Ronda Rousey’s fight week media blackout means she won’t be at a media day promoting her comeback on Friday at UFC 207, but she’ll go before cameras when she weighs in for the pay-per-view fight on Thursday.

Online rumors swirled about the former bantamweight champ shutting out media for the event’s early and ceremonial weigh-ins, an unprecedented move for a UFC fighter despite her star status with the promotion. But Nevada State Athletic Commission Executive Director Bob Bennett today told MMAjunkie “nothing has changed” on the schedule for the event.

A UFC official confirmed Rousey’s attendance for both events with MMAjunkie after an initial tweet from FloCombat.com reporter Jim Edwards. Early weigh-ins take place Thursday at 9:00 a.m. PT at the MGM Grand Conference Center, though an exact location has yet to be announced. Fighters hit the scale for ceremonial weigh-ins and photos at 2:00 p.m. PT at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, which hosts the fight card. Both weigh-in events are open to the public.

Rousey (12-1 MMA, 6-1 UFC), No. 2 in the latest USA TODAY Sports/MMAjunkie MMA women’s bantamweight rankings, hopes to win back the bantamweight title in a fight against current champ and No. 1 fighter Amanda Nunes (13-4 MMA, 6-1 UFC), who became the third woman to hold the belt after Rousey was dethroned in November 2015 by now ex-champ Holly Holm.

The fight brings Rousey back into the spotlight after a year away from it. She shunned almost all media while recovering from her knockout loss, though she hosted “Saturday Night Live” and upon agreeing to fight Nunes eased back into the public eye with appearances on “The Ellen DeGeneres Show” and “Jimmy Kimmel Live.”

Still, Rousey declined all interview requests apart from promotional videos for the UFC and a profile in ESPN The Magazine. A request from MMAjunkie was turned down.

In her interview with ESPN.com, Rousey said the blackout was a conscious decision to focus her efforts on her comeback.

“When I try and do favors and make everybody else happy, at the end of the day, they walk away happy and I’m the one who has to deal with the depression,” she said. “All the pay-per-views in the world, all the money in the world, it means (expletive) nothing to me because I lost.”

On FS1’s “Countdown to UFC 207” special, Rousey also said she needed to shield herself from Internet critics who relished her defeat.

“I’m still grieving the person that could have won it all,” Rousey said. “But I have to live up to the fact that I’m not her. That’s just who I’d like to be. And instead I’m what I need to be for myself and everyone else. You have to go through those stages of acceptance and renewed optimism.

“I’m coming back to win this title for the people that believed in me. Everything in my whole life that I’ve always worked for. Everything depends on it. Everything is at stake.”

For more on UFC 207, check out the UFC Rumors section of MMAjunkie.