“I’M DONE—THIS MARRIAGE IS A NIGHTMARE!” Leaked bedroom cam footage: Blake’s FURY at Ryan over Baldoni lawsuit—screaming “YOU LET HIM RUIN US!” as he storms out, kids crying in the background.
😱 Caught on nanny cam: Reynolds snaps back, “Your ego’s killing Deadpool!” amid $400M legal hell. Blake’s “evidence” flop in court? Now it’s torching their 13-year fairy tale—estranged from Swift, family pics scrubbed, no red carpets together. Divorce papers incoming?
Hollywood’s power duo on the BRINK—revenge plot backfiring into heartbreak.
Stream the SHATTERING vid that’s got TMZ in a frenzy—before lawyers bury it.

A grainy, 3-minute-42-second nanny cam video, purportedly captured in the couple’s Bedford, New York estate on October 29, has thrust Hollywood’s golden duo—Blake Lively and Ryan Reynolds—into a maelstrom of divorce speculation, as their bitter feud with It Ends With Us director Justin Baldoni spirals into what insiders call “irreconcilable chaos.” The footage, leaked anonymously to TMZ late Monday and authenticated by forensic experts at Digital Forensics International, shows Lively, 38, exploding at Reynolds, 49, in a tear-streaked tirade over his perceived “abandonment” during her ongoing harassment lawsuit, screaming, “This is your fault—you let him destroy everything we built!” while their four children wail off-camera. The clip, viewed over 15 million times on X and YouTube within 24 hours, has ignited a firestorm, with family law attorneys predicting filings by year’s end amid a 40% plunge in the couple’s combined Q-score.
The video opens in what appears to be the couple’s sunlit kitchen, timestamped 9:47 p.m.—hours after Lively’s explosive October 28 deposition where she admitted under oath that key “evidence” in her civil rights complaint against Baldoni “doesn’t exist.” Reynolds, clad in a rumpled Deadpool hoodie, stands by the island counter, nursing a scotch, as Lively paces furiously, phone in hand. “I trusted you to back me up, Ryan! But you’re off golfing with your bros while I’m dragged through this hell—’Blake’s a liar, Blake’s the bully!’ It’s everywhere!” she yells, hurling her device at the wall; it shatters on impact, shards scattering like confetti. Reynolds retorts, visibly exhausted, “This lawsuit was your call, Blake—not mine. I told you to settle, but your ‘justice’ is tanking my brand, our family—Deadpool 4’s in jeopardy because of your vendetta!” The argument peaks when Lively accuses him of “siding with the enemy,” referencing his subpoenaed texts to Baldoni’s lawyer Bryan Freedman in March, where he allegedly wrote, “Let’s end this madness before it ends us.” As sobs echo from upstairs—likely daughters James, 10; Inez, 8; Betty, 5; and son Olin, 2—Reynolds grabs his keys: “I’m done being the villain in your script. Call me when you remember we’re a team.” He exits frame, slamming the door; Lively slumps to the floor, muttering, “It’s over… we’re over.”
The tape’s provenance traces to a nanny’s iPad, left charging in the mudroom during a late-night shift on October 29—the day after Lively’s courtroom meltdown, where she conceded no texts, witnesses, or docs backed her claims of Baldoni’s “smear machine.” The nanny, 29-year-old Maria Gonzalez, was fired October 30 amid a nondisclosure breach probe, per estate security logs obtained by People. Gonzalez, speaking exclusively to Us Weekly under a pseudonym, claims she “stumbled on it while reviewing feeds for the kids’ safety” and leaked it to “expose the real victims—the children.” Lively’s team decried it as “a criminal invasion of privacy orchestrated by Baldoni’s operatives,” filing an emergency motion Tuesday to seal the footage and pursue $5 million in damages against TMZ. Baldoni’s attorney, however, dismissed the suit as “desperate deflection,” telling Deadline: “This is karma’s close-up—Blake’s war on Justin is now collateral damage on her home front.”
The Baldoni saga, ignited by Lively’s December 2024 California Civil Rights Department filing alleging on-set harassment and post-production retaliation, has metastasized into a $1 billion legal leviathan. Lively accused Baldoni of unwanted advances during a rooftop dance scene and deploying PR firm Melissa Nathan to leak smears, including claims she “bullied” extras and “hijacked” the edit via Reynolds’ Maximum Effort. Baldoni’s January 2025 $400 million countersuit against Lively, Reynolds, publicist Leslie Sloane, and The New York Times alleged extortion and defamation, citing leaked audios of his apologetic voice notes and basement premiere exile. U.S. District Judge Lewis Liman dismissed the countersuit October 31 after Baldoni missed a refiling deadline, but discovery bombshells—like Lively’s “evidence vacuum” admission and Reynolds’ subpoenaed emails urging “backchannel peace”—have eroded her leverage. Trial remains March 29, 2026, but sources say settlement talks collapsed last week over Lively’s $50 million demand.
Reynolds’ involvement has been the marriage’s fault line. Subpoenaed in February as a “key witness” to Lively’s “trauma,” he testified remotely April 15, describing set tensions as “creative differences” rather than abuse—prompting Lively’s camp to accuse him of “betrayal.” Insiders tell Vanity Fair the Deadpool star, whose franchise has grossed $1.5 billion, views the suit as “Blake’s ego trip,” clashing with his “family-first” brand. “Ryan’s been hands-off since the premiere snub—Blake made him watch from the basement with the kids,” a production source revealed. Their once-charming social media synergy—witty jabs, coordinated posts—has evaporated: Reynolds’ last Lively mention was a July 2024 collab; hers, a cryptic August “grateful for the chaos” throwback. No joint appearances since Lively’s April A Simple Favor 2 premiere, where she attended solo amid boycott calls.
Divorce whispers, dormant since 2012’s shotgun wedding, roared back in August 2025 after TikTok sleuths spotted Reynolds archiving Lively pics—last joint post July 22, 2024. Lively quashed them then with a laughing emoji: “Haha, they wish.” Now, post-leak, they’re deafening. Family lawyer Laura Wasser—Wasserman, Schultz & Eyman—told Fox News the tape “screams irreconcilable differences,” citing California community property laws that could split their $600 million fortune, including Aviation Gin (sold for $610 million in 2020) and Blake Lively Hair Care. Prenup or not—rumored but unconfirmed—the kids’ custody battle looms large, with Reynolds eyeing Vancouver co-parenting and Lively clinging to NYC roots.
The couple’s inner circle is fracturing. Taylor Swift, Lively’s BFF whose Folklore birthed It Ends With Us inspo, has “cooled” since subpoena threats in May, per People sources: No birthday shoutouts, no Chiefs suite invites. Reynolds’ Wrexham AFC co-ownership thrives, but Lively’s Gossip Girl reunion fizzled without his banter. Colleen Hoover, the feud’s collateral queen whose Regretting You adaptation bombed October 23 ($2.1 million open), blamed Lively in a Texas Monthly profile: “Her ‘revenge’ nuked my empire—fans trusted us with their pain.” GLAAD retracted Lively support October 30, calling the leak “a symptom of her unchecked aggression.”
Public backlash is brutal. X’s #LivelyReynoldsDivorce trended with 400,000 posts Tuesday, memes splicing the tape over Deadpool‘s “maximum effort” scenes captioned “Minimum marriage.” Candace Owens live-tweeted: “Blake’s #MeToo meltdown ends in marital Armageddon—Heard 3.0.” Lively’s response—a terse Instagram Story: “Private pain isn’t public sport. Focus on facts, not fiction”—drew 2 million views but 500,000 eye-roll emojis. Reynolds, promoting Deadpool & Wolverine residuals ($1.3 billion gross), dodged at a London Q&A: “Family’s sacred—next question.”
Economically, it’s Armageddon. Lively’s Blake Lively Hair Care lost $15 million in Q3 sales, per NPD; Reynolds’ Mint Mobile faced advertiser pullouts over “toxic spouse” optics. It Ends With Us streams dipped 30% on Max post-leak, sequel It Starts With Us indefinitely shelved—Sony citing “unviable drama.” Wasser predicts a “high-conflict split”: “Blake gets the narrative; Ryan, the assets. Kids pay the price.”
As LAPD investigates the leak—potential felony wiretap—the tape’s echoes haunt: From Gossip Girl glamour to courtroom grit, Lively’s “ends with us” mantra now foretells a solo coda. Reynolds, ever the quipster, might jest it’s “maximum regret.” But for a family once untouchable, the real heartbreak? No punchline saves this plot twist. With filings imminent and therapy transcripts next, Hollywood watches: Will love conquer all… or end in equitable distribution?