audience that Blake Lively has and all the reporters she has, she was surprised that she never spoke about domestic violence before,” Lieberman said in the current clip.
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Tiktoker speaks after being named in Break Live lawsuit

A few months later, her video was mentioned in Lively’s legal complaint as evidence of a targeted effort by his team at Baldoni and Wayfarer Studios to harm her reputation. Lieberman said that after journalists began contacting her, he only learned about her inclusion.
She found that Blake Lively’s legal team claimed that Bardoni had distributed her video within the production company, claiming that she was willing to be a participant or a useful pawn of the organized smear.
“I don’t know what she went through, so I don’t know what he went through,” Lieberman said. “But I’m just a random girl with an opinion.”
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Vibrant, Bardoni’s Lawsuit Fallout causes waves of hatred

Vitriol was faster when the lawsuit came into the headlines. Lieberman says she was falsely accused of being paid to deprive Blake of the vitality, attacked by misogynistic and anti-Semitic slur, and blamed her for undermining the woman who spoke up.
“You’re the reason people don’t believe in women,” one user wrote.
Others went further, sought “another Holocaust” and questioned her motivations by referencing Bardoni’s Jewish heritage. “He is Jewish, and your Jews have not taken any rocket scientists,” a commenter claimed.
Lieberman removed many of his most disgusting remarks, but not before he documented them.
Fallout spilled into her professional life.
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After being fired from her tech job in October (for unrelated reasons), Lieberman says she was rejected by two potential employers who Googled her and didn’t like what she saw.
“They told me, ‘We don’t need drama. It’s not a great look,” she said.
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She shared the truth in Tiktok and then hatred was caught up in her.
The video of Tiktok, at the heart of the storm, appeared with Bardoni after Lieberman attending the “It Ending Us” screening in Highland Park, Illinois, discussing the film’s heavy subject matter with caution and intention. Lieberman praised his words and performance.
“The way he talked about films and domestic violence was just beautiful to me,” she recalls.
Her post praised Bardoni for raising awareness, but Liebermann was energized as something he saw as a missed opportunity to talk about domestic abuse. She said she wasn’t particularly happy to portray her as a participant and didn’t plan on the video as a flashpoint in the legal war.
Lieberman says he never had any connections with the production or Bardoni, except to be moved by what he saw at the premiere. Her Tiktok channel, which shares a deep personal story about body image and self-doubt, has never been caught up in Hollywood controversy before.
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The creator of the Center of Lively lawsuit Tiktok turns hatred into empowerment

She says that unwanted attention has ironically grown her platform.
“It gave Blake the opportunity to create a community of women who empower each other and use the platform in a way that allows us to turn negative experiences into something positive in real life.”
She has since found new jobs and remains determined to stand in her position.
“I think they thought I was just a little Chicago guy. “But I’m here. Don’t ruin the fat jewishgirl.”