Tyra Banks sues Netflix, claims documentary edited interview to imply 'America's Next Top Model' cover-up
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Nearly four months after Netflix released an explosive documentary chronicling the legacy and controversies of "America's Next Top Model," the show's creator, Tyra Banks, is suing the streaming giant for false light, defamation by implication, breach of contract and false endorsement.According to the lawsuit filed on June 13 and obtained by Fox News Digital, Banks who participated in the docuseries "Reality Check: Inside America's Next Top Model" accused Netflix and the docs producers of deliberately editing her 3.5-hour interview down to 16 minutes to create the false impression that she knowingly concealed what a former contestant has since characterized as a sexual assault that occurred during the filming of "ANTM.""Tyra Banks participated in the Netflix documentary series 'America's Next Top Model' because she believed viewers deserved a candid conversation about the show's legacyits successes and its shortcomings," the lawsuit states. "There are aspects of the show for which Ms. Banks takes accountability and she wanted 'ANTM' viewers to hear that from her directly.""Going into her interview, Ms. Banks did not limit the 'ANTM' topics the interviewer could ask," the lawsuit continues. "During a three-and-a-half-hour interview, Ms. Banks answered questions about the show's groundbreaking history, including criticism of decisions she would approach differently today."'AMERICA'S NEXT TOP MODEL' CONTESTANTS LOBBY CALIFORNIA FOR BETTER REALITY TV PROTECTION AFTER NEW DOCUSERIESBanks says the Netflix series was sold to her as a "documentary series" that would chronicle "ANTM," but says the viewers were "stripped of context andreassembled to support a false and defamatory narrative unrelated to what sheactually expressed.""Worse, the false narrative the producers constructedthrough selective editing, deliberate omission, and surgical manipulation of continuous footageincluded that Ms. Banks knowingly allowed a contestant to be sexually assaulted on her show, exploited that contestants trauma for ratings, and then could not even remember it when asked," the suit stated. "That narrative about Ms. Banks is a complete fabricationone that Netflix streamed to a global audience of millions."CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP FOR THE ENTERTAINMENT NEWSLETTERThe suit highlights one "egregious example of the producers manipulation to create a false narrative," involving former contestant Shandi Sullivan.SUPERMODEL PAULINA PORIZKOVA EXPOSES DARK SIDE OF FASHION INDUSTRY THAT PREYED ON HER AT 15"One of the areas of interest about ANTM over the last twenty years has been about an evening during which Ms. Sullivan was intoxicated, had intercourse with a man in Milan, and quickly confessed her infidelity to her longtime boyfriend," the suit reads. "On the Netflix Series, Ms. Sullivan is shown describing the event as an assaultsomething Ms. Banks had never heard before and was not told during her interview. Having withheld that information, Ms. Loushy asks Ms. Banks: You remember the story with Shandi? The episode shows Ms. Banks glance upward, say um, and then the screen cuts to black. The implication is devastating and deliberate: that Tyra Banks cannot even remember the story of the woman who was assaulted on her show."LIKE WHAT YOURE READING? CLICK HERE FOR MORE ENTERTAINMENT NEWSBanks lawyers claim the "implication is false.""Ms. Banks remembers Ms. Sullivan well. She stood out as a remarkable young woman and talented aspiring model. Ms. Banks also remembers the encounter in Milan as a matter of regret over infidelity. As far as she knew at the time, that was how everyone involved understood itnot as a sexual assault. Before it aired, no one involved in making or clearing the episodenot the producers, the network executives that oversaw the show, or the networks standards-and-practices reviewerstold her that anyone regarded it as a sexual assault.""Second, Ms. Banks goes on to say: 'I do remember her story.' That response was cut off from the end."Banks' attorneys claim that producers "deprived viewers of truth by withholding from Ms. Banks the information about what others had said in their Netflix interviews and not providing her with an opportunity to respond.""There are numerous other examples," the lawsuit states.Representatives for Netflix did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital's request for comment.Banks, who is requesting a jury trial, is asking for an "appropriate" amount of punitive damages.
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