I’ve been following the unsealed text messages in the Blake Lively legal drama through squinty, cringey eyes: It’s unfortunate and deeply awkward when private correspondences between friends are laid bare for public consumption, even when the friends in question are world-famous billionaires like Taylor Swift.
That said, when I saw Ryan Reynolds’ private text messages defending his wife unsealed as part of her legal battle with Justin Baldoni… well, that I was glad to see.
A rep for Reynolds summed it up succinctly to Puck News: “What husband wouldn’t support his wife and the mother of his children?” That’s the real, unequivocal spousal advocacy I’m here for — and I’d expect from my own husband. Not a PR-softened statement or a neutral, diplomatic thing, but an active, protective stance when it counts.
The messages themselves — written during the fraught release window of It Ends With Us — are fiery, emotional, and actually human. Reynolds expresses frustration that Lively wasn’t being allowed to celebrate a professional win amid online speculation and behind-the-scenes chaos. He rejects the lazy, sexist narratives that often snap into place around powerful women and names the toll that kind of treatment takes. In some exchanges, he’s even more blunt, using language that is raw and unvarnished.
“Baldoni and these other buckets of dumb-dumb-juice should be acknowledging the speculation and gossip themselves,” he wrote at one point. “They should be jumping in front of it in the most full throated, unqualified way. Now.”
On other occasions, he referred to Baldoni as a “thoroughbred, predatory fraudster” and an “inexplicably toxic mess.”
Listen, I don’t need my partner to be polite in private when it comes to defending me. I need him to be clear. I need him to be on my side, without equivocation. I need him to understand that silence or neutrality can feel like abandonment when you’re the one taking the hits. (Fortunately, my own husband shows up like that for me, too.)
Lively’s lawsuit alleges sexual harassment and retaliation — claims Baldoni denies — and the legal process will determine what’s proven in court. But the moral question of what a spouse does while that process unfolds is separate.
Loyalty is what happens in the messy middle, when things are uncomfortable and public opinion is divided. It’s advocating behind closed doors and, when necessary, refusing to sanitize your feelings for the sake of appearing reasonable.
I’ve been married long enough to know that partnership isn’t just about shared holidays and inside jokes. It’s about believing your spouse when they say something is wrong — and acting accordingly. It’s about giving your spouse the benefit of the doubt, all the time, and always being on their side when push comes to shove.
Reynolds vented, protected, and affirmed in private conversations that were never meant for public consumption — and that was the right thing to do.
Now that those messages are public, they read less like a scandal to me and frankly more like an inside look at a good marriage — present, loyal, and denensive of his wife. And if I were in Lively’s position, those are exactly the words I’d want to know my husband was saying when I wasn’t in the room.