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Texas pastor and apostle, Regina Willingham is speaking out after allegedly losing her legal battle connected to Hulu’s Freaknik documentary, claiming she never gave permission for her image to be used and that the fallout destroyed major parts of her life. In a lengthy Facebook post, Willingham said appearing in the 2024 documentary allegedly cost her leadership positions connected to two churches and severely damaged her campaign for city council district representative. She also claimed the situation devastated her children and grandchildren, who were allegedly blindsided after seeing the footage and online backlash tied to the documentary.
Willingham wrote that she believes the judicial system “violated these women” by allowing decades-old footage to be publicly used without consent, adding that “God is not pleased” with how the women involved were treated. The situation became part of the larger controversy surrounding Hulu’s “Freaknik: The Wildest Party Never Told,” where multiple women reportedly explored legal action over fears archived footage from the 1990s Atlanta festival would be used without their approval.
Attorney Adriane Love became one of the most visible legal voices connected to the backlash, publicly representing Willingham and additional women who argued they were unfairly exposed and humiliated decades later through old footage from the legendary street festival. Although the documentary ultimately premiered, the controversy sparked nationwide debates about privacy, consent, public footage, and the long-term consequences of viral media exposure decades after events took place.