Blake Lively Voice Memo Reveals Loving Messages to Justin Baldoni Amid Lawsuit
Private warmth resurfaces as a legal fight reshapes how Hollywood hears old words

A newly surfaced voice memo involving Blake Lively and Justin Baldoni is adding an intimate layer to a dispute already reverberating through Hollywood.
The recording, shared amid an ongoing lawsuit, captures Lively speaking warmly to her 'It Ends With Us' director and co-star, and even sending love to his family.
The disclosure has unsettled fans and industry watchers alike, not because of what is said alone, but because of when it has re-emerged. In an industry where tone and context can shift careers, the memo has become a breaking point for how personal exchanges are reinterpreted once legal lines are drawn.
As more recordings surface, the story has moved beyond celebrity curiosity into a wider reckoning over trust, boundaries and perception.
A Voice Memo That Struck a Different Tone
The earlier voice memo shows Lively speaking affectionately to Baldoni, thanking him for his support and extending love to his family, according to Us Weekly. The message, recorded during pre-production on 'It Ends With Us', reflects a collaborative relationship marked by reassurance rather than tension.
'Hey. I hope you're so well', Lively said on the voice recording that was sent during the pre-production days of her movie with Baldoni in February 2023. 'Just wanted to connect just to put something on your radar. So, between us. Like, this is so premature for me to even share this with you. All good, all good stuff. Headline is great, good, great stuff.'
Sources familiar with the memo describe it as informal and emotionally open, a contrast to the strained public narrative that later followed. For supporters of Lively, the recording underscores how professional bonds can be warm without crossing boundaries.
'So nice talking to you', Lively said at the end of the voice memo. 'Not talking to you, this is so sad. This is my social interaction these days, just talking into voice memos. OK, I hope you're well. Send my love to your family who don't know me. Take care, bye.'
For critics, however, its release raises uncomfortable questions about how such exchanges are later weighed when legal disputes emerge.
'Beautiful': A Second Memo Shifts the Spotlight
The focus intensified with the release of a separate voice memo in which Justin Baldoni called Blake Lively 'beautiful' after she sent him a fitting photo for the film. As stated by TMZ, the message was recorded before filming began and framed as encouragement rather than flirtation.
Baldoni also told Lively she gave him 'chills,' language that has since been dissected for meaning and intent, Just Jared reported. Baldoni has publicly maintained that the comments reflected admiration for her commitment to the role, not a personal advance.
Still, in the context of a lawsuit, even supportive language has taken on new weight.
Context, Consent and Creative Collaboration
Directors and actors often exchange informal encouragement to build trust, especially on emotionally heavy projects like 'It Ends With Us'.
The controversy arrives at a fragile moment for Lively, as questions swirl about how the lawsuit could affect her future roles, Puck News noted. The publication notes that perception, rather than proven misconduct, often drives casting decisions in high-stakes productions.
The memos, stripped from their original context, now sit at the intersection of personal rapport and public scrutiny.
Lawsuit Fallout and the Cost of Reinterpretation
For Blake Lively, the resurfaced memos may complicate a narrative centred on professional grievance. For Justin Baldoni, they risk casting normal creative encouragement in a more suspicious light.
Neither side has alleged criminal behaviour. Yet the emotional impact has been real, with fans divided over whether the recordings humanise the relationship or deepen the controversy.
When Private Words Become Public Record
The episode has reignited debate over privacy in an era where digital messages rarely stay buried. Voice memos, once fleeting, can become permanent fixtures in legal and cultural memory.
As the lawsuit unfolds, the recordings serve as a reminder that tone, timing and trust can all shift once disputes enter the public eye. In Hollywood, the most revealing moments are often the ones never meant to be heard beyond their original listener.
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