NBA superstar Stephen Curry has long been known for his silky three-point shot, championship rings, and cool, composed image — a role model on and off the court. But now, the Golden State Warriors legend is trading in his calm demeanor for courtroom fire, launching a $50 million lawsuit against ABC’s The View and longtime host Whoopi Goldberg, accusing them of orchestrating a “malicious ambush” on live television that he claims has left lasting damage on his personal and professional life.

Whoopi Goldberg Ate a Bag of Cat Treats Thinking They Were Pretzels After  Meeting the Pope

And make no mistake — this isn’t just about TV drama. It’s personal.

“This was more than an off-the-cuff question. It was a planned hit job,” a member of Curry’s legal team told reporters.
“They didn’t just cross a line — they bulldozed it.”

From MVP to Plaintiff

Steph Curry's Players' Tribune Essay on the Gender Pay Gap and Women's  Equality Is Gold | Vogue

The lawsuit stems from a recent appearance Curry made on The View to discuss the tenth anniversary of the Eat. Learn. Play. Foundation, the charity he founded with wife Ayesha Curry to combat childhood hunger, improve education, and create safe play spaces for underserved kids.

For over a decade, the Currys have been widely celebrated as one of America’s most admired couples, frequently praised for balancing fame, philanthropy, and family — all while under the microscope of celebrity culture.

So when Curry agreed to the daytime interview, sources say, he expected questions about his four NBA championships, his bestselling memoir, and his foundation’s new Oakland initiative.

“Instead,” said one source present at the taping, “he got blindsided.”

The Question Heard Around the World

Don't Let This Happen to You: Whoopi Goldberg and Jeanine Pirro in Shouting  Match During 'The View'

About halfway through the interview, Goldberg pivoted abruptly.

“Steph,” she began, holding the audience’s attention, “how do you balance the image of being the NBA’s clean-cut golden boy… with some of the whispers out there about your personal life?”

The crowd shifted in their seats. The silence was deafening. Steph blinked, clearly caught off guard. According to legal filings, he had never been briefed on the question beforehand — a direct violation of the show’s pre-interview agreement, his lawyers allege.

“It felt like a setup,” Steph later told confidants.
“Not journalism. Just a shot in the dark meant to wound.”

The line of questioning — described in the complaint as “defamatory innuendo regarding marital fidelity” — sparked immediate online backlash, with many criticizing Goldberg and the producers for targeting the basketball star in what one viewer called “a drive-by character hit.”

The Fallout

Stephen and Ayesha Curry Launch Eat. Learn. Play. Foundation | Golden State  Warriors

Though Steph stayed composed on camera — a skill he’s honed over 15 seasons in the league — insiders say he was “deeply shaken” after the segment ended.

In the days that followed, media speculation ballooned. Hashtags like #StephExposed and #CurryScandal trended on X, despite there being zero credible allegations against him. Sponsors began calling. One major brand quietly postponed a launch tied to the Curry family. And Curry’s publicist says their office was flooded with requests for comment.

“This isn’t just about gossip,” said a source close to the family.
“This affected their kids. Their schools. Their safety. It was irresponsible and cruel.”

The Lawsuit: $50 Million and a Fight for Dignity

Filed in Los Angeles County Superior Court, Curry’s complaint accuses The View, ABC, and Goldberg of:

Defamation of character

Intentional infliction of emotional distress

Breach of good faith interview protocol

Damages to his business and charitable interests

The lawsuit states that the incident has resulted in “loss of reputation, brand partnerships, and emotional harm to himself and his immediate family, particularly his children.”

“They painted a target on his back,” said his attorney. “Now we’re painting a legal one on theirs.”

Ayesha Curry Speaks Out

With Eat. Learn. Play. Foundation, Ayesha And Stephen Curry Are Taking  Their Philanthropy To The Next Level

Ayesha Curry, entrepreneur, author, and mother of their three children — Riley, Ryan, and Canon — released a brief but pointed statement:

“We’ve built a life around honesty, faith, and integrity. What happened on that stage was dishonest, irresponsible, and reckless. We will not let it stand.”

Whoopi Responds

In a statement issued through her representative, Whoopi Goldberg pushed back, saying:

“I asked a question. That’s my job. If Mr. Curry felt uncomfortable, I regret that. But this is daytime television, not a safe space for scripted narratives.”

Sources at ABC say legal teams are reviewing the claim, but insiders suggest executives are scrambling — especially as more public figures, including NBA colleagues, begin speaking out in Curry’s defense.

Social Media Explodes

Whoopi Goldberg doesn't get why younger generations think Boomers aren't  cool

Reaction to the lawsuit has been immediate and intense:

“Steph Curry suing The View is the plot twist 2025 didn’t see coming — and I’m here for it.”

“Whoopi better lawyer up. Steph’s not just dropping threes anymore — he’s dropping subpoenas.”

“Good for Steph. Celebs shouldn’t have to accept public humiliation as the price of fame.”

What’s Next?

Legal experts say Curry has a solid defamation case, particularly if internal communications at ABC reveal producers prepped the question intentionally to provoke a reaction. If the case proceeds to trial, it could force a reckoning on how talk shows handle celebrity interviews in the age of clickbait and viral outrage.

One Final Shot

Before stepping into his SUV outside the courthouse, Curry turned to reporters and offered a single sentence:

“I’ve spent my life building something with grace — I won’t let anyone tear it down with gossip.”

The battle lines are drawn. The courtroom is the arena now.

And this time, Steph isn’t just playing for points — he’s playing for his name.