
Ryan Reynolds: Canada's Hero, Business Titan, and Family Man Navigating Fame's Highs and Lows
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About this listen
Ryan Reynolds has been front and center in headlines this week, demonstrating once again why he remains a fixture in both Hollywood and the global business scene. The most significant development is that the Canadian government will be bestowing upon him one of its highest civilian honors, the Officer of the Order of Canada, an accolade recognizing his wide-ranging charitable contributions and his steadfast commitment to his home country. The ceremony is set to take place in Ottawa as part of Canada Day festivities, according to the Vancouver Sun and multiple reports.
Hot on the heels of this national honor, Reynolds is also in the spotlight for his juggernaut of a business career. TIME just featured him on the cover of its 2025 TIME100 Most Influential Companies issue, spotlighting Maximum Effort, his powerhouse production and marketing agency. The profile lauds his ability to fuse playful, viral marketing with savvy investments—think Aviation Gin, Mint Mobile, 1Password, and, of course, Wrexham AFC. Forbes now values the companies he’s bought, co-owned, or sold at over $14 billion, and his unique approach to “fastvertising” and public storytelling has become an industry template. TIME also noted Reynolds’s flair for keeping his personal brand relatable, whether he’s joking online with Hugh Jackman, poking fun at Wrexham co-owner Rob McElhenney, or sharing self-deprecating posts about family life.
While his entrepreneurial reputation is soaring, Reynolds has also been navigating a turbulent period on the personal front. The $400 million lawsuit filed earlier this year by Justin Baldoni against Reynolds and Blake Lively—centering on allegations of civil extortion and defamation—was dismissed by a judge just this June. Still, the wider legal battle between Lively and Baldoni is ongoing and continues to generate public interest, with Reynolds making rare comments about how such high-profile disputes can weigh on both personal and professional life. In a candid TIME100 Companies interview, Reynolds described the necessity of staying accountable and grounded, insisting that neither highs nor lows define a person.
Adding to the intrigue, Reynolds and Lively made a high-profile public appearance in New York this week, their first since the legal saga began, sending social media buzzing with speculation about their united front. Instagram accounts from tasteofreality and whatstrending were among those sharing footage from their outing.
On the business side, Wrexham AFC, the football club Reynolds co-owns, continues to climb the English football pyramid, just one promotion away from the Premier League. But sources like Goal warn that for Wrexham to make that final leap, the club might need an injection of billionaire-level funding—think Jeff Bezos or Mark Zuckerberg. Former player Matt Jansen said the financial demands of top-tier football are “off the scale,” hinting that even Hollywood star power has its fiscal limits.
Through it all, Reynolds maintains his signature balance: unbothered online, shrewd in business, and steadfastly private about family amid the noise. If the past few days are any measure, his ability to command both headlines and boardrooms looks stronger than ever.
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