Inventing Anna led directly to “a torrent of online abuse, negative in-person interactions, and pejorative characterizations in podcasts”.
“This action will show that Netflix made a deliberate decision for dramatic purposes to show Williams doing or saying things in the Series which portray her as a greedy, snobbish, disloyal, dishonest, cowardly, manipulative and opportunistic person,” the suit reads.According to Williams, her onscreen counterpart—portrayed byalum Katie Lowes—is a freeloading, backstabbing witch who turns on Sorokin during a sojourn to Morocco, when the fraudster shows signs of being in dire financial straits.
with show creator Shonda Rhimes, who isn’t named as a defendant in the suit. “We wanted to know what we were making up; we didn’t want to be making things up just for the sake of it,” Rhimes explained, in what Williams called “an admission.” “We wanted to intentionally be fictionalizing moments versus accidentally fictionalizing them,” Rhimes added.
Williams’ attorney, Alexander Rufus-Isaacs, argued that the issue at the heart of Netflix’s alleged defamation was the choice to use his client’s real name and biographical details, something afforded to few other characters in the show.
. She sold the rights to both her article and the book to HBO, walking away with around $340,000 before taxes, according to
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