Why is the photographer an **** at all? Because she didn't just give the cover away to please a customer? But if she had, where would it have ended? Because she sued for defamation? Shooting weddings was her livelihood - what was she to do, get retrained as a computer technician? Because the verdict was so large? That's how the lit game is played. The final settlement will probably be for about $50 thousand.
A single bridezilla cut my stint as a wedding photographer short - eleven great experiences, and one that made me never want to do it again.
I should sue, huh?
Speaking from my experience, when something like that happens, both parties are to blame.
If I were a wedding photographer, instead of complaining about "bridezillas", I would try to learn from other wedding photographers who are happy about their job. They do exist.
Charging a premium is always a good choice, a price that includes everything. Don't expect to attract clients with super low tariffs then to surprise them later by some hidden fees. Even Ryanair had to revise some of their policies, for example, on how much they could charge in case the passenger doesn't print his boarding card in advance.
By the way, in case someone feels compassion for the photographer in question and wants to support her in a financial way, she is giving a course on how to successfully run a photographic business and to earn $800,000 a year:
https://andreapolito.com/homepage
And if you sign up in the next 20 hours, you can get 50% off:
https://andreapolito.com/sales-page-15549986
Now it's up to you to decide whether such a person is potentially capable of **** you off by not delivering what has been promised.
Perhaps I should be waiting her to sue me, too. But I live in France, a country where no jury composed of compassionate human beings shall seat in civil cases and the judge knows the line between defamation and freedom of speech.