The Bold and the Beautiful
Who’s The Boss?! B&B’s Hope and Brooke Need a Reminder That Steffy Forrester Isn’t Just Acting Like the Forrester Creations Queen: She IS The Forrester Creations Queen!
Hope and Brooke Logan are throwing tantrums in a building they do not own and Steffy Forrester has the 37.5% ownership stake to prove it.

STEFFY FORRESTER OWNS 37.5% OF FORRESTER CREATIONS AND THE LOGANS NEED TO SIT DOWN
TL;DR: Hope Logan stormed out of the main office at Forrester Creations on this week’s Bold and the Beautifuldeclaring she knows her worth, and Brooke Logan is sitting at home plotting how to fight for what she “deserves.” Reader, here is a math lesson. Steffy Forrester owns 37.5% of the company. Eric Forrester owns 37.5%. Ridge Forrester owns 20%. The Logans own zero. Steffy is not acting like the queen. Steffy IS the queen.
The Numbers the Logans Keep Forgetting
Let us pull out a calculator, darling. Eric Forrester owns 37.5% of Forrester Creations as the founder and chairman. Steffy Forrester owns 37.5% as co-CEO, including the 12.5% Bill Spencer transferred to her in 2018. Ridge Forrester holds 20% as co-CEO and head designer. Thomas Forrester rounds it out with 5%.
That math leaves the Logans with exactly zero percent ownership of the building they keep storming out of in tears. Zero. Not a share. Not a vote. Not a leg to stand on. Hope Logan walked into the main office this week, demanded a timeline for her line, declared “I know my worth,” and threw out a “someone else will” before storming out. Steffy laughed in her face. Reader, Steffy was not being rude. Steffy was being correct.
Brooke Logan is now sitting in her own home plotting how to “fight for what she deserves.” Hope is encouraging her mother to take on Steffy in a boardroom Brooke does not have a chair at. The two of them have spent decades acting like Forrester Creations is the family business they were entitled to inherit, and the receipts say something different. The Logans are guests at a Forrester table, and the Forresters have been served notice they are tired of refilling the wine.
Should the Logans accept their place in the Forrester Creations pecking order or do they have a right to demand more? Send your hottest takes to [email protected] and we may publish them right here on the page!
Hope Logan Walked Out of a Building She Does Not Own
Hope’s “I know my worth” exit was the speech of a woman who has confused being employed with being valuable. The Hope for the Future line is a Forrester Creations line. The intellectual property belongs to the company. The brand belongs to the company. The customer base belongs to the company. The trademarks belong to the company. The only thing Hope Logan personally owns is her face on the campaign and her last name, which is, ironically, the wrong last name for the building.
When Hope sniffed “if you don’t want me, someone else will,” she meant Logan. The problem is the woman who started Logan also does not own Forrester Creations. Katie Logan launched her boutique with Eric Forrester’s designs given to her in a moment of pique, and that fountain has dried up. Eric came home. Eric apologized to his family. Eric is back at Forrester Creations standing next to Ridge while the Logans cry about being unappreciated. The defection plot Hope keeps flirting with starts at zero, walks past zero, and ends at zero, because Hope cannot take Forrester intellectual property with her when she leaves a company she has no ownership stake in.
Hope is not threatening the company. Hope is threatening herself. Steffy laughed because the math is hilarious. Carter Walton would tell you the same thing in a contract review. The minute Hope walks, the line stays. The contracts stay. The customer base stays. Hope walks into Logan with her face, her last name, and a boyfriend who runs a competing magazine, and she calls that a power move. Steffy calls it a Tuesday.
Brooke Logan Has Been Acting Like a Forrester for Forty Years and It Is Time to Tell Her
Brooke Logan married into this family. She married into it again. She married into it a third time. She has spent the entire run of this show treating Forrester Creations like her personal fashion empire, when at no point has she ever held an ownership stake worth talking about. Brooke is a former CEO who was put in the chair by the family that owns the company, and the family that owns the company has every right to take that chair away whenever they want. They have. Repeatedly.
Now Brooke is being encouraged by her daughter to “fight for what she deserves,” and the question every viewer should be asking out loud is: deserves based on what? A marriage that ended, started, and ended again? Three decades of using the Forrester boardroom as her personal stage? A history of giving her access to her own daughter so she can keep one foot in the building? Brooke Logan does not have equity. Brooke Logan has tenure, and tenure does not vote at the shareholder meeting.
The new generation of Forrester women does not owe Brooke a single thing, and Steffy Forrester is the daughter of the woman Brooke spent decades treating like a rival. Steffy has 37.5% of the company. Brooke has the marriage license to the man who has 20%, and a marriage license is not a stock certificate. The day Ridge votes against Steffy is the day the Forrester family becomes the Logan family, and that day has not arrived. It is not coming.
Steffy Forrester Is Not Acting Like the Queen Because She IS the Queen
The genius of this week’s confrontation is that Steffy did not raise her voice. Steffy did not throw papers. Steffy did not make a speech. Steffy laughed, kept her seat behind the desk, and watched Hope walk out of a building she does not own. Then she turned to her father and said Hope was not going anywhere. Why? Because Steffy Forrester knows the math. Steffy Forrester knows the contracts. Steffy Forrester is the woman whose name is on the deed.
Hope can wail about toxic environments. Brooke can fight for what she thinks she deserves. Liam Spencer can pitch defection from his couch at home. Katie Logan can wave from Logan and promise her niece a corner office. The receipts do not change. Eric Forrester votes with Steffy. Steffy votes with Steffy. Ridge will vote however he votes, but 75% of the company has already made its position clear. The Logans walking out is not a coup. The Logans walking out is a coffee break.
The real shock of the week is that anyone in that office still pretends the Logans have leverage. They do not. Hope never have. Hope never will. Steffy is not behaving like a queen. Steffy IS the queen, and the throne has her name engraved on the back. The Logans need to sit down, smile, and remember whose dress they are wearing.
Are the Logans entitled brats acting up in a building they don’t own, or do they have a real claim to fight for? Sound off below because the comment section is going to be a war zone!
WATCH THIS: What will Hope’s next move be?
@soapoperamag #HopeLogan Defects to Logan With Her CREW and the Runway is About to FLOP on B&B! She takes #ZendeForresterDominguez and her brother. The lineup TANKS. Hit play because the only question is: does she crawl back to Forrester or run to Thomas?! #BB #BoldandtheBeautiful ♬ original sound – Soap Opera Magazine






















