Key Points
- Jury finds blogger liable but damages stay fairly low. Final court ruling may still adjust the legal record.
- Milagro thanks fans on livestream and blocks mocking viewers. She says she feels proud for standing by free speech.
- Blogger hints at a mixtape to turn pain into art. Case sends another warning to online hosts who spread lies.
Blogger Milagro Gramz (Milagro Cooper) is not backing down. She spoke to fans after losing a high profile case. The ruling came in Megan Thee Stallion’s Miami civil lawsuit.

A Florida jury found the blogger liable on three claims. They tied her posts and a deepfake clip to Megan’s distress. Our earlier Megan court win breakdown explains the verdict in detail.
Gramz shrugs off loss and thanks her fans
Going live on Instagram, Gramz said she felt calm. She smiled at the camera and addressed thousands watching online. She told them she was ready for whatever comes next.
Gramz also dealt with trolls who mocked her courtroom defeat. When one viewer wrote about the loss, she blocked them. She said haters only boost her numbers by showing up.
The blogger thanked loyal viewers for sticking beside her through trial. She promised more shows soon and urged them to stay tuned. For her, one chapter closes and another one now opens.
Free speech talk and new media pride
Gramz framed the case as a fight over free speech. She said new online hosts give fresh views on big stories. In her words, their work is real and has value.
She joked that music might now be her safest outlet. “I will start working on my mixtape,” she told viewers. Many heard that as a light dig at the Houston star.
The case followed months of upset over a deepfake sex clip. Megan sought heavy damages, saying the clip pushed her into costly treatment. We earlier covered that in our Megan deepfake treatment story.
What the verdict means after the livestream
The jury awarded Megan seventy five thousand dollars, including extra damages. They also said Gramz counts as media for legal purposes. A judge could still alter one claim when final orders arrive.
Soon after, Gramz’s lawyers released a press note of their own. They stressed the judge has not yet signed the last judgement. They also said the money is small beside Megan’s first request.
Fans of both women are now reading the case in different ways. For Megan, the ruling backs her claims of long running harm. For Gramz, the livestream showed she plans to keep talking.
Either way, the Megan Thee Stallion lawsuit keeps shaping online talk.





