Gypsy-Rose Blanchard Recounts Mom’s Murder While Doing ‘We Listen and We Don’t Judge’ TikTok Trend

Blanchard served eight years in prison after her mother’s 2015 death

Gypsy-Rose Blanchard is once again in the spotlight after sharing personal reflections through a viral TikTok trend. In the video, she revisits difficult moments from her past, offering insight into experiences that have shaped her life.
In a video shared to TikTok by influencer Natalie Reynolds on Saturday, March 21, Gypsy, 34, got in on a viral social media trend — dubbed “We listen and we don’t judge” — in which people talk about their secrets or difficult life moments in a lighthearted manner.
The video, which shows the true crime figure and influencer standing at a kitchen counter as they speak directly to camera, includes a moment where Gypsy references the 2015 murder of her mother, Dee Dee Blanchard.
“We listen and we don’t judge: I went to prison for eight and a half years because I …” Gypsy said, before making a choking noise and adding, “… my own mom.”

Reynolds reacts in light shock, while Gypsy reminded her, “Hey, we listen and we don’t judge,” before the video continues with a number of other topics from both women.
Some commenters were quick to express their disbelief with the TikTok video, with one person commenting, “Nothing funny about this at all.”
“That wasn’t cute nor funny,” another commenter wrote, as others questioned: “Why would you post this?”
Gypsy was a victim of Munchausen by proxy who served prison time for conspiring with her then-boyfriend, Nicholas “Nick” Godejohn, to murder her 48-year-old mother.
In 2016, Gypsy was sentenced to 10 years in prison after she pleaded guilty to second-degree murder charges. In 2018, Godejohn was found guilty of first-degree murder, and in 2019, he was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole, plus an additional 25 years for armed criminal action.

Gypsy — who is mom to daughter Aurora, 14 months with her boyfriend Ken Urker — has previously been candid about sharing her story in interviews and on her social media platforms following her December 2023 release from prison.
When her parole ended in June 2025, Gypsy wrote in a now-deleted video, “I’ve taken accountability and now, I take back my life. When I accepted my sentence, I accepted the weight of my choices. I served my time. That was my accountability and I’ve carried it for years. I don’t owe the past anything more.”
She then wrote that the “next chapter” of her life would be “one of healing. Of growth. Of reclaiming my life.”
“This is freedom. And I’m moving forward with clarity, peace, and self-forgiveness. The Justice system has decided. The case is closed. This is justice for Dee Dee, as well as myself, who the system failed all my life,” Gypsy said, adding, “Justice was served and so was my time.”



