Whitney Wolfe Herd says she tried to stop the new biopic about her life, telling an interviewer she asked her lawyer two years ago to “shut it down” when she learned Swiped was moving ahead without her involvement. The Bumble founder described feeling “terrified and slightly flattered,” while adding she is “honored” by the casting of Lily James as the lead. The film premiered this month at the Toronto International Film Festival and began streaming on September 19.
Wolfe Herd did not participate in the production, citing a nondisclosure agreement linked to her 2014 legal dispute after leaving Tinder. The filmmakers have said they built the script from public records and reporting. The movie dramatizes her exit from the earlier company and the launch of Bumble, the service that put women in control of initiating conversations and later expanded into networking and friendships.
Her remarks arrive as dating platforms face fresh scrutiny and business headwinds, placing renewed attention on the origins and strategy that differentiated Bumble in a crowded market. The biopic’s release also revisits the workplace issues that shaped Wolfe Herd’s departure from Tinder, which she addressed in her lawsuit at the time, and underscores why she could not consult on the film.
In public comments, Wolfe Herd has maintained a measured stance toward the portrayal, reiterating discomfort with seeing her story depicted while praising James’ involvement. The project features Dan Stevens and others in key roles and traces Wolfe Herd’s move to build a competing platform after her tenure at Tinder. For the company she founded, the film’s timing offers a high-profile retelling of an origin story that influenced product design and brand positioning in the sector.















































