Blake Lively’s Secret Crush on Justin Baldoni Explained!!
It’s 7:21 p.m. PDT on March 20, 2025, and the Hollywood rumor mill’s churning hotter than a Malibu summer: Did Blake Lively secretly crush on Justin Baldoni while filming It Ends With Us—and is that the real spark behind their explosive feud? Four months after the $350 million-grossing film dropped, and three months into a legal slugfest that’s got more twists than a Colleen Hoover novel, fans are buzzing over a wild theory: Lively, 37, fell for her chiseled co-star/director, 41, got rebuffed, and flipped the script with a sexual harassment lawsuit to bury him. X is ablaze, the tabloids are drooling, and we’re diving into this juicy mess to explain it all—truth, gossip, or just a blockbuster fantasy?
The Crush Theory Takes Root
The whispers started in January 2025, when Baldoni’s legal team dropped a 179-page countersuit against Lively, her husband Ryan Reynolds, and their PR squad, alleging she’d tried to “destroy” him with “grossly edited” claims of on-set misconduct. Buried in the filings? A May 2023 set video of Lively and Baldoni slow-dancing as Lily and Ryle—her smiling, him guiding her hips, a vibe fans called “flirty as hell.” Lively’s December 2024 complaint had flagged this scene as proof he “ignored intimacy protocols,” but X users saw something else: “She’s blushing—Blake TOTALLY had a crush,” one post crowed. “He’s all business, she’s all giggles—unrequited much?”
Cue the sleuths. Posts on X—like one from @CenterviewHQ claiming, “Blake wanted to fuck Justin Baldoni, he rejected her, and she decided to ruin him”—painted Lively as a scorned starlet scorned by Baldoni’s fidelity to his wife, Emily. Another, from @lvuexxx, added, “She flirted, he turned her down—that’s why she’s crying harassment.” No hard proof, but the narrative stuck: Lively, married to Reynolds since 2012, allegedly caught feelings filming steamy scenes with Baldoni, only to crash into his “loyal husband” wall.
On-Set Sparks—or Smoke and Mirrors?
Let’s rewind to Hoboken, May 2023. Lively’s fresh off baby No. 4 with Reynolds, playing Lily Bloom—a florist tangled in a toxic love triangle with Baldoni’s Ryle Kincaid. He’s directing, starring, and running Wayfarer Studios—power vibes galore. Photos show them laughing between takes, but Lively’s suit later claimed he “lingered” on kisses and “pressured” her to lose weight (he says she asked to delay “body scenes” herself). Baldoni’s countersuit fired back: She invited him to her trailer while pumping breast milk, she dodged the intimacy coordinator, she set the flirty tone.
Exhibit A: that dance clip. Lively’s amended February 2025 filing says she texted a friend that day, calling Baldoni a “creep” who showed her a nude birth video of his wife (yikes). But fans dissect her body language—nervous laughs, sidelong glances—and cry, “That’s crush energy!” Baldoni’s lawyer, Bryan Freedman, told Megyn Kelly in January, “She’s twisting context—watch the footage.” X users agree: “She looks smitten, not scared,” one wrote. Intimacy coordinator Ella Paterson, per a March 19 Geo News piece, hinted their rapport was “playful” pre-lawsuit—adding fuel to the “she liked him” fire.
The Ryan Factor—and Rejection Rage?
Here’s the kicker: Lively’s got Ryan Reynolds, Deadpool himself—funny, rich, and famously devoted (they’ve got four kids!). Why pine for Baldoni? Fans theorize it’s less romance, more ego. “Blake’s used to men falling over her—Justin didn’t, so she snapped,” an X post mused. Baldoni’s suit claims she and Reynolds muscled creative control—Reynolds even wrote a rooftop scene—suggesting a power clash. Did Lively misread Baldoni’s charm as flirtation, only to feel snubbed when he kept it pro?
Baldoni’s no slouch—Jane the Virgin heartthrob, feminist podcast host, married dad of two. “He’s hot and principled—Blake’s type,” a fan speculated. But his camp insists he’s “faithful,” dodging Lively’s alleged vibes. Her lawsuit says he hired crisis PR to smear her post-filming; his says she smeared him first. X’s @siqueiritcha posted March 19, “Blake DEFINITELY fell in love with him—look at her eyes!” Theory: rejection stung, and she weaponized harassment claims to save face.
The Holes—and the Hype
Hold up—does this add up? Lively’s filing details “severe anxiety” from Baldoni’s alleged behavior, backed by co-stars like Brandon Sklenar and Jenny Slate, who’ve rallied for her. Texts call him “shocking”—not swoony. Norwegian reporter Kjersti Flaa, no Lively fan after a 2016 interview flop, debunked the crush rumor on YouTube in January: “No evidence—just gossip.” USA Today warned in January that “crush” speculation feeds sexist tropes, like women crying harassment over spurned love. Baldoni’s $250 million New York Times libel suit (plus $400 million vs. Lively) screams damage control—not a guy smug over dodging a crush.
Yet the press tour fuels doubt. Baldoni solo, Lively with Reynolds and cast—did she ice him out pre-lawsuit? Her “wear your florals” promo clashed with his DV advocacy, hinting at a rift. The Cut (March 5) calls it a “bewildering brawl”—maybe less crush, more clash. X keeps it spicy: “Blake’s playing victim; Justin’s the real king,” vs. “She’s exposing a creep—believe her.”
Explained—or Just Entertaining?
At 7:21 p.m. PDT, March 20, 2025, here’s the deal: Lively’s “secret crush” is a fan-fueled fever dream—fun, but flimsy. Evidence leans circumstantial—smiles don’t equal swooning, and lawsuits don’t scream romance. More likely? A toxic mix of creative egos, mismatched visions, and a PR war gone nuclear. Trial’s set for March 2026—until then, X will keep spinning this soap opera. Crush or no crush, one thing’s clear: It Ends With Us didn’t end at the credits—it’s Hollywood’s messiest sequel yet.