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A 97-second video of a custody exchange between an influencer and her NBA-player ex has been circulating widely this week — filmed in the rain, showing their young child crying during the handoff while tension escalated between both sides of the family. It’s racked up millions of views and just as much commentary, most of it picking a side. The more useful conversation is about what filming a custody exchange actually does, for the child in the middle and for whoever hits record.
Why High-Conflict Exchanges Get Filmed at All
People start filming custody exchanges for a real reason: when a co-parenting relationship is contentious, a recording can be the only protection against a false claim later — “he was aggressive,” “she was late again,” “he wouldn’t let me see the kids.” In a genuinely high-conflict dynamic, documentation isn’t paranoia. It’s often the only way to have anything besides one person’s word against another’s.
Where It Crosses a Line
The difference between protective documentation and public spectacle is the audience. Recording an exchange for your own records, your lawyer, or a custody file is fundamentally different from posting it — because the moment it’s public, the child’s distress becomes content, and the exchange stops being about protecting anyone and starts being about the story each side wants told. Kids don’t consent to being evidence in a narrative war, even when both parents feel completely justified.
What Actually Protects You in High-Conflict Co-Parenting
- Keep a private, dated log of exchanges, communications, and any concerning incidents — for your records and your attorney, not for an audience.
- Use structured co-parenting communication apps that timestamp everything automatically, reducing “he said, she said” without needing your own footage.
- If you do record an exchange for safety reasons, treat it as evidence, not content — it doesn’t need to leave your files to do its job.
The Real Lesson From a Viral Custody Video
Whatever actually happened between the two people in that clip, the pattern underneath is familiar to anyone who’s been through high-conflict co-parenting: documentation matters, but so does what you do with it. A private, organized record protects you and your kids. A public one usually just adds a second audience to a conflict that was already hard enough for a child to sit in the middle of.
If you’re navigating a high-conflict custody situation and need a private, court-ready way to document exchanges and incidents, the Custody Court Evidence Organizer is built to keep your record organized without turning your child’s life into public content.