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Blake Lively and Ryan Reynolds enjoyed a bright date night, taking a break from the drama surrounding the legal battle with Justin Bardoni at the New York premiere of “Another Simple Favor.”
In pastels, the mint green Greek goddess gown, 37-year-old Blake, looked like a million dollars, playfully instigated the dress and posed for the photographer.

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Ryan, 48, looked stylish in his grey plaid suit.
The couple was upbeat and even had a little dance move.
Others at The Glitzy event included director Paul Feig and Lively co-star Anna Kendrick.
Lively attendees said, “It’ll end with us,” in a legal battle between the couple and her final film.
Just this past week, Bardoni’s legal team has blown up Lively and Reynolds’ tactics with “Super Shady.”
A few months before things exploded between vibrancy and Bardoni, her legal team filed a lawsuit in their case against the director “It ends with us” to get a damaging text.
To keep it downlow, Lively’s team filed it under the plaintiff who did not recognize “Vanzan” as “Vanzan.”
Documents from September 27th stated, “This case arises from an ongoing campaign to undermine the plaintiff’s business and the reputation of the plaintiff… The defendant has certain contractual and confidentiality and obligations to the plaintiff, through oral commitments and/or written contracts, of good faith and loyalty to the plaintiff regarding the plaintiff’s business and reputation.”
According to deadlineJustin’s PR team was summoned in October. The subpoena states, “concerns, references, related and applies to all electronic records, data, documents and communications collected from the mobile phone containing the requested information.”
After successfully obtaining the text, the lawsuit was dropped just to help Blake file a now-notorious sexual harassment complaint against Bardoni.
“Mr. Lives and Mr. Reynolds’s company Vanzan had nothing to do with the case. They knew that. This fake lawsuit was designed to gain the power of a subpoena without surveillance or scrutiny,” Bardoni’s lawyer Brian Friedman told the outlet.
“There is nothing ordinary about this,” Friedman said, “We argue that the parties who are not involved in these cases are ineligible to breach of contract with other parties that they claim cannot be identified.
Lively’s legal team denies fraud. Her lawyers Esra Hudson and Mike Gottlieb said, “There’s nothing here. A conscientious and thorough investigation. They acted on reliable information and adopted common tools such as DOE litigation and civil subpoena.