How Gwyneth Reacted To Brad Pitt Marrying Jennifer Aniston
Apparently, Gwyneth was asked about the couple during the Toronto Film Festival premiere of Duets in September 2000, and was less than thrilled, saying "Are you really asking me this question? I can't comment on this kind of thing."
However, Odell reports that the actor was also bummed about her ex moving on, and told friends that Brad "has terrible taste in women." Here's the full excerpt via Us Weekly so you have all the context:
Odell also claims that in 2005 (when Brad and Jen divorced), Gwyneth didn't hold back about her ex during a dinner:
Okay then!

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Are age-gap relationships too real for reality TV?
"Bachelor in Paradise" mixed its franchise mainstays with its "Golden" cohort for a more age-diverse cast. Other shows are following suit. After more than a decade on the air, Bachelor in Paradise is known for a few things: young, hot singles hooking up and having it out on a white-sand beach, endless swimsuits and humorously edited shots of tropical wildlife. When the reality dating show returned this summer after a two-year hiatus, ABC decided to shake up the formula. Instead of welcoming dozens of 20- and 30-something contestants back for another round of cocktails and confessionals, producers decided to cast a wider net. The revamp would include youngins mixing it up with the older, equally attractive contestants from The Golden Bachelor and The Golden Bachelorette. 'For the first time ever, Golden men and women will be hitting the beaches of Paradise alongside all of your Bachelor and Bachelorette favorites from seasons past,' franchise host Jesse Palmer announced during the Season 29 finale of The Bachelor. 'So how is this whole thing going to work? You're going to have to tune in to find out.' Naturally, age-gap discourse ensued — and just as predictably, controversy soon followed. With the format change, both Palmer and longtime Paradise bartender Wells Adams expressed their hopes for age-gap romances among the Bachelor extended universe in the run-up to the July season premiere. 'This happens all the time in the real world. Look at Bill Belichick right now,' Adams told Us Weekly, referencing the 73-year-old UNC football coach's romance with Jordon Hudson, 24. Some longtime fans and Bachelor alumni reacted negatively, suggesting that the idea was creepy, or at least inappropriate. Palmer soon adjusted his message, instead saying he "encouraged everyone to stay in their generational lane and just not make it weird.' Still, the discourse was curious for a time when so many age-gap relationships seem to be unfolding in the public eye. Is our patience for these May-December romances wearing thin, or is the Bachelor audience specifically primed to reject an age-diverse dating pool? The golden rule When The Golden Bachelor premiered in September 2023 to record ratings, it felt like a potential antidote for the franchise's traditionally narrow outlook on age and dating. In any given season of The Bachelor, any woman over 30 is liable to worry about being treated like a crone next to her younger peers. During Clayton Echard's Bachelor run, a 33-year-old contestant called herself a "cougar." Although The Golden Bachelor and The Golden Bachelorette dig deeper and have earned praise for focusing on participants' emotional depth rather than their age or how they look in a dress or suit, the franchise has kept those shows' participants separate from their younger counterparts, save for a cameo here and there to offer advice. Until now. Bachelor in Paradise's age-gap exploration follows a growing trend in the reality dating space. In addition to ABC's Golden franchise expansion, Netflix launched its own mature dating show, The Later Daters, in 2024. Then there's TLC's MILF Manor, in which mothers and their sons hit the beach together only to find out that they'll all be dating other parents and offspring. Up next in 2026, Bachelor star Nick Viall, who is 44, and his wife, Natalie Joy, who is 26, are hosting their own age-gap dating show, Age of Attraction, where 'age is thrown out the window when singles search for their soulmates.' The flurry of newer shows that subvert age expectations follows a familiar pattern in reality television, Andy Dehnart, editor of Reality Blurred and president of the Television Critics Association, tells Yahoo. Whenever a new format finds even moderate success, everyone races to create their own version 'and generally falls on their face because they've missed whatever makes that thing interesting,' he says. But age-gap dating series and those centered around more mature singles could strike the right balance of familiar and novel to viewers, Denhart says. He doesn't foresee age gaps taking over reality TV, though. 'I don't expect every single show to suddenly do this, or Big Brother next summer to be a house full of 20-somethings and 50-somethings,' he says. A sign of the times While shows about older singles' experiences in the dating world reflect a growing spirit of inclusivity in reality television, the focus on age gaps, specifically, seems out of step with real-world trends. According to Pew Research, the share of heterosexual relationships in which the husband is older than his wife by three or more years has been steadily declining since 1880. In fact, data shows married couples keep getting closer in age. In 2000, 46% of opposite-sex married couples consisted of spouses who were two years apart in age or less. In 2022, that increased to 51%. Whereas in the past, supposed 'gold diggers' were often maligned to the point of outright harassment (see: Anna Nicole Smith), younger generations are highly attuned to the skewed power dynamics that can arise in these relationships and are more likely to criticize the older partner in the couple as a 'cradle robber.' Perhaps because of this, the public discourse has not been kind to many of the celebrity age-gap relationships we've seen of late. Viall and Joy faced criticism from both within and outside Bachelor Nation for their 18-year gap; Belichick and his 'creative muse' Hudson have weathered public scrutiny for their nearly five-decade age disparity; and Tom Cruise's new, much younger rumored flame, Ana de Armas, has already been accused of ageism for apparently liking an unflattering social media post about his ex Nicole Kidman's supposed cosmetic work. Within this context, it's hardly a surprise that the idea of Boomers hooking up with millennials and Gen Z-ers on the BiP beach did not spark joy for many. But Lavonne McNeil, a 60-year-old billing specialist from Englewood, Colo., who has been watching the Bachelor franchise since the 2000s, has a different perspective. When she met her lhusband Larry, who died nearly two years ago, she was 32 and he was 54. They married after seven years of dating and remained together until his death. 'It was a beautiful run, and I absolutely loved and adored him,' McNeil said. 'He made me feel safe, and he made me feel validated. He was the best person I could ever ask for in my corner.' The way McNeil sees it, the dismissive takes about a May-December romance ignore a core reality of falling in love: the heart wants what it wants, social expectations be damned. In her case, the relationship lasted 27 years, throughout which she and Larry loved each other intensely. The difficulty only arose at the very end. As a couple with significant years between them grows older, she says, their dynamic begins to change. 'It's not so much a couple anymore, as it is like taking care of a parent,' she says. 'That is only the downfall [of] that. But I was there until the end regardless, because I knew that was my responsibility.' McNeil feels a little differently about the prospect of age gaps on Bachelor in Paradise than some of the online commentariat. 'Age is not a factor,' she says about falling in love — at least, not in her case. Compatibility 'depends on the couple. It's not a one-size-fits-all. … It's a case-by-case scenario.' Dehnart also believes the Paradise age-gap discourse has gotten a little off track. He acknowledges that age gaps typically bring with them a power differential that can become problematic. Given that dating shows typically reinforce traditional understandings of heterosexual relationships, and especially at a time when the culture is trending back toward conservatism, he says, 'I think it's understandable that when you disrupt that a little bit, people get weirded out.' At the same time, Dehnart argues, the singles on Bachelor in Paradise are in their late 20s to early 30s. 'People in their 30s, especially those who've already been on a reality TV show, know what they're doing — not only in front of the camera, but in relationships,' he says. 'At least enough to make those kinds of choices.' These productions are also hyper-mediated environments, in which many conventional aspects of dating fly out the window. In Paradise, especially, where marriage is a potential result but not necessarily the goal, applying traditional rules of dating starts to feel a little self-defeating. As Dehnart puts it, 'I don't think that anyone's expecting [Paradise] to be, really, the solution to their relationship issues.' Age is just a number So far, the Goldens and their younger counterparts have kept things light on the BiP beach — although Sean McLaughlin, 28, and April Kirkwood, 67, heated things up with a kiss during a hot (and feathered) chemistry challenge. Kirkwood previously gave Jonathon Johnson, also 28, her rose when he faced elimination, but he's since clarified that their bond remains strictly platonic. Chances are, we won't see a full-blown relationship form between any of the Goldens and the junior cohort, but in this horny setting, it's wise to never say never. After a lackluster ninth season, before its hiatus, Paradise, along with the Goldens, has now added a $500,000 cash prize. For the first time since 2007, The Bachelorette won't air a new season this year — news that broke not long before two lead producers left the franchise. Ratings for The Bachelor have been trending downward for years. Within that context, the experimentation we're seeing on Paradise begins to feel like part of a bigger pivot. According to Dehnart, this move could be interpreted as a 'last-ditch effort' to save the Bachelor franchise by taking its newest, Golden success and blending it with something that's historically worked — like transforming its onscreen talent into a revolving cast of pseudo soap opera stars who create new stories again and again. So far, the season has not performed well relative to its predecessors; Season 10's premiere brought in the lowest viewership in Paradise history. ABC and Warner Bros., which produces the series, did not immediately respond to Yahoo's request for comment. 'This is maybe our first network franchise that is ready to go away,' Dehnart says. Mixing age groups, he suggests, 'could be something that injects a little bit of life into it at this late stage and maybe gives us a few more years, depending on how it plays out.' Solve the daily Crossword


Cosmopolitan
8 hours ago
- Cosmopolitan
Matthew Koma Calls Out Hilary Duff for Having Sex in Dirty Shirt
Matthew Koma and Hilary Duff are out here being cute and flirty on Instagram, per usual. Hilary posted a video of her husband wearing a tank top that honestly looks like it's seen some things, captioning the photo "Pretty cool that you're still wearing your shirt that you performed in yesterday at sweaty Lollapalooza and you flew home in, and you're well into this day. Also having a pretty intense nip slip right now." Matthew performed at Lollapalooza with his band Winnetka Bowling League, and he shot back "You had sex with me in this shirt. What's that say about you?" I love them. Hilary and Matthew got married in 2019, and she recently gushed about him to Us Weekly (via Yahoo). "Oh, [he's] the best. Are you kidding?" she said. "My friends in town right now from Toronto, and I haven't seen her for a year, and we wanted to get a workout in. So I was like, 'We're gonna do a 7 a.m. workout. You got the kids?' And he's like, 'I'm on it. I got the kids.' He packed lunches and made breakfast and got everybody dressed and drove them to school. Like, he's in it." She added, "He's so hands-on, and then he's also my best friend. We get in bed and just download information to each other at night, and it's for fun. We're really in the thick of it right now."


Elle
a day ago
- Elle
How Ana de Armas And Tom Cruise's ‘Incredibly Close' Relationship Is Changing
Ana de Armas took Tom Cruise home to Vermont with her last weekend. The two stars were photographed holding hands, fueling more dating rumors. A source told People this week that Cruise and de Armas's relationship has changed, although the insider did not say whether it has become truly romantic. De Armas 'really enjoys spending time with him,' the source said. 'They've become incredibly close, and Tom continues to be a huge support—both personally and professionally.' The actress, who is working with Cruise on the thriller Deeper, wanted to take him to Woodstock, Vermont, where she owns a $7 million house. 'Ana loves Vermont,' the source explained. 'It's her place to rest and recharge. She was excited to host Tom and show him around. She took him to all her favorite spots.' A source told People on July 18 that de Armas was single. That same day, an insider detailed de Armas's connection with Cruise to the outlet. '[They] have a special work relationship,' the source said. 'Tom is crazy hardworking, and she's very excited to work with him. She calls it an opportunity of a lifetime.' Deeper begins filming this month. The source added that, as she has been preparing, Cruise has been 'an incredible mentor to Ana. She has nothing but amazing things to say about him.' For Cruise, the sentiment may go a little deeper. On May 14, a source told Us Weekly that Cruise was 'super smitten' with de Armas and had 'developed' feelings for her. 'They've gone out on some dates, and it's very low-key,' the source claimed. 'It's in the early stages, and he's been courting her.' ELLE Collective is a new community of fashion, beauty and culture lovers. For access to exclusive content, events, inspiring advice from our Editors and industry experts, as well the opportunity to meet designers, thought-leaders and stylists, become a member today HERE.