Johnny Depp-Amber Heard defamation trial brings stan culture into the courtroom
A frenzied scene materializes four days a week at the Fairfax County Courthouse in Virginia as fans seek seats at the defamation trial between Johnny Depp and his ex-wife Amber Heard.
The line to enter the courthouse begins before sunrise. Throughout the day, people appear carrying signs, wearing fan merch and costumes, even walking a pair of alpacas. Nearly all of them are there for Depp.
“We just want to support our captain,” said Jack Baker, 20, who arrived Monday dressed like an extra in Pirates of the Caribbean to film footage for his YouTube channel. “If he goes down with the ship, we’re going down with him.”
Maryam Alam, 29, and Alina Alam, 29, had hoped to get into the courthouse, but when they showed up at 7 a.m., they were already too late. Both grew up watching Depp on screen — playing such characters as Edward Scissorhands, Captain Jack Sparrow, Willy Wonka — and were eager for the chance to see him in person.
Sers Esther Gunn, left, and Margaret Gunn wait near the security entrance outside the Fairfax County Horic Courthouse for a chance to see actor Johnny Depp’s arrival in Fairfax, Virginia, April 27, 2022. (Valerie Plesch/The New York Times)
“It’s fulfilling a childhood fantasy,” Maryam Alam said. “It’s the reason why everyone else is here.”
High-profile celebrity cases have drawn a wide audience ever since Court TV began broadcasting from courtrooms in the 1990s. But the trial of Depp and Heard has become a case study in what happens when complex claims are filtered through the lenses of stan culture and social media.
In addition to the live coverage on TV, YouTube, and various news and entertainment websites, countless short clips edited for maximum virality have circulated on Instagram and TikTok — “fancams,” in social media parlance, featuring forensic analyses of Depp’s and Heard’s trial attire, and courtroom exchanges that have been described as “SAVAGE.”
Depp, 58, is suing Heard, 36, over an essay she published in The Washington Post in 2018 about sexual violence, in which she described herself as a “public figure representing domestic abuse.” Although Depp was not named in the article, he has argued that it clearly alluded to him, damaging his reputation and career. (Heard filed for divorce in 2016 and, soon after, for a restraining order against Depp, which she was granted.) In his testimony, Depp denied ever striking Heard and argued that she was the aggressor in their relationship. The jury is simultaneously considering a defamation countersuit Heard against Depp.
Natasha Miller Miller drove from Reno, Nevada to attend the defamation trial between actor Johnny Depp and Amber Heard, his ex-wife. (Valerie Plesch/The New York Times)
Many of the accusations were aired in 2020, during a libel case Depp brought against The Sun, a British newspaper that ran a headline referring to him as a “wife beater.” The judge ruled that the defendants had shown that what they published was “substantially true,” and Depp lost the case.
Although the jury in Virginia has been instructed to carefully weigh the evidence and reach a verdict only after testimony is complete (Heard has yet to take the stand), and fan observers have been advised not to react audibly or visibly to either party in the courtroom, the rest of the world is under no such obligation.
In a TikTok video captioned “AMBER HEARD CAUGHT LYING AGAIN,” Ethan Trace (2.8 million followers) gleefully recounts how Heard’s lawyer said in court that the actress used a makeup palette to cover up bruises Depp gave her during their marriage. The lawyer held up a palette to reinforce her point, and while she did not name the brand, it was identifiable in photos and video from the trial, and internet sleuths quickly named the company, Milani Cosmetics.
Milani, the brand, later released a TikTok video that stated the product Heard’s lawyer showed did not become available until after the couple had separated. (“Milani Cosmetics is not taking a formal stance on the trial, evidence or future outcome of the case,” a spokesperson wrote in a statement.)
“Boom!” Trace says in the video. “Milani Cosmetics: We love you! Thank you for sharing this!” The video has more than 16 million views.
In an email, Trace said he felt Depp had been treated unfairly the media. “How could no one be talking about evidence that could possibly prove a man’s innocence after being labeled an ‘abuser’ in the eyes of the public?” he wrote.
From left, Ines Sorto-Rojas, Kailyn Diaz, and Anasofia Almanac show their support for actor Johnny Depp outside the courthouse in Fairfax, Virginia, April 25, 2022. (Valerie Plesch/The New York Times)
On April 13, shortly after testimony began, Gawker noted that the TikTok hashtag #justiceforjohnnydepp had received 1.1 billion views. In two weeks, that number has more than quadrupled. As of this writing, #justiceforamberheard has 22 million views.
Heard’s supporters hope her testimony will shift the dialogue surrounding the trial. “Instead of looking at all these TikToks and everything, I think that people should actually follow the case,” said Carmen Diamandis, 22.
“Stans will literally go to any extent to defend anyone,” he said of Depp’s supporters, adding: “Amber Heard, she has not got that fan base.”
Marianne Nafsu, 32, a true-crime content creator from Detroit who has posted about the case, said: “I can’t wait to hear her side when she stands trial.” She added that “it’s only fair to len to both sides and see: Where’s all this coming from?”
Asked for a comment on the fan response, Heard’s lawyers provided her friend Eve Barlow, a music journal who has been tweeting in support of Heard.
“The social media landscape is shockingly brutal for Amber,” Barlow wrote in an email, adding that many of the comments on TikTok and Twitter reflect “misogyn hate.” Depp’s representatives did not respond to a request for comment.
Rachel Louise Snyder, author of “No Visible Bruises: What We Don’t Know About Domestic Violence Can Kill Us,” said in an interview that Depp has certain advantages over Heard in the court of public opinion.
“People will dispense with the same critical eye that they would give anybody else when it comes to someone who is really a beloved figure,” she said. Snyder added that the case offers a potential counternarrative to common misconceptions of abuse: who can perpetuate it and who can be a victim.
“We don’t think about victims as wealthy. We don’t think about victims as men. We don’t think about perpetrators as women,” she said. “I’m not saying that she’s a perpetrator and he’s a victim. I’m just saying that we have an opportunity to look at our own myths and stereotypes around ‘Who’s the victim and who’s the perpetrator?’” (Abuse affects 1 in 4 women, according to the National Domestic Violence Hotline, and 1 in 7 men.)
On TikTok, many of Depp’s supporters have posted about a recording in which Heard says: “Tell the world, Johnny, tell them, ‘I, Johnny Depp, a man, am a victim too of domestic violence,’ ” and continues, “See how many people believe or side with you.”
Scout Robert, 24, was taken aback Heard’s words. “When she said that, she made the statement to the world that as a man, you cannot be abused,” she said in an interview. Robert, who has more than 40,000 followers on TikTok, has posted numerous videos on the platform, in which she has called Heard a liar, abuser and hypocrite. Some have been viewed hundreds of thousands of times.
Robert said she felt the #MeToo slogan “believe women” had become overused. Rather, she said, people ought to “len to women,” while acknowledging “that men can be victims of domestic abuse as well.”
Snyder, likewise, thinks the Depp trial could spur more nuanced conversations about abuse and how it doesn’t always fall within neatly prescribed boundaries.
“Maybe he’s a victim; maybe he’s an abuser; maybe he’s a little bit of both,” she said. “Same for her.”