Phoebe Bridgers has been sued for defamation, TMZ and People report and Pitchfork can confirm. A producer named Chris Nelson, who owns a recording studio in Los Angeles, claims that Bridgers “intentionally used her high-profile public platform on Instagram to publish false and defamatory statements regarding [Nelson] in order to destroy his reputation.” He is seeking $3.8 million in damages for alleged defamation, false light, intentional infliction of emotional distress, intentional interference with prospective economic relations, and negligent interference with prospective economic relations.
In his lawsuit, obtained by Pitchfork, Chris Nelson says that, “in or around 2018, [he] and his girlfriend at the time… began having consensual sexual encounters with [Phoebe] Bridgers.” Nelson and his girlfriend broke up “in or around the fall of 2019,” according to the lawsuit, but Nelson says that Bridgers and the woman “continued their relationship.”
Another year later, Bridgers made “false and misleading statements about [Nelson],” according to the lawsuit, which reads:
(Phoebe Bridgers changed her Instagram handle from @_fake_nudes to @phoebebridgers earlier this year.)
In addition, according to the lawsuit, Bridgers allegedly directed her followers to Nelson’s ex-girlfriend’s Instagram account, where the woman claimed that Nelson “beat a young Latinx man to death,” “bludgeoned at least one other man with a baseball bat,” “defrauded [a] neighbor out of an estimated $100,000-$130,000,” and more.
Nelson “believes that defendant Bridgers maliciously and intentionally posted the false and defamatory statements about [him] as part of a vendetta to destroy [his] reputation that was enflamed by defendant Bridgers and [his ex-girlfriend’s] sexual relationship.”
Representatives for Phoebe Bridgers were not available for comment. Pitchfork has also reached out to lawyers for Chris Nelson.
Chris Nelson is not credited as having worked professionally with Phoebe Bridgers. Nelson is, however, a producer of It’s So Nice!, the 2019 debut album from Noël Wells, the musician, actress, and director well known for her role in the first season of Master of None.
In December 2020, Nelson filed a defamation lawsuit against Wells in the Los Angeles County Superior Court, the same venue for his lawsuit against Phoebe Bridgers. In the lawsuit against Wells, obtained by Pitchfork, Nelson claims:
As with his lawsuit against Bridgers, Nelson is seeking damages for alleged defamation, false light, intentional infliction of emotional distress, intentional interference with prospective economic relations, and negligent interference with prospective economic relations. His lawsuit against Wells is active and ongoing, with multiple hearings scheduled for November, online records show.
Pitchfork has reached out to representatives and attorneys for Noël Wells for comment and more information.
In addition to his lawsuits against Phoebe Bridgers and Noël Wells, Chris Nelson is suing his ex-girlfriend for alleged defamation, false light, intentional infliction of emotional distress, intentional interference with prospective economic relations, and negligent interference with prospective economic relations. Nelson filed his lawsuit in the Los Angeles County Superior Court in December 2020.
In the lawsuit, obtained by Pitchfork, Nelson alleges that his ex-girlfriend “published false, defamatory, and misleading statements about [him] stating, among other things, that [Nelson] is a career criminal, murdered a man, commits racially-motivated hate crimes, abuses women, stole hundreds of thousands of dollars, trafficked in stolen or fake goods, committed cybercrimes, and defrauded numerous people.”
Nelson’s lawsuit against his ex-girlfriend is also active and ongoing, with a hearing scheduled for November, according to online records.
Pitchfork has reached out to an attorney for Chris Nelson’s former girlfriend for comment and more information.