What began as a seemingly off-the-cuff, charitable-adjacent anecdote on national television has now metastasized into one of the most explosive and high-stakes public relations wars in recent memory. The feud between comedian Vice Ganda and the camp of global fashion icon Heart Evangelista has officially escalated beyond a simple “he said, she said.” It has now entered a new, dangerous phase: a public “threat” has been issued. But this was not a physical threat or a simple, angry tweet. This was a calculated, strategic, and devastatingly effective “warning shot” from Heart’s team—a public relations “cease and desist” so powerful, it has accomplished the unthinkable: it has left Vice Ganda completely, and uncharacteristically, silent.

The battle lines were drawn weeks ago during a live broadcast of the popular show It’s Showtime. In a segment, Vice Ganda mentioned visiting a school in Heart Evangelista’s “province” (Sorsogon, her husband’s), describing it in shocking terms. The comedian claimed the school was “rotten” or “dilapidated” and, most damningly, that it had “no reading materials.” Vice Ganda then claimed to have been so moved by this poverty that they personally funded its repair and sent aid. The unprompted, live call-out of Heart’s name, not once but twice, was a move that left the public stunned. It was a direct, bizarre, and seemingly unprovoked shot at one of the nation’s biggest stars.
The implication was clear: how could Heart Evangelista, a woman who lives a life of unimaginable luxury, allow such destitution to exist in her own backyard? The attack was personal, it was public, and it was potent. Vice Ganda had, in one swift move, painted Heart as an out-of-touch, neglectful socialite. For days, the attack hung in the air, and the public waited for Heart’s response. What they got was not a defense; it was a declaration of war.
This is where the “threat” was born. Heart’s camp, led by her fiercely loyal personal assistant, Resty Roselle, did not just deny the story. They executed a public takedown so thorough, it left Vice Ganda’s narrative in smoking ruins. This was the warning shot. It came in multiple, strategic waves. First, Roselle publicly called Vice a “clout chaser” and “mema” (someone who talks just for the sake of it). This was the initial challenge. Roselle then posed a critical question: why was Vice Ganda attacking Heart, a private citizen, and not the actual government bodies responsible, like the Department of Education or the office of Senator Sonny Angara, the DepEd Secretary? This was a strategic move to re-frame Vice’s attack not as brave truth-telling, but as cowardly bullying.
But the true “threat” came from the receipts. Roselle did not just say Vice was wrong; she proved it. She exposed the truth of the donation, which was later confirmed by an official statement from the local government of Bulusan, Sorsogon. The LGU statement was the bullet in Heart’s gun. It “clarified” that the school was not “rotten” and, most importantly, already had complete books and supplementary reading materials before Vice’s visit, thanks to a DepEd program. The building Vice “repaired” was a makeshift classroom, and the donation was not a grand, school-saving gesture, but a total of ₱67,360 (approximately $1,140 USD), given in small installments, to help an already ongoing PTA project.
This was the first part of the threat: a public warning that Heart’s camp has the real facts. They proved, with an official government document, that Vice Ganda’s entire “heartbreaking” story was, at best, a gross exaggeration and, at worst, a complete fabrication used for an on-air moment. The unspoken message was, “We have the truth on our side. Do you?”

The second part of the threat was even more personal and far more dangerous for the comedian. Heart’s camp did not just stop at the current facts; they reached into the past. Roselle brought up Vice Ganda’s old, infamous public feud with the comedian Ate Gay. This was the masterstroke. It was a clear and deliberate signal to Vice and the public: “We are willing to go there. We know your history of public feuds, and we will use your past patterns against you. If you continue to attack Heart, we will dredge up every skeleton in your closet to prove that you are the problem, not us.”
This is a classic PR “threat” tactic, and it is devastatingly effective. It tells the opponent that this is no longer a “friendly” media squabble; this is a fight for survival, and Heart’s camp is willing to use every weapon at its disposal. They are not just protecting Heart’s reputation as a fashion icon; they are protecting her, a global brand, from what they see as a defamatory attack.
The result of this multi-pronged “threat” has been a deafening, profound silence from Vice Ganda. The comedian, known for their quick wit, sharp comebacks, and total control of the public narrative, has been completely neutralized. There has been no clapback, no sarcastic tweet, no follow-up story on Showtime. Heart’s camp, by issuing this public warning, has successfully cornered their opponent. Vice Ganda is now in a “no-win” situation.
If Vice responds, they will be forced to debate the official LGU statement, a battle they cannot win. They will also be inviting Heart’s camp to follow through on their threat and unleash more damaging stories from the past. If Vice doesn’t respond, they appear weak and, more importantly, guilty. They are tacitly admitting that Heart’s camp was right, that the story was false, and that the ₱67k donation was spun into a self-serving, fabricated tale.
This is the power of the “threat” Heart Evangelista’s camp issued. It was not a vulgar, emotional outburst. It was a cold, calculated, and precise strike. It was a warning shot fired with the “receipts” to back it up. The battle may not be over, but the narrative has been seized. Heart’s camp has proven that they are not just “mema.” They are strategic, they are armed with facts, and they have issued a clear, unspoken threat to anyone, no matter how powerful, who dares to use Heart Evangelista’s name in vain: “Tread carefully, because we are watching. And we keep all the receipts.”