Exhibit A-List
Episode 37 is a big one. The brand behind those pastel ceramic pans you bought after hearing about them on a wellness podcast just got sued by two of the biggest cookware conglomerates in the world. Groupe SEB and Meyer Corporation, the companies behind All-Clad, T-fal, Farberware, and Rachael Ray cookware, filed a federal lawsuit against Caraway in the Southern District of New York alleging false advertising, commercial disparagement, and trade libel. Their argument: calling PTFE-coated cookware toxic, cancer-causing, and full of forever chemicals is scientifically inaccurate and designed to scare consumers. Caraway says they are simply telling the truth. Jasmine breaks down the Lanham Act false advertising framework, what the science actually says on both sides, and why the fake American Cancer Society link in Caraway's marketing is the most damaging detail in the complaint. Elon Musk just lost a $150 billion lawsuit against OpenAI. Not because the jury found he was wrong. Because he waited too long to file. A nine-member jury deliberated for three hours and unanimously dismissed every claim on statute of limitations grounds. The court never ruled on whether OpenAI actually broke its founding nonprofit promise. Jasmine explains what a statute of limitations is, why the most expensive legal team in the country still ran into one, and her honest theory about why Musk may have filed this lawsuit even knowing it could fail. Dalton Eatherly, the Tennessee rage-bait livestreamer known as Chud the Builder, was charged with attempted murder after a shooting outside the Montgomery County Courthouse. His victim Joshua Fox is a Black disabled veteran and father of three. Eatherly livestreamed himself from the stretcher. Jasmine breaks down the self-defense question, why his documented history of deliberately provoking confrontations is going to matter enormously to a jury, and what the charges actually carry in Tennessee. Then Mikayla Nogueira, the TikToker with 17.4 million followers, posted a get ready with me for divorce court and showed up in a brand new Birkin, fresh Louboutins, and a full diamond stack while announcing she was serving a certain energy. Jasmine explains exactly why that video is now evidence, what divorce proceedings actually turn on financially, and what her lawyer was probably feeling when those seventeen million views started rolling in. Plus: Erika Jayne settled her $25 million bankruptcy lawsuit days before trial without disclosing terms. And the combined legal fees in the Blake Lively and Justin Baldoni case are now estimated at $60 million, making the attorneys the only confirmed winners of that entire eighteen-month saga. Follow Jasmine:Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jasminewegesq [https://www.instagram.com/jasminewegesq%E2%81%A0%E2%81%A0]TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@jas_the_lawyer [https://www.tiktok.com/@jas_the_lawyer%E2%81%A0%E2%81%A0]Website: https://www.wegesq.com [https://www.wegesq.com]Subscribe, rate, and share Exhibit A-List to stay updated on new episodes.
37 episodios
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