Brit Eady
Sues Bravo for Defamation, Sexual Harassment
… 1 Year After Explicit Poster Drama
Published
Brit Eady is taking legal action against Bravo, alleging defamation, intentional infliction of emotional distress, sexual harassment, and more in response to the scandal surrounding Kenya Moore allegedly displaying explicit images of her at a salon opening event last year.
The lawsuit, filed against Bravo, NBCUniversal, and production companies Truly Original and Endemol Shine North America, alleges that they misled the public by suggesting Moore distributed compromising photos of Eady last June.
Following the incident at Moore’s hair spa opening, where it was alleged that she distributed posters depicting Eady in a compromising position, Eady asserts that she was not present at the event and that Moore was subsequently removed from the reality series.
In her legal claim, Eady disputes that the individual in the explicit photos was her and accuses Bravo of insinuating otherwise, leading to the broadcast of cast members’ reactions on a later episode of the show’s 16th season.

TMZ.com
Eady alleges that Bravo created a hostile work environment and subjected her to sexual harassment by exposing her to unwelcome and offensive behavior following the incident, which she describes as a “gendered attack.”
She is seeking the immediate removal of the episode in question from public view and is requesting damages of at least $20 million from Bravo.
On the same day she initiated legal action, Eady clarified on social media that she was not the individual depicted in the explicit posters.
She also confirmed her absence from the reunion, as previously reported.
Requests for comment from Bravo’s representatives have not been answered at this time.