Madison Square Garden Sues Wired for Defamation Over Alleged Celebrity Risk List

Madison Square Garden Sues Wired for Defamation Over Alleged Celebrity "Risk List"
On July 16, 2026, three Madison Square Garden entities sued Wired, its publisher, and three journalists in New York County Supreme Court, alleging defamation by implication over a July 9 article describing a purported celebrity "risk list." MSG says the reporting misrepresents an internal database; Wired denies the claims.
Information last verified on July 18, 2026. This is a developing story; we update it as the record changes.
Status: As of July 18, 2026, this is a newly filed complaint in New York County Supreme Court. No court has ruled on the claims, and the allegations described here are MSG's contentions, which Wired denies.
Jurisdiction scope: This article covers a defamation lawsuit filed in New York state court and explains New York defamation and anti-SLAPP law. It does not address other states' rules and is general information, not legal advice.
What Happened
On July 16, 2026, MSG Entertainment Corp., MSG Entertainment Holdings LLC, and MSG Sports Corp. (owner of the Knicks and Rangers) filed suit in New York County Supreme Court against Wired, its publisher Advance Magazine Publishers Inc., parent company Advance Publications, and reporters Noah Shachtman and Maddy Varner, along with Wired global editorial director Katie Drummond. The complaint responds to a July 9, 2026 Wired article, "Madison Square Garden Kept a List of Gay Celebrities," which reported that MSG maintained a database categorizing celebrities and VIPs by sexual orientation, race, and a perceived "risk level." MSG alleges the article drew on data taken in a breach of its systems and selectively presented fragments to create a false implication that MSG tracked LGBTQ people for discriminatory or exclusionary ends. MSG's filing states the sexual-orientation field was added to its Salesforce CRM system in 2022 for Pride-outreach, charitable, hospitality, sponsorship, and marketing purposes. The complaint pleads defamation by implication and tortious interference, and seeks a jury trial along with compensatory, presumed, and punitive damages, plus a retraction. Wired has said it stands by its reporting and will defend the suit, which it calls baseless.

What the Law Actually Says
New York defamation law generally requires a plaintiff to show a false statement of fact, published to a third party, that is defamatory and caused harm, without a valid privilege defense. Where a media defendant reports on a public figure or public issue, the plaintiff must also show actual malice, meaning the defendant published knowing the statement was false or with reckless disregard for its truth or falsity. That heightened standard traces to New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, 376 U.S. 254 (1964), the U.S. Supreme Court decision that created the actual-malice requirement for public-figure defamation claims against the press. Read more about the elements of a defamation claim for the baseline framework.
"Defamation by implication" is a distinct theory built on statements that may be literally true, or a selective presentation of true facts, that nonetheless create a false and defamatory implication in a reasonable reader's mind. Courts applying New York law generally require a plaintiff pursuing this theory to show the publisher intended or endorsed the false implication, not merely that a reader could draw an unflattering inference. This is a harder showing than a claim resting on a single false statement, because the plaintiff has to isolate the implication, prove it is false, and connect it to the publisher's intent. For background on how these claims are evaluated under state law generally, see New York defamation law and our overview of how defamation claims work.
Because this suit targets news reporting on what MSG frames as a matter of public concern, New York's anti-SLAPP statute is a central consideration. N.Y. Civil Rights Law Section 76-a, broadened in 2020, defines an "action involving public petition and participation" to include claims arising from communications on issues of public interest and requires a plaintiff in such an action to prove actual malice, not just negligence, regardless of whether the plaintiff is a public figure. N.Y. Civil Rights Law Section 70-a lets a defendant in such an action move for expedited dismissal and recover costs and attorney's fees if the claim was commenced or continued without a substantial basis in fact and law. A media defendant sued over reporting on a company it covers, like Wired here, commonly invokes Sections 70-a and 76-a early in the case.
Analysis: Why This Matters
The following is analysis from the Recording Law Editorial Team.
A well-resourced corporate plaintiff suing a news outlet over an investigative story is the kind of case New York's anti-SLAPP law was written for: a defendant reporting on a matter of public interest facing litigation from the entity it covered. Because the underlying data reportedly originated in a security breach of MSG's own systems, this case also sits at the intersection of defamation law and the First Amendment questions that arise when journalists report on hacked or leaked material, an area courts have generally treated cautiously when the reporting concerns a matter of public interest and the outlet did not participate in the underlying intrusion. This is also the same MSG whose facial-recognition practices are the subject of separate data-breach class-action litigation, so the arena is now facing scrutiny in more than one legal forum over how it handles data about the people who pass through its venues. Defamation-by-implication claims are also generally harder for a plaintiff to win than claims resting on a single false statement, since the plaintiff must prove the publisher intended the false implication rather than simply that a reader could draw an unflattering inference from accurate facts. None of this predicts how a New York court will rule on this specific complaint. No claims have been adjudicated, and this analysis does not evaluate the merits of MSG's allegations or Wired's defense.
How Defamation-by-Implication Claims Generally Work
In general terms, a defamation-by-implication claim asks a court to look past the literal truth of individual statements and consider the overall impression a publication creates. A plaintiff pursuing this theory typically must identify the specific false implication, show it is reasonably understood by an ordinary reader, and demonstrate the publisher intended or endorsed that implication rather than merely reporting facts a reader might interpret unfavorably. Courts weigh the headline, structure, and juxtaposition of facts alongside the literal statements themselves. This is general background on how the doctrine operates and is not an assessment of any particular case, including the one described above.
This is general legal information, not legal advice. It covers a pending New York defamation lawsuit and New York defamation law, verified as of July 18, 2026. This story is developing and nothing has been decided; consult a lawyer licensed in your jurisdiction about your specific situation.
Related articles
- New York defamation law
- the elements of a defamation claim
- MSG's facial-recognition data-breach class actions
Last updated: 2026-07-18. This is a developing story; details verified as of 2026-07-18.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is Madison Square Garden suing Wired over?
MSG entities allege Wired's July 9, 2026 article falsely implied MSG tracked celebrities by sexual orientation for discriminatory purposes, a claim MSG calls defamation by implication. MSG says a Salesforce field was used for Pride-outreach and sponsorship purposes instead. These are allegations in a newly filed complaint; nothing has been decided.
What is defamation by implication?
It is a defamation theory where statements that are individually true, or selectively presented, create a false and defamatory impression. Under New York law, a plaintiff generally must show the publisher intended or endorsed the false implication, not just that a reader could infer something unflattering.
Can you sue a news outlet for defamation in New York?
Yes, a news outlet can be sued for defamation in New York like any other publisher, but a plaintiff suing over reporting on a public figure or public issue must generally prove actual malice, and the defendant can invoke New York's anti-SLAPP statute if the reporting concerns a matter of public interest.
What is New York's anti-SLAPP law?
N.Y. Civil Rights Law Sections 70-a and 76-a let a defendant sued over speech on a public issue seek early dismissal and recover fees if the claim lacked a substantial basis, and require the plaintiff to prove actual malice in many such cases. The 2020 amendments broadened the law's scope.
Does MSG have to prove actual malice?
If a court finds the Wired article concerns a public issue under New York's anti-SLAPP statute, or if MSG is treated as a public figure, MSG would generally need to show Wired published with actual malice, meaning knowledge of falsity or reckless disregard for the truth, under the Sullivan standard.
Can you be sued for reporting on hacked or leaked data?
Reporting on hacked or leaked material generally receives First Amendment protection when the outlet did not participate in the underlying intrusion and the reporting concerns a matter of public interest, though a subject of the reporting can still bring a defamation claim over how the material was characterized.
Has a court ruled on the MSG-Wired lawsuit?
No. As of July 18, 2026, this is a newly filed complaint. No court has ruled on the claims, and the characterizations in this article are allegations from MSG's filing or Wired's public statements, not adjudicated facts.
Sources and References
- N.Y. Civil Rights Law Section 76-a (public petition and participation; actual-malice requirement)(nysenate.gov).gov
- N.Y. Civil Rights Law Section 70-a (anti-SLAPP expedited dismissal and fee-shifting)(nysenate.gov).gov
- New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, 376 U.S. 254 (1964)(law.cornell.edu)
- Washington Times: Madison Square Garden sues Wired over celebrity database report(washingtontimes.com)