TikToker Got Called Out After Fake Lawsuit Video

A fabricated story about a Grammy Awards lawsuit has gone viral on TikTok, fooling thousands of users who believed they were witnessing a real fashion industry scandal.

The fake narrative involves a stylist claiming to face legal action over Chappell Roan’s Grammy dress, but the entire situation appears to be an elaborate promotional scheme for a music review app.

The original video comes from a newly created account that posted only two videos but managed to rack up 9.12 million views on the first post. The video shows someone designing a dress, followed by footage of Chappell Roan in her Grammy outfit, with a lengthy caption describing a supposed lawsuit.

According to the fabricated story, the stylist designed a controversial dress for the singer and was subsequently sued by the Grammy production company for breach of contract and causing reputational harm.

The caption, which appears to be AI-generated, goes into extensive detail about conservative groups calling for action, production companies demanding apologies, and the stylist being blacklisted from the industry. It even makes claims about secret deals between the Grammys and Spotify, and an exclusive website where industry insiders allegedly get paid to review unreleased music.

What makes this situation particularly concerning is how many people believed the story.

Comment sections filled with supportive messages, with users saying things like “Chapell should be taking care of it, honestly” and “I’m on your side, girl.” Many comments suggested the singer should help pay for the legal damages or support the stylist financially.

However, several red flags expose the story as fiction. The account was brand new with an anonymous creator claiming it was a “secret account.”

Most tellingly, the bio contained a link to tuneswards.com, a site claiming to pay people $47 per hour to review unreleased music. This same link appeared on multiple accounts posting identical stories with different people in the videos but the exact same caption and narrative.

Content creator Morgan called out the situation in a response video, expressing alarm that so many people believed the fabricated story without verification. She pointed out that any legitimate stylist with enough influence to work with Chappell Roan would have an established online presence, not just a single viral video on a brand new account.

Similar campaigns previously used fake story times to promote products like spicy cubes and AI software for university work. These accounts use the same formula: create multiple profiles, post identical scripts with different faces, and include promotional links in the bio.