Co-hosts Anne Marie Malecha and Stacy Bratcher examine how AI lawsuits can quickly evolve from legal problems into full‑scale reputation crises for companies in every industry. Using The New York Times v. OpenAI and Mobley v. Workday as case studies, they cover how long‑running battles over copyright, bias, and data demands test stakeholder patience, drive media coverage, and force leaders to manage fear, anger, and uncertainty around AI. Sharing practical insight into choosing the right spokesperson, handling government involvement, and keeping investors, employees, and customers informed, this episode of Reputation Nation will help leaders stay ahead of the next wave of AI-driven crises.
Episode 11. AI Series.
On this episode of Reputation Nation, Anne Marie Malecha and Stacy Bratcher dig into how AI is rapidly becoming a high‑stakes legal, regulatory, and reputational risk for companies in every industry. They unpack Mobley v. Workday as a potential blockbuster AI hiring class action and The New York Times v. OpenAI as a case study in the new wave of AI copyright and training data lawsuits. Throughout the episode, they zero in on practical AI risk management, what in-house counsel, compliance teams, and communications leaders should be asking their vendors, hard‑wiring into contracts and governance, and doing now to protect corporate reputation before the next surge of AI litigation and regulation hits.
On this week's Fast Four episode, Reputation Nation hosts Anne Marie and Stacy break down the Cracker Barrel rebrand backlash and why monitoring and mitigating online bot-driven narratives matters more than ever. They move through the Louvre jewel heist’s operational fallout, what Twitch’s federal defamation suit could mean for creators, and how Katy Perry and Justin Trudeau’s headline-grabbing romance could be a reputation reset for both public figures. Expect the unexpected, get crisis-ready, and learn why having the right advisors in place before a crisis hits can make all the difference.
Episode 9. Fast Four.
In the series finale of the Lively v. Baldoni saga, Reputation Nation hosts Anne Marie Malecha and Stacy Bratcher dissect the headlines, crisis moments, and reputational fallout from one of Hollywood’s most watched legal battles. From Blake Lively’s lengthy post-trial statement and Taylor Swift’s rumored deposition to the strategic choices facing Justin Baldoni, this episode reveals what goes into communications and legal decision-making when stakes are the highest and everyone is watching. Packed with actionable takeaways for leaders and communicators, don’t miss these expert insights on managing your message and reputation under pressure.
Episode 8. Lively v. Baldoni.
On this episode of Reputation Nation, Anne Marie Malecha and Stacy Bratcher take you straight into the heart of the Lively v. Baldoni showdown, focusing on the role of subpoenas, the impact stakeholder interests have on legal decisions, and the strategy behind each move in this ongoing dispute. They break down how tactical filings and evidence gathering set the tone for both courtroom proceedings and public perception, and leave their listeners with practical insights for anyone navigating legal and PR challenges in high stakes situations.
Episode 7. Lively v. Baldoni.
Reputation Nation hosts Anne Marie Malecha and Stacy Bratcher return for part 2 of the Blake Lively vs. Justin Baldoni series with defamation expert Joe Meadows to explore how lawsuits, leaks, and “receipts” collide in court and the media. From the timing of administrative complaints to the strategic use of litigation websites and selective disclosures, this episode examines how courtroom tactics and crisis PR intertwine when public perception often decides the outcome long before a verdict does. This episode provides practical insights into managing reputational risk, aligning legal and communications strategies, and navigating crises where every move matters.
Episode 6. Lively v. Baldoni.
Reputation Nation hosts Anne Marie Malecha and Stacy Bratcher examine high stakes litigation through the Blake Lively v. Justin Baldoni case, exploring the critical relationship between legal strategy and crisis communications when every filing makes headlines and every statement goes viral. They break down why "no comment" is never neutral, crisis management as a containment discipline and the use of litigation websites as strategic first-strike tools to frame narratives. The episode covers the pressure to speak versus the benefits of staying quiet, publicity for different stakeholder types and practical advice on vetting crisis firms.
Episode 5. Lively v. Baldoni.
Reputation Nation hosts Anne Marie Malecha and Stacy Bratcher examine how AI is reshaping crisis, regulatory, and reputation landscapes, spotlighting Penske Media’s antitrust lawsuit alleging Google’s AI Overviews siphon traffic from outlets like Rolling Stone and threaten digital media economics. They break down a federal ruling that lets Particle Health’s antitrust claims proceed against Epic Systems, a pivotal test of alleged EMR market power and data-access gatekeeping with industry-wide implications for health data competition. The episode also unpacks Shein’s AI-generated model controversy as a cautionary tale on vendor oversight and human-in-the-loop approvals, then turns to the Workday hiring-bias case, where a rare collective action highlights algorithmic discrimination risks for employers at massive scale. Actionable takeaways: pressure-test AI vendor practices, add human review to AI workflows, and prepare legal-comms strategies now for antitrust and bias scrutiny in the AI gold rush era.
Episode 4. Fast Four.
In this episode of Reputation Nation, Anne Marie Malecha and Stacy Bratcher dive into how 23andMe’s breach escalated into a governance and trust crisis, including mass board resignations, founder dynamics, and a communications response that blamed users and arrived late on key safeguards like multifactor authentication (MFA). The hosts explain why a $30M class action is small next to the brand’s reputational debt, how boards should manage fiduciary duties under pressure, and what “do no harm” looks like in the first 24 hours of a crisis. The conversation closes with a practical Fast Four on accountability, legal realities in bankruptcy, product-data alignment, and the long road to rebuilding trust.
Episode 3. 23andMe.
In this episode, the conversation delves into the legal and crisis management challenges faced by 23andMe following a significant data breach. The discussion highlights the importance of trust, governance, and effective communication strategies in managing crises, particularly in sectors dealing with sensitive personal data. The Reputation Nation hosts, Anne Marie Malecha and Stacy Bratcher, bring in data privacy attorney Alya Sulaiman to analyze the implications of the breach, the company's response, and the lessons learned for future crisis management.
Episode 2. 23andMe.
This episode dissects how 23andMe’s data breach spiraled into a governance and trust crisis: board resignations, founder buyback optics amid bankruptcy, and a public response that blamed users. Hosts Anne Marie Malecha and Stacy Bratcher detail why entity-based health privacy expectations collided with a consumer retail DNA product, how directors’ fiduciary duties and D&O coverage factor into risk, and why the first 24 hours require empathy, precision, and audience segmentation. The Fast Four closes with clear, memorable guardrails for leaders handling high-sensitivity data.
Episode 1. 23andMe.