Carrie Underwood has filed a $50 million lawsuit against The View and Whoopi Goldberg, accusing them of defamation after a live segment attacked her political involvement — a shocking clash that turned public outrage into legal war and left her determined to reclaim her name in court.
Country music superstar Carrie Underwood has launched a stunning $50 million defamation lawsuit against ABC’s The View and longtime co-host Whoopi Goldberg, following what her legal team calls a “vicious and calculated ambush” during a recent live broadcast that left her “professionally and personally shattered.”
The legal firestorm, which erupted this week in a Los Angeles courtroom, centers around a segment aired on July 24th, 2025, in which the panelists on The View allegedly made “false, reckless, and reputation-destroying” remarks about Underwood in connection to her involvement in a recent political fundraiser.
According to Underwood’s 38-page legal filing, the live broadcast crossed far beyond the boundaries of fair commentary and entered what her attorneys describe as “character execution, broadcast to millions in real time.”
The episode in question, which has since been widely circulated on social media, featured a heated discussion about celebrity involvement in politics.
During the segment, Goldberg reportedly referred to Underwood’s speech at a Nashville rally as “tone-deaf, dangerous, and depressingly predictable,” while another co-host allegedly claimed, “She’s not just out of touch — she’s actively propping up harmful rhetoric.”
What began as typical daytime talk quickly escalated into what Underwood calls a “public trial without evidence or context,” leaving the country singer blindsided and, according to her team, “irreparably harmed in the eyes of fans, peers, and industry partners.”
Within 24 hours of the episode airing, Underwood’s name began trending for all the wrong reasons — with hashtags like #CarrieCancelled and #ToneDeafTour circulating on X (formerly Twitter).
Several brand partnerships were reportedly “paused for review,” and at least one scheduled appearance was quietly dropped from her press tour.
The legal team representing Underwood, led by powerhouse defamation attorney Marcus Bell, minced no words in the suit’s language:“This was not commentary.
This was not opinion. This was a televised character assassination — designed to provoke outrage and boost ratings at the expense of truth, fairness, and Carrie Underwood’s reputation.”
At a press briefing outside the courthouse on Monday, Bell went further, stating:“They tried to humiliate Carrie Underwood on live television. Now they will taste public humiliation in court.
We will drag every producer, every executive, and every smug co-host into cross-examination — and the facts will speak for themselves.”
While ABC has yet to release an official response, sources inside the network say executives were caught off-guard by the suit’s timing and intensity. “They didn’t just cross a line — they bulldozed it,” one insider told reporters. “And Carrie’s about to bulldoze back.”
Industry observers note that the case could set a new precedent in how television networks handle live commentary about public figures — especially celebrities with strong fan bases.
Underwood, a Grammy-winning artist with more than 20 years in the spotlight, has largely stayed out of political controversy throughout her career.
Her recent appearance at the Nashville event — which she described as “a nonpartisan call for unity and voter engagement” — marked a rare foray into political territory.
But the backlash from The View’s coverage appeared to frame her involvement as something far more incendiary.
Insiders say Underwood felt compelled to act after receiving what she described as a wave of “malicious, threatening, and deeply misogynistic” online abuse following the broadcast — much of it, her team alleges, fueled directly by The View’s statements.
The lawsuit seeks not only monetary damages but also a formal retraction and on-air apology from the show’s hosts and ABC network executives.
As of Tuesday afternoon, Whoopi Goldberg has made no public comment, and The View‘s social media channels have remained unusually quiet. However, speculation is already swirling that producers are in crisis talks behind the scenes.
Whether the case goes to trial or ends in a high-profile settlement, one thing is clear: Carrie Underwood is not backing down. In her own words, reportedly shared in a private team meeting after the suit was filed:“If they thought I’d just smile, nod, and let it slide — they’ve never listened to my lyrics.”
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