was planning a summer wedding with her boyfriend, John Miller. They weren’t, anddebunked the phony allegation. Twelve months later, it’s clear whose reporting was more accurate.Garner was in the midst of planning a wedding
at her home in California. The tabloid asserted that it had details about the ceremony from a so-called insider. The source knew that Garner had, for example, “picked out a simple, sexy white dress,” and knew that Reese Witherspoon, Kate Hudson, and even Ben Affleck’s mom were on the guest list.and events, and it’s a sure sign the story is bogus. This wedding claim was no different, full of lots of details but missing one crucial element: the truth. But that’s hardly a surprise.
The story seemed to be a follow-up from another debunked story from the publication's sister paper, thelast March. They weren’t, as we reported at the time, but then this bogus article came out in May, pushing the limits of honesty to its breaking point, again. The couple were, in fact, cooling off just as the story was printed, as we pointed out, but they have since remained very much together. While Jennifer Garner and John Miller are still dating, they have not gotten married, nor were they planning to get married last summer. The gossip media hasn’t learned its lesson either. In November,