Gwyneth Paltrow’s first red carpet appearance since winning her Utah ski court trial happened Sunday, and the actress did not disappoint in the glam department.
06.04.2023 - 00:45 / justjared.com
If you’re looking for Matthew Koma on Twitter, he’s not there.
The 35-year-old musician, and husband to Hilary Duff, was suspended from the social media platform after posting a parody about Gwyneth Paltrow‘s recent ski trial.
Keep reading to find out more…
If you missed it, Matthew was booted from the app after impersonating the actress, following her trial in Utah last month.
He was seen using an image of Gwyneth in his profile picture and responded to a tweet about the verdict.
Twitter has implemented an impersonation violation, which says that “accounts that pose as another person, group, or organization in a confusing or deceptive manner may be permanently suspended under Twitter’s misleading and deceptive identities policy.”
Following his ban, Matthew headed to Instagram with a message for his fans.
“Thanks for all the kind messages today,” he wrote, via Page Six. “Closure’s hard. But it’s a community like you guys that keeps me positive and looking forward to the next time I find the opportunity to impersonate a celebrity on a social media platform.”
If you missed it, you can get a recap of everything that happened at Gwyneth‘s trial on Just Jared.
Gwyneth Paltrow’s first red carpet appearance since winning her Utah ski court trial happened Sunday, and the actress did not disappoint in the glam department.
Last month, Gwyneth Paltrow stood trial in Utah where a man named Terry Sanderson accused her of causing him severe injury when she allegedly crashed into him while they were both skiing at the luxurious Deer Valley ski resort. She ultimately won the trial after Sanderson was determined to be "100 percent at fault" for the 2016 ski crash.The proceedings garnered lots of attention, and now, weeks later, Paltrow has taken to Instagram to comment on what happened.
The latest ad for Blake Lively’s beverage brand is ripped from the headlines.
Gwyneth Paltrow’s high-profile US lawsuit helped “humanise celebrities” to jury members, the foreman in the case has said. Last week the Oscar-winning actress won the civil lawsuit, brought by retired optometrist Terry Sanderson, over a ski collision in 2016. Ms Paltrow was cleared of all fault over the incident, which occurred at the Deer Valley resort in Utah, which left Mr Sanderson with several broken ribs and head injuries.
Public opinion of actress Gwyneth Paltrow seems to have changed following her big win in a ski collision lawsuit. Paltrow was sued by retired optometrist Terry Sanderson in 2019 over a ski crash that he claimed left him severely injured. However, a jury ruled that the Goop founder was not at fault for the accident and awarded her $1 in damages Thursday.
Gwyneth Paltrow’s legal battle may not be over yet!
If Gwyneth Paltrow’s recent trial involving a ski-hill collision was a TV show, it would be a ratings blockbuster.
Gwyneth Paltrow consciously uncoupled from ordinary life years ago. In the era of celebrity relatability, with once mysterious A-listers now sharing everything from breakfast to breakdowns on social media, she is one star completely comfortable with the world knowing she exists on a higher plane of bone broth, vagina candles, and $8,000-a-day skiing lessons. Facing a lawsuit, many A-listers might simply choose to pay-up, regardless of whodunnit, rather than go through the rigmarole of a potentially reputation-damaging court case.
Terry Sanderson’s legal team has released a statement on his behalf, one day after he lost the Utah ski trial against Gwyneth Paltrow.
Terry Sanderson is now a household name. And that’s a problem for… Terry Sanderson!
A juror is speaking out about what led them to side in Gwyneth Paltrow‘s favor!
Gwyneth Paltrow won the trial of the century, a dispute with a septuagenarian over a 2016 skiing accident at a ritzy Utah mountain resort.And she didn’t even have to try on a glove — though I assume if required, it would have been a cashmere-lined, leather one from Prada.Gwyneth simply leaned into her crazy, rich self — dripping with luxury goods and grieving over her missed half-day of skiing.Her yield? One very petty dollar.A juror told Good Morning America that they sided with the “Shakespeare in Love” star after a snow expert essentially poured cold water on the recounting of events by Dr. Terry Sanderson — who claimed Paltrow plowed into him on the slopes.
Gwyneth Paltrow “not at fault” for a 2016 ski collision in Deer Valley, Utah, but her fans are certainly guilty of thirsting over her dreamy defense attorney. James Egan — who represented the “Shakespeare In Love” star alongside a team of colleagues from the law firm Epperson & Owens — has become an unexpected heartthrob, thanks to thirsty viewers tuning in to watch the trial.
Samantha Imrie, a juror on the Gwyneth Paltrow Utah ski crash trial, is speaking out. The jury found Terry Sanderson, who sued Paltrow for $300,000 in a negligence lawsuit, to be "100 percent at fault" for a ski collision with Paltrow at the Deer Valley ski resort in 2016. Imrie, who was juror 11, was part of the jury who sided with the Goop founder on Thursday.
Matt Donnelly Senior Film Writer Gwyneth Paltrow’s ski trial was watched by nearly 30 million people across YouTube and social media platforms, Variety can report. The eight-day saga was covered exhaustively by major media outlets and disseminated in viral clips and memes all over the internet. It was also a significant boon for the Law and Crime Network, which streamed the trial live on its YouTube page (the channel also has carriage deals with the likes of Roku, Samsung TV and Sling TV, though those numbers only report quarterly). 16.5 million people tuned in to the livestream, the network said. Another 7.4 million viewed the event on Facebook, and another 4.2 million consumed proceedings involving the Oscar winner on TikTok. Keep in mind, these numbers do not account for similar airings on Court TV and the Associated Press live feed.
One of the jurors in the Gwyneth Paltrow trial is breaking her silence.
Zack Sharf Digital News Director A juror in the Gwyneth Paltrow ski accident trial opened up to ABC News about the jury’s unanimous decision in favor of the Oscar-winning actor. Samantha Imrie, a nurse who was Juror #11, said it only took a couple of hours for the jury to reach its verdict, although her mind changed sides repeatedly during the trial. “The whole thing was a little shocking,” she said. Terry Sanderson, a 76-year-old retired optometrist, sued Paltrow for $300,000, alleging that in 2016 the actor skied into him at a Deer Valley ski resort in Utah and left him with a concussion, four broken ribs and a brain injury. Paltrow then countersued for $1 and attorney’s fees. Under Utah law, the downhill skier has the right of way. Paltrow and Sanderson both claimed they were the downhill skier.
Gwyneth Paltrow just won the ski crash trial against retired optometrist Terry Sanderson and now a juror is speaking out.
All’s well that ends well? After the jury ruled in her favor and found her not liable for a skiing accident in 2016, Gwyneth Paltrow made a point to say goodbye to the man behind the lawsuit — Terry Sanderson — before exiting the courtroom.