Is La Belle Vie Charcuterie Utah All It Appears? A Look at Tianna Evertsen’s Business & Complaints
Status Update & Disclaimer — October 4, 2025
As of the date of this article, Tianna Evertsen has not responded to requests for clarification or provided evidence addressing the concerns raised by customers and former employees of La Belle Vie Charcuterie and The Wedding Vault Magazine. This article reflects publicly available information, consumer complaints, and personal opinions based on that information.
Importantly, we are not stating as fact that Tianna Evertsen is a scammer. We acknowledge that, like many businesses, not every event or transaction works out perfectly. Miscommunication, isolated mistakes, or client misunderstandings can happen to any business owner.
That is why this post also serves as an invitation. Tianna is encouraged to respond quickly and publicly and provide supporting evidence or clarification. DisputeVoice will publish her full, unedited response as long as it is backed by verifiable proof.
Even if Tianna provides proof that disproves some or all of the concerns raised here, this DisputeVoice post becomes a permanent public record—a resource for consumers to review both sides and make an informed decision.

Let us begin...
In today’s social media-driven world, event-hosting scams have evolved beyond clumsy email cons or shady Craigslist ads. With polished Instagram pages, curated photo galleries, and influencer partnerships, bad actors can present themselves as thriving businesses—even when the truth is far more troubling.
From the global disaster of the Fyre Festival to disturbing local cases involving figures like Tianna Evertsen, scammers have perfected the art of building trust online, collecting upfront payments, and disappearing—often leaving victims financially and emotionally devastated.
This in-depth guide will expose how these scams operate, real-world examples, and why platforms like DisputeVoice.com are the only reliable way to warn future victims before they make the same mistake.
Fyre Festival: The Original Social Media Event Scam
The infamous Fyre Festival remains the gold standard of event-hosting scams. Marketed as an exclusive music festival on a private Bahamian island, organizers promised luxury villas, gourmet food, and A-list performances. Influencers flooded Instagram with sleek promotions—but when attendees arrived, they found disaster relief tents, minimal food, and chaos.
Founder Billy McFarland was sentenced to six years in prison, but the Fyre Festival taught scammers everywhere a valuable lesson: A polished online presence can lure even the most cautious consumers.
Tianna Evertsen and La Belle Vie Charcuterie Utah: A Local Example of the Same Playbook
Title: La Belle Vie Charcuterie Utah Instagram Page
Alt Text: Screenshot of La Belle Vie Charcuterie's Instagram page promoting Utah grazing tables and catering services.
Caption: Tianna Evertsen's La Belle Vie Charcuterie Instagram page shows a carefully curated brand image promoting grazing tables and catering in Utah.
Description: This screenshot from the La Belle Vie Charcuterie Instagram account showcases the polished, professional aesthetic used to market Utah catering and grazing table services. Despite the attractive online presence, numerous customer complaints tell a different story.
While the Fyre Festival was international news, similar scams unfold every day in local communities—and the pattern is shockingly familiar.
Tianna Evertsen, operating under business names like La Belle Vie Charcuterie and The Wedding Vault Magazine, presents a flawless brand image on Instagram. Lavish grazing boards, elegant events, and curated social media posts portray a thriving event service—but a deeper look reveals a concerning story.
On Reddit’s popular r/UtahInfluencerDrama, dozens of users have come forward with alarming complaints:
"She would make them pay $1,000 for a board and then ghost them or show up with something you can make for like $6.50." — u/k8thegr8
"I was scammed not only by LBV but also by The Wedding Vault as a wedding planner. I trusted her for my clients and got burned." — u/UtahPlanner87
"Worked for her. She stiffed me on wages and treated everyone like they were disposable. Soulless." — u/FedUpCatering
"The lies were constant, the clients always angry, and somehow it was never her fault." — u/EventsBurned
"She'd sell out her own mother for a viral Instagram post." — u/ExVendorBurned
A Polished Instagram, No Google Reviews: The Classic Scam Pattern
One of the most glaring red flags surrounding Tianna Evertsen and La Belle Vie Charcuterie is the total absence of Google reviews. For a business claiming to serve weddings, private parties, and corporate events, this is highly unusual.
Why? Because satisfied customers nearly always leave Google feedback—especially for visually impressive services like charcuterie boards or event design. But scam operations often:
- Avoid setting up a Google Business Profile to dodge public accountability. 
- Rely solely on Instagram or TikTok, where they control the narrative. 
- Delete, block, or hide negative feedback. 
Pair that with the growing wave of complaints on Reddit and other platforms, and the picture becomes clear: The business looks polished online but leaves a concerning trail offline.
Charcuterie: What It Really Is

Charcuterie is a cornerstone of French cuisine, referring to the culinary art of preparing cured meats and specialty products like bologna sausage, smoked meat, and sausage casings. Traditionally, a charcutier, or pork butcher, would craft items such as marbled meats, steak tartare, and processed meats, often served with accompaniments like boule (bread), Basque cuisine specialties, or polonaise sauce.
Today, charcuterie boards have become a trendy centerpiece at events, typically featuring cured meats, cheeses, steak frites, barbecue items, or even seafood like basa (fish). Yet, behind the Instagram-ready photos, there's a rich history rooted in meat science, meat cutting, and centuries of medieval cuisine.
True charcuterie involves expertise, quality sourcing, and respect for culinary tradition. When businesses overcharge for subpar mystery meats, repackage supermarket items as luxury, or exploit trends without proper skill, it misleads consumers—and tarnishes the art of charcuterie itself.
Questionable Content Ownership: Repurposing Videos to Boost Credibility?
Social media deception doesn’t end with curated images. Some speculate that Tianna’s Instagram features videos implying association with recognizable public figures—including a clip of Elizabeth Smart attending a house party. If it is legit, send us the proof! DisputeVoice will say so here and validate it, but only after confirming its authenticity. It mentions Sia•Snowman too. Is this a legitimate association? Click the image to see the video.
But critical questions remain:
- Did Tianna film the video herself?
- Did she repurpose a clip found online?
- Was it relabeled to create the illusion of her brand’s involvement?
And this image, which I have tried to research myself but could find no cross-referencing information. It it a legitimate review post? It does not mention Tianna Evertsen's La Belle Vie Charcuterie. Again, if it is legit, send us the proof! DisputeVoice will say so here and validate it but only after confirming its authenticity.

Instagram’s platform allows users to upload any video from their device, regardless of the source. Adding logos, captions, or filters is a known tactic among influencers and scammers to inflate credibility.
While no direct proof confirms this occurred with Tianna’s content, the possibility—combined with the absence of Google reviews and extensive complaints—warrants serious caution.
Apparently their BBB rating is an F.

Anatomy of a Modern Event-Hosting Scam
Event-hosting scams often follow a predictable, five-step pattern:
- The Hype: Instagram reels, influencer shout-outs, and photo shoots build excitement.
- Upfront Payments: Victims pay deposits or full fees—often thousands of dollars.
- The Disappearance: Communication breaks down, quality plummets, or nothing is delivered.
- Blame Shifting: Organizers blame vendors, weather, or the victims themselves.
- Rebranding & Repeat: The scammer shuts down and relaunches under a new name.
This pattern has been seen with the Fyre Festival, Tianna Evertsen, and countless others.
How to Spot the Red Flags
Protect yourself by watching for these warning signs:
- Overly polished Instagram feeds with limited third-party reviews.
- No Google Business Profile or Google reviews.
- High-pressure sales tactics.
- Missing or vague contracts.
- Untraceable payment methods.
- Recurring complaints on Reddit or forums.
- Evidence of repurposed content or staged photos.
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Real Victims Share Their Stories: Reddit Voices
Communities like r/UtahInfluencerDrama are critical for exposing bad actors. In Tianna’s case, the stories shared go beyond disappointed customers—they include unpaid employees and deceived collaborators:
"She didn't pay me for three weeks of work. Classic narcissist behavior." — u/EventInsiderUtah
"She promised the world, under-delivered, then blamed everyone else." — u/BehindTheBoards
"Hires people, bleeds them dry, ghosts them—then starts a new 'business' with a new logo." — u/WiseToItNow
These firsthand accounts reveal the true scope of harm: financial loss, damaged reputations, and shattered trust.
Why Reddit Isn’t Enough: How DisputeVoice Fills the Visibility Gap
Reddit threads are powerful—but their reach is limited. Most brides, event planners, and corporate clients find vendors through Google, not buried Reddit posts.
That’s where DisputeVoice.com comes in:
✅ Structured, search-optimized warning pages targeting business names and keywords.
✅ References to Reddit threads for proof.
✅ First-page Google visibility—right where potential clients are searching.
✅ Public pressure scammers can’t easily hide from.
A simple Google search like "Tianna Evertsen reviews" or "La Belle Vie Charcuterie scam" should reveal the truth—and DisputeVoice helps ensure it does.
We Invited Tianna Evertsen to Respond Before Publishing
We also invite past and present clients of Tianna Evertsen, La Belle Vie Charcuterie, and The Wedding Vault to come forward and share their experiences—good or bad. Whether your story reflects outstanding service or disappointing results, we believe in transparency and want all sides to be heard. You are welcome to submit your experience and, if you wish, supporting images or documentation, to DisputeVoice.
Before publishing this article, we provided Tianna Evertsen the opportunity to respond to the concerns raised. We invited her to share her side of the story and to provide verifiable documentation, receipts, communications, or any other evidence that could disprove the growing body of complaints.
As of the time of publication, Tianna has not provided any such documentation or response.
We remain committed to fairness. Should Tianna choose to share verifiable evidence or a public statement, DisputeVoice will publish it in full, unedited, provided she can substantiate her claims.
Importantly, even if Tianna provides proof that disproves some or even all of the concerns raised here, this DisputeVoice post becomes a permanent public record. It remains visible as a documented example of how public allegations, unanswered complaints, and missing transparency created real doubt. Future clients researching her name or business will see both sides of the story, helping them make an informed decision—and helping prevent the next person from unknowingly walking into a trap.
How DisputeVoice Works
DisputeVoice is designed to:
- Document real victim experiences.
- Publish them as structured, credible blog posts.
- Optimize them for high visibility in Google results.
- Connect the dots between polished social media and real-world complaints.
Founder Steve Chayer, himself a scam victim, explains:
"After losing a large sum to an online business scam, my lawyer told me recovering the money was unlikely. But I’m a fighter—so I built DisputeVoice to expose bad actors where it hurts them most: in search results."
Already, names like Blake Evertsen, Eyad Abbas, and Dustin Boudreau, among others, show how DisputeVoice makes scams visible—and Tianna Evertsen’s case deserves the same spotlight.
Conclusion: Awareness Is Your First Line of Defense
Event-hosting scams thrive on appearance, not accountability. Don’t be fooled by Instagram feeds, influencer endorsements, or flashy branding.
Do your research. Read independent reviews. Listen to real victims on Reddit. And when the truth is buried, let DisputeVoice help uncover it.
Have you been impacted by Tianna Evertsen, La Belle Vie Charcuterie, or another event-hosting scam?
Visit DisputeVoice.com to share your story and help protect others.
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