If you’re looking for Matthew Koma on Twitter, he’s not there.
01.04.2023 - 03:37 / msn.com
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.
But the Oscar-winner turned wellness guru is not one of them. The internet has been flooded with Paltrow in the last two weeks, as her high-profile legal fight played out on camera. This all started with a skiing accident involving a retired optometrist in Utah in 2016, and somehow ended in global headlines about the star's outfits, controversy over her offer to hand out treats in the courtroom - declined! - and questioning about her friendship with Taylor Swift.
She won the case - only asking for $1 in damages, because this was about principle - but for a woman who would barely have noticed making it all go away for $300,000 (£242,000), the amount she was sued for, was it really worth it?Many were shocked hearing the details of the wealth and privilege that spilled out in court, but perhaps there were just as many impressed by her dry response when asked what she had lost as a result of the accident. "Well, we lost half a day of skiing," quickly went viral. (Luckily, she was still able to get a massage.
If you’re looking for Matthew Koma on Twitter, he’s not there.
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.
If Gwyneth Paltrow’s recent trial involving a ski-hill collision was a TV show, it would be a ratings blockbuster.
Terry Sanderson is now a household name. And that’s a problem for… Terry Sanderson!
Gwyneth Paltrow, who won the much-watched, two-week civil trial in which a retired optometrist claimed the actor caused a 2016 ski accident that left him with brain damage, says she fought the allegations because “acquiescing to a false claim compromised my integrity.”
to the complainant in her ski trial as she left the courtroom victorious this week has been revealed. The actress leant over to tell the skier: "I wish you well. " Paltrow has won her US lawsuit against retired optometrist Terry Sanderson over a 2016 ski crash in Utah.
Terry Sanderson, the man suing Gwyenth Paltrow, apologized for a slight against her.
Gwyneth Paltrow’s ski accident trial has been making headlines for much more than just the 2016 incident at the center of the case.
The jury in Gwyneth Paltrow's ski collision trial will likely hear from her husband Brad Falchuk today as proceedings near a close. Yesterday, depositions from her now-teenage children, Apple and Moses, were read to the jury. Paltrow's defense has used a number of digitally created animations to illustrate different angles of the actress' version of events.
Gwyneth Paltrow’s daughter had never seen her mother “shaken up like that”, and was “concerned” following her ski crash, a US court has heard. Apple Martin, who was around 11 or 12 at the time of the incident, said her mother had been “frantic” and “in a state of shock” following the collision in 2016.The Oscar-winning actress has claimed that retired optometrist Terry Sanderson collided with her at the Deer Valley resort in Utah, which resulted in her losing “half a day of skiing” with her family.
The depositions of Gwyneth Paltrow's children are being used to defend the star in court as she's being sued for a 2016 ski accident that allegedly left Terry Sanderson severely injured. Moses' deposition is being read first and will be followed by Apple's.
Gwyneth Paltrow is currently in court after being accused of colliding with a 76-year-old man on the ski slopes in Utah in an accident which he claims caused him "concussion, broken ribs and a brain injury". Yet, Express. co.
Courtroom chic? Gwyneth Paltrow has put on quite the fashion show while in Utah for a civil trial.
Gwyneth Paltrow on a ski slope recalled hearing a “blood-curdling scream” moments before the 2016 incident. Terry Sanderson, who is suing the Hollywood star, took the stand on Monday 27 January, adding he thought somebody “was seriously out of control” on the slopes of the Deer Valley resort in Utah.
A neuropsychologist who treated the man suing Gwyneth Paltrow over a 2016 ski collision cast aspersions on the testimony of medical experts hired by the celebrity’s legal team — and argued that, as his personal doctor, she was better suited to speak about 76-year-old Terry Sanderson’s post-concussion symptoms.
Tough cookies. Day three of Gwyneth Paltrow’s skiing accident trial started on a not-so-sweet note, as her security team’s request to give treats to the courtroom bailiffs was shut down.
Gwyneth Paltrow's accuser "pretty much" lost his love of life after the actress allegedly crashed into the back of him in a skiing hit-and-run, a US court has been told. Terry Sanderson, 76, is suing the Hollywood star for $300,000 (£244,000), claiming she was "out of control" and hit him, causing him to suffer a brain injury, four broken ribs and other serious injuries. Paltrow, 50 is also accused of leaving the scene without saying a word after the collision at the Deer Valley Resort in Utah on 26 February 2016.
a man who collided with Gwyneth Paltrow on a ski slope could not “plausibly” have been caused by him crashing into her, a US court has heard. Retired optometrist Terry Sanderson showed “typical hallmarks” of a traumatic brain injury and “deteriorated abruptly” following the 2016 incident at the Deer Valley Resort in Utah. The Oscar-nominated actress is being sued by Mr Sanderson for allegedly “slamming” into him from behind, leaving him unresponsive and with several broken ribs.
Gwyneth Paltrow's name is synonymous with a Hollywood lifestyle, and her controversial wellness brand, Goop, which was recently valued at $250 million. On the third day of a civil trial where she's being sued for causing "permanent traumatic brain injury" to Terry Sanderson after allegedly crashing into him while skiing at an exclusive resort in Utah in 2016, legal experts weighed in on whether the suit was related to Sanderson's injuries or Paltrow's last name. Sanderson, a retired optometrist, originally sued Paltrow for $3.1 million and claimed he was a victim of a hit-and-run.
Gwyneth Paltrow has been accused during her ski crash trial of slamming so hard into a 72-year-old retired optometrist she “bounced off him”. The Oscar-winner was in court on Tuesday (21. 03.