Entertainment
From Diddy to Kardashians the biggest celebrity legal battles of 2025
Another year, another round of celebrity legal battles that remind us that even in 2025, the toxicity and criminal activity in Hollywood runs deep.
The cracks have been showing for years if not decades; between bigshot filmmaker Harvey Weinstein being convicted of rape and the beloved Princess of Pop, Britney Spears, revealing she’d practically been made to perform on gunpoint, the industry’s reckoning has been a long time coming. And although we’re still a long ways away, significant strides were made this year.
If you thought 2024 was chaotic, 2025 proved Hollywood’s legal storm is just getting started.
1. The reckoning of Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs
A year after his September 2024 arrest, Sean “Diddy” Combs faced the biggest reckoning of his career: a federal criminal trial that ran for nearly two months in the summer of 2025. After weighing five felony counts, the court sentenced Combs to 50 months in prison (4 years) with a $500,000 fine. It could’ve been much worse; he avoided a potential life sentence after being acquitted of the two major charges — sex trafficking and racketeering conspiracy.
The trial, which was not televised, began on May 12 under Judge Arun Subramanian in a Manhattan courtroom with a 12-person New York jury made up of eight men and four women. From day one, Combs’ defence leaned on a technical distinction central to their case. “Domestic violence is not sex trafficking,” they argued in opening statements, framing the prosecution’s narrative as an overreach rather than a federal crime (BBC).
The prosecution’s star witness was Combs’ ex-girlfriend Cassandra “Cassie” Ventura, who signed onto Combs’ Bad Boy Records in 2005 at age 19. Her 2023 sexual assault lawsuit — settled within 24 hours for $20 million — had triggered a wave of more than 70 civil suits against Combs and helped set the stage for the federal investigation. On the stand for four days, Cassie described being assaulted by Combs while trying to flee one of his alleged “freak-offs” in 2016, a moment which was caught on camera and leaked by CNN months before Combs’ arrest.

Combs’ team called no defence witnesses, nor did Combs take the stand. They opted instead for aggressive cross-examinations. Legal analyst Mitchell Epner noted that the strategy signalled confidence: that the prosecution’s witnesses “made our case,” and that the defence didn’t need to present additional testimony to raise reasonable doubt (USA Today).
Several high-profile figures were pulled into the proceedings. Kid Cudi testified that his car was deliberately blown up during the period he briefly dated Cassie. Other celebrities, like Usher and Justin Bieber, surfaced in online conspiracy theories. Kanye West even appeared at the courthouse one day in support of Combs. Suge Knight, founder of Death Row Records, publicly defended Combs from prison despite their infamous rivalry. Meanwhile, 50 Cent’s top-streamed Netflix documentary on Combs intensified public scrutiny with footage and allegations that stretched back to the 1990s.
After six weeks, the jury delivered its verdict: not guilty on sex trafficking and racketeering conspiracy, but guilty on two counts of transportation with intent of prostitution. Combs was formally sentenced on October 3. With credit for time served and a one-month added sentence over alleged prison rule violations, the disgraced hip hop mogul is eligible for release on June 4, 2028.
2. Justin Baldoni loses defamation case against Blake Lively
Blake Lively closed out 2024 by officially filing a sexual harassment lawsuit against her It Ends With Us costar and director Justin Baldoni on December 31. That same day, Baldoni filed a $250 million defamation lawsuit against The New York Times over their report that Baldoni orchestrated a “smear campaign” against Lively. And thus, the stage was set for Lively vs. Baldoni 2025.
On January 16, Baldoni filed a second lawsuit alongside Wayfarer Studios — a $400 million countersuit targeting Lively and her husband Ryan Reynolds, accusing them of hijacking the film and orchestrating a smear campaign against him. In his complaint, Baldoni alleged Reynolds mocked him using the character “Nicepool” in Deadpool & Wolverine, which was released around the same time as IEWU. Baldoni’s team then launched an aggressive strategy, releasing videos, audio clips, emails, text messages, details of his lawsuits, and a timeline of events on a website called “Lawsuit Info.” The website is still available: thelawsuitinfo.com.

The move did not sit well with Federal Judge Lewis J. Liman, who warned both sides about litigating in the press and tainting a jury (ABC News).
By March, Reynolds filed a motion to dismiss Baldoni’s defamation suit, arguing it lacked legal grounding and stemmed solely from Baldoni’s “hurt feelings” over Nicepool. Lively filed her own motion to dismiss two days later, calling Baldoni’s claims an abuse of process and invoking California protections for harassment accusers.
On June 9, Judge Liman dismissed Baldoni’s $400 million countersuit and his $250 million suit against The New York Times. The newspaper later sought damages from Baldoni and Wayfarer for legal fees.
Taylor Swift became an unexpected figure in the dispute after Baldoni’s team issued subpoenas seeking her communications with Lively, accusing Lively of trying to pressure Swift to publicly pledge allegiance to her. Swift’s representatives brushed off the claim as a publicity stunt. The first subpoena was withdrawn, but Baldoni’s team reissued another later in the year. They also tried to depose Swift by serving her deposition papers outside her fiancé Travis Kelce’s house, but failed (People magazine).

Lively sat for her deposition on July 31. Shortly after, Baldoni’s team filed an unrevised draft in court, prompting Lively to move to strike it from court records. In August, Judge Liman granted Lively’s request to unseal evidence she says shows Baldoni’s team orchestrated a smear campaign. Lively is also seeking millions in attorney fees under California’s Protecting Survivors from Weaponized Defamation Lawsuit Act of 2023 — a point Baldoni’s team disputes.
Baldoni’s attorneys argue that the law doesn’t apply to this case as Lively “fabricated her allegations of sexual harassment,” which is what they’re going to try to prove in trial. But will that day actually come?
In early December, Judge Liman postponed the trial from March 9 to May 18 due to his criminal trials taking precedence over civil cases. He also advised both parties to consider settling outside of court.
3. Kendrick vs. Drake
Drake’s new year resolution for 2025 was to leave his feud with Kendrick behind. On January 3, Conductor Williams released a Drake freestyle track, Fighting Irish, where Drizzy reflects on the fallout from the battle and what he described as betrayal within the industry. “Just know the s**t is personal to us and wasn’t just business,” he rapped, framing the dispute as unresolved and deeply felt.
A week later, Drake filed a defamation lawsuit in New York City against his home label, Universal Music Group, accusing the company of promoting Kendrick’s diss track, Not Like Us, a song littered with “inflammatory and shocking allegations.”
UMG pushed back, moving to dismiss the lawsuit as Drake’s attempt to “save face” after losing the rap battle to Kendrick.
Meanwhile, Kendrick responded to the lawsuit by mocking Drake on the Super Bowl halftime show stage. “I want to perform their favourite song, but you know they love to sue,” he teased before performing it anyway. Drake subsequently amended his lawsuit to accuse Lamar of trying to “assassinate the character of another artist.”
The case reached its turning point in October 2025, when a federal judge dismissed Drake’s lawsuit. The court ruled that Drake had no grounds to sue UMG and noted that Kendrick’s diss was just that — a diss track and a “war of words.”
Drake’s legal team said they intended to appeal the decision. As of now, no appeal has been filed.
4. Jay-Z’s dual victory
Jay-Z spent much of 2025 navigating two legal battles, one involving Diddy and the other shocking paternity claims.
At the end of 2024, an anonymous woman, represented by attorney Tony Buzbee, accused Jay-Z and Sean “Diddy” Combs of raping her when she was 13 years old after the 2000 MTV Video Music Awards. As Diddy’s legal troubles mounted, many viewed the lawsuit as a potential turning point for Jay-Z as well.
That reckoning never came. In February 2025, the woman abruptly withdrew her lawsuit. One month later, Jay-Z filed a defamation suit against both the accuser and Buzbee, alleging she had “voluntarily admitted” the claims were false and made under pressure. His filing described the case as an “evil conspiracy” designed to extort money and damage his reputation. In July, a judge dismissed Jay-Z’s defamation lawsuit, effectively closing that chapter.
The second legal battle was one Jay-Z had been fighting for a decade against a man named Rymir Satterthwaite, who alleged the rapper was his biological father. In November 2025, the case was officially dismissed, bringing an end to the decade-long dispute. Jay-Z declined to seek attorney fees, closing out one of the longest-running legal sagas attached to his name.
5. The Kardashians vs. Ray J
Ray J reignited a decades-old feud with his ex, Kim Kardashian, and her mother, Kris Jenner, in 2025 by firing back after they sued him for defamation. In October, Kardashian and Jenner filed a lawsuit claiming Ray J made “blatantly false” statements accusing them of being on the verge of a federal racketeering investigation and likening them to Sean “Diddy” Combs’ legal troubles.
In November, Ray J responded with his own legal filing, accusing Kardashian and Jenner of breaching a confidential settlement agreement from April 2023. That deal, he says, included a $6 million payment and a mutual non-disparagement clause that barred any future public mention of their infamous 2003 sex tape. Ray J alleges that references to the tape on The Kardashians violated that agreement, entitling him to damages and undermining the defamation claim against him.
His cross-complaint also revives long-standing assertions that Kardashian and Jenner orchestrated the leak of the tape and manipulated public narratives for publicity. The Kardashians’ legal team has dismissed his claims as unfounded.
Entertainment
Antonio Banderas opens up on ethnic stereotyping in Hollywood
Antonio Banderas has spoken candidly about the ethnic stereotyping he faced when he first arrived in Hollywood, recalling being told bluntly that his Hispanic background limited him to villainous roles, and explaining why breaking out of that box still means so much to him.
“They said, you are here, like the blacks and the Hispanics, to play the bad guys,” the Oscar-nominated actor told The Times.
The irony of what came next is something he clearly savours.
“The problem was a few years later I had a mask, hat, sword and cape and the bad guy was Captain Love, who was blond and had blue eyes.”
That role was, of course, Zorro, the gutsy hero Banderas played in The Mask of Zorro in 1998 and The Legend of Zorro in 2005.
But it was a cat, not a swordsman, that he considers the most culturally significant step forward.
Puss in Boots, the character he first voiced in Shrek 2 in 2004, reached an audience that nothing else could quite match.
“Even more important is Puss in Boots, because it’s for young kids. They see a cat that has a Spanish, even an Andalusian accent and he’s a good guy.”
He has now voiced the character across five films, including the critically lauded Puss in Boots: The Last Wish in 2022, which earned an Oscar nomination.
However, the 65-year-old confirmed last year that he has not yet been approached for Shrek 5, due in cinemas on 30 June 2027.
“I’m not so far, and I’m not being called for that,” he told Parade.
“Puss in Boots did very well. Number two got a nomination for the Oscar, and the movie behaved beautifully at the box office. But I am totally satisfied with the five Puss in Boots that I did. I don’t know what is going to happen in the future. Maybe they [will] call me tomorrow.”
Entertainment
Kerosene hiked to Rs433.40 per litre, petrol, diesel held steady as PM intervenes
- Govt to pay OMCs Rs95.59 on petrol, Rs203.88 on diesel under PDC.
- PM blocks petrol, diesel hikes, bears Rs56bn to protect consumers
- Highlights diplomacy, says Pakistan leading talks with Iran, Gulf.
KARACHI: The federal government has increased the price of kerosene oil by Rs4.66 per litre, bringing it to Rs433.40 per litre, effective from March 28, according to a notification issued by the Petroleum Division.
Petrol and diesel prices, however, remain unchanged at Rs321.17 and Rs335.86 per litre, respectively, despite significant increases in the global oil market.
The Petroleum Division said petrol and diesel prices were held steady to shield consumers from international price shocks.
The government will pay oil marketing companies Rs95.59 per litre on petrol and Rs203.88 per litre on diesel under the Petroleum Development Cess (PDC), as per the notification.
This latest adjustment follows a March 21 revision, when kerosene prices had surged to Rs 428.74 per litre, marking a sharp increase earlier in the month.
The repeated revisions reflect ongoing pressure on domestic fuel pricing amid volatile global markets and geopolitical tensions in the Middle East.
Consumers and businesses continue to feel the ripple effects of rising fuel costs, making this latest hike in kerosene closely watched across the country.
Meanwhile, a few hours before the March 28 announcement, Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif addressed the nation on the fuel crisis.
PM Shehbaz revealed that he had rejected a summary to raise petrol by Rs95 per litre and diesel by Rs203 per litre, keeping the prices of both fuels unchanged for now, despite global surges.
“The government will bear the additional cost, estimated at Rs56 billion, to protect consumers,” the premier said during the televised address.
He also highlighted Pakistan’s diplomatic role in the Middle East, including ongoing talks with Iran and Gulf countries, with Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar leading the negotiations.
Shehbaz vociferously credited CDF Field Marshal Asim Munir and stressed Pakistan’s active diplomacy day and night to promote peace.
Entertainment
Britney Spears meets son Jayden after DUI arrest
Britney Spears has broken her social media silence following her DUI arrest last month, sharing a playful video with her younger son Jayden Federline, her first post since the 4 March incident.
The 44-year-old uploaded the clip to Instagram on 27 March, showing the pair larking around together in front of a mirror, taking turns holding a red phone to snap pictures.
Britney was clearly in good spirits, tossing her hair and smiling throughout. At one point she danced playfully around Jayden before quickly catching herself.
“Naughty little sister and a mama too!” she said while leaping around him. “Composure, I’m being very composed.”
Jayden, 19, had his own moment in the video when he put on a Fedora hat and channelled his inner Michael Jackson, saying: “I wish I could be like Michael.”
Britney also changed outfits during the clip, swapping her initial all-white look, low-rise white shorts and a cropped long-sleeved top, for skinny jeans, a blazer and heels.
She captioned the video warmly: “Thank you guys for all your support… spending time with family and friends is such a blessing!!! Stay kind!!!”

The reunion comes after her rep confirmed in early March that Britney would be spending time with her sons as she worked through the aftermath of her arrest.
“Britney is going to take the right steps and comply with the law and hopefully this can be the first step in long overdue change that needs to occur in Britney’s life,” the statement said.
Her rep added that her loved ones were putting together a plan to support her wellbeing going forward.
The mother-son time carries extra meaning given how difficult their relationship has been at times.
Britney went close to three years without seeing Jayden, making the recent reconnection all the more significant to her. When he came back into her life in 2024, she was openly overwhelmed.
“I’m in shock!!! He came back and he feels older and smarter than me!!!” she wrote at the time. “He’s a man and I cry everyday of my life because of the miracle and genius he is!!!”
Jayden, who had been living in Hawaii with his father Kevin Federline, has since moved back to Los Angeles to pursue music.
He last appeared on Britney’s Instagram in early January, and the pair have spent the last two Christmases together. Britney also shares son Sean, 20, with Federline.
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