(Baldoni, his publicists and Wallace have denied these allegations.
Wallace owns a PR firm called Street Relations and has cultivated a certain mystique among his peers.
Wallace denied those allegations, and the suit was settled in 2022.
The Times has said they plan to vigorously defend against the lawsuit.
(That petition was withdrawn the same day Wallace filed his suit.)
Wallace’s firm has no website.
Eventually, he landed in public relations.
Media runs in Wallace’s family.
Wallace started Street Relations in Los Angeles in 2007.
He’s also worked with Heather Hayes & Associates, a Georgia-based concierge service for addiction recovery.
Wallace is now based in Dripping Springs, Texas.
The lawsuit says Wallace assembled a team that included his client Heather Hayes.
Margera alleged that the treatment program was “psychological torture,” comparing it to Britney Spears' conservatorship.
But Wallace was not qualified to manage his treatment program, Margera said later in his lawsuit.
His “understanding,” he said, was that he had fulfilled Fordham’s graduation requirements.
Fordham confirmed to BI that Wallace attended between 1989 and 1993 but did not graduate.
Nathan wrote of the proposed social media work: “All of this will be most importantly untraceable.”
Whatever Wallace was doing,Baldoni’s team seemed pleased with it.
Anyone can pay to have content shared, reposted, commented on, or upvoted.
“There is no way to know who’s behind them,” he said.
One Los Angeles-based crisis publicist said the Lively-Baldoni blowup is not ideal for someone like Wallace.
“I imagine Jed has no interest in having his name out there,” the publicist said.