logo
Candid new photos suggest two big noughties stars are quietly dating

Candid new photos suggest two big noughties stars are quietly dating

News.com.au29-07-2025
Two big noughties movies stars have been spotted holding hands after seeing a movie together, suggesting they may be quietly dating.
She's All That and Josie and the Pussycats actress Rachael Leigh Cook, 45, was spotted hand-in-hand with former Superman actor Brandon Routh, also 45, in Los Angeles over the weekend.
The pair seemed very happy together as they waited in line, Cook holding Routh's hand and at one point putting her arm around his back.
Celeb outlet Just Jared, who first reported the news, said the pair may have been dating for months – they made a joint appearance on the Instagram page of a restaurant in Iowa after dining together back in February.
Routh is best known for playing Superman in the 2006 film Superman Returns, a one-film entry into the DC Comics franchise after a sequel planned for 2009 was cancelled. The franchise was later rebooted with Henry Cavill for Man of Steel in 2013.
He was previously married to actress Courtney Ford in 2007 – the couple have a son together, however Ford filed for divorce in January of this year citing 'irreconcilable differences.'
While Cook's career as an actress and model started when she was just a child, she's best known for her starring role in the 1999 teen comedy She's All That alongside Freddie Prinze Jr. and for playing the titular role in Josie and the Pussycats two years later.
She wed Canadian actor Daniel Gillies in 2004, and the pair had two children together before they divorced in 2021.
Cook said in a 2021 interview that, despite her string of box office hits around the turn of the millennium, she never saw herself as being in contention with some of the other big young actresses of the time.
'I never saw myself as shiny and pretty in the way that someone like Jessica Alba or Jennifer Love Hewitt were then,' she told The Independent.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Mixed reviews as Netflix finally releases season 2 of global smash ‘Wednesday'
Mixed reviews as Netflix finally releases season 2 of global smash ‘Wednesday'

News.com.au

time2 hours ago

  • News.com.au

Mixed reviews as Netflix finally releases season 2 of global smash ‘Wednesday'

It was perhaps a near-impossible feat for Netflix to top the dizzying highs of Wednesday's first season, which still ranks as the streamer's most-watched show of all time. Yet three years after viewers were first introduced to Tim Burton's macabre thriller centred around Wednesday Addams (Jenna Ortega), it seems for some, the wait wasn't worth it. The streamer finally released part one of Wednesday 's second season on August 6, with the first four episodes generating a deeply divided reaction among fans and critics. While there's yet again wide praise for Ortega's performance, the key takeaway is the character becomes lost in a convoluted plot with an overcrowded cast. Season two picks up back at Nevermore Academy, where Wednesday is – to her disdain – the toast of the school after her murder-solving exploits last season. The Hollywood Reporter was among the most scathing of reviews, criticising the unmemorable screenplay, and the bolstered roles of the entire Addams family, including Pugsley (Isaac Ordonez), Morticia (Catherine Zeta Jones) and Gomez (Luis Guzman). 'I can't think of any more damning criticism for these four new episodes of Wednesday than that, just two days after watching them, I legitimately can't remember anything that Wednesday is trying to accomplish this season, nor any single withering line of dialogue,' wrote reviewer Daniel Fienberg. 'Whereas my original review of the first season praised Wednesday for having the restraint and focus to not simply become The Addams Family … Wednesday has simply become The Addams Family,' Fienberg continued. The LA Times, meanwhile, ruled season two failed to 'recapture the magic' of its debut. 'It's impossible to recapture the magic of the first season, and Wednesday Season 2 isn't quite as crisp or surprising,' wrote culture critic Lorraine Ali. 'In the first four episodes made available for review, Wednesday 's zingers aren't as wickedly sharp as they once were. And because we know she's going to be annoyed by her classmates, such as perky werewolf roommate Enid (Emma Myers), the dynamic is not as morbidly charming.' IndieWire described the plot as 'so ordinary', while lamenting several 'lazy' one-liners. ' Wednesday 's dry, morbid humour is, at best, noticeable, but too often forgettable and sometimes actively lazy,' the outlet's review read. 'While arguably inconsequential in the long run, the faux pas exemplifies Wednesday 's priorities: all looks and little else. 'The absent attention to detail beyond what's stylish, combined with the neat-and-tidy aesthetic mandated for broadly appealing teen dramas, puts the focus back on what Season 2 is trying to say, which isn't much.' On the flip side, Variety was much more positive in its assessment, writing the show offered 'the same visual delights that have made all of Burton's worlds so fascinating.' 'With the Addams family getting increased screen time, several layered enigmas, and Ortega leading the charge, the show is still as twisted, enticing and devour-able as it was when it first debuted three years ago,' penned critic Aramide Tinubu. The Telegraph gave it four out of five stars, declaring the second outing offered 'both substance and style.' 'Netflix has given the series every chance with glittering additions to the ensemble and a twisting, turning storyline, full of homicidal crows and dark family secrets. A near three-year delay would have killed off a lesser show, but Wednesday 's murderously enjoyable second season proves worth the wait.' Part two of the season, which hits the platform September 3, has already generated considerable buzz thanks to a solid cliffhanger and an anticipated A-list cameo from Lady Gaga.

Davey Lloyd opens up about drug addiction and how he turned life around
Davey Lloyd opens up about drug addiction and how he turned life around

News.com.au

time2 hours ago

  • News.com.au

Davey Lloyd opens up about drug addiction and how he turned life around

Davey Lloyd has opened up about his sobriety journey – revealing that his addiction to drugs and alcohol was so bad, he nearly lost his life before managing to beat his demons. The former reality star, 35, has been free of substances for more than 500 days, a feat he achieved after checking into rehab following a scary accidental cocaine overdose that left Lloyd 'clinically dead' for several minutes in December 2023. After hitting rock bottom, the reformed party boy has a new outlook on life, explaining the emotional reason he finally cleaned himself up after hitting rock bottom. 'The only way I could be a decent human being, is to get sober,' he said while appearing as a guest on the new episode of the Soberly Speaking podcast. 'And doing that for my future wife, future kids and for my family.' Lloyd told host Julia Rangiheuea, a former Big Brother contestant who has also had a personal battle with substance abuse, that his issues stemmed from an unknown trauma he carried as a child after losing a sibling to Sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS). 'I found out through doing a lot of healing, and stuff like that in rehab, that trauma can be passed down from parents to their children,' he said. 'My brother passed away at five weeks old of cot death (an older term for SIDS), on Christmas Eve in 1988. 'I was conceived not long after his passing … my mum was still mourning when she was pregnant with me, so I absorbed a lot of her trauma and her own self-doubt. That has been ingrained into me.' He went on to state – through tears – that he believes this is where his own 'self-loathing and shame' came from, and why he detached himself to drugs after taking his first pill at age 16. From there, Lloyd began smoking marijuana, before finding cocaine, a drug he said was highly addictive as he had Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD). 'It made me feel normal,' he explained. 'People with ADHD release less dopamine in the brain, so cocaine for me was like self-medicating, and I remember being like, 'this is who I am supposed to be'. I can sit down and talk to people. I could be so friendly. I could listen to what people had to say.' After discovering the Class A narcotic, Lloyd became a 'party boy' who would go on days-long benders, admitting that before he starred on the first season of The Bachelorette with Sam Frost in 2015, he'd been out getting wasted. 'I was 25, the youngest there, and the first one to meet her,' he recalled on Soberly Speaking. 'I'd come from a big weekend, I'd probably had 15 eckies [ecstasy pills] and what not. 'I think I finished up partying on the Monday morning from Friday, and then had to leave the house on Tuesday to start filming'. Despite forming a 'connection' with Frost, Lloyd left the famous mansion without a rose ceremony, and returned back to his party lifestyle, which he said only snowballed from there. As a result, Lloyd experienced three drug-induced seizures over the next decade, with the latter almost taking his life. 'I'd been sniffing for 48 hours, and I got up to get in an Uber, but as I stood up, I don't really know what happened,' he said. 'Forty minutes later, I woke up on the ground, all the ambulance surrounding me. I pissed myself, I couldn't get up, my mates were in hysterics, I couldn't speak. 'They told me after that I had died. My friends had attempted CPR on me and had failed, but luckily the ambulance came in time and brought me back to life.' After this terrifying brush with death, Lloyd began the long journey to health and recovery, stating it made him realise that 'my life was meaningless'. He moved back in with his parents and checked into rehab. But it wasn't all smooth sailing. Lloyd's addition had left him $70,000 in debt. 'When you're sniffing $8000 of cocaine-a-week, it racks up, pun intended,' he said. Now almost two years clean of drugs and alcohol, Lloyd is focused on his future, and hopes his sobriety will make him a good dad and partner when the time comes. Now, the former reality star said he's 'grateful' for the events that brought him to where he is today. 'I'm so grateful to be here, to have made it through the tough times, and to be experiencing life in a new way,' he wrote on Instagram recently. Fans have been quick to commend the reformed drug addict, praising him for his honesty and bravery. 'You should be so proud of yourself,' one said. 'Super brave Davey to be so open and transparent …. You are doing amazing things and your dreams and aspirations will most definitely come true,' agreed another. As one mused: 'Sobriety looks so good on you.'

Matthew McConaughey lost lead Titanic role for refusing director James Cameron's simple request
Matthew McConaughey lost lead Titanic role for refusing director James Cameron's simple request

News.com.au

time3 hours ago

  • News.com.au

Matthew McConaughey lost lead Titanic role for refusing director James Cameron's simple request

Paint me like one of your Dallas girls. Matthew McConaughey was nearly cast as Jack Dawson in Titanic, but reportedly sunk his audition with director James Cameron. Journalist Matthew Belloni's newsletter, What I'm Hearing, features an excerpt from the record-breaking film's producer Jon Landau's posthumous book, The Bigger Picture, which explains what allegedly happened during the Texas-born actor's audition. 'We brought him in to do a scene with Kate [Winslet]. You want to check for chemistry, not just how people look on film but how they interact,' Landau writes in his memoir, per the newsletter. 'Kate was taken with Matthew, his presence and charm. Matthew did the scene with the drawl.' When McConaughey, now 55, spoke with a Southern accent, Cameron, now 70, reportedly told him, 'That's great,' but added, 'Now let's try it a different way.' Dawson was meant to be an orphaned man from Chippewa Falls, Wisconsin, trying to make his way back to the US via the doomed ocean liner after travelling abroad. Landau claims McConaughey flat-out told Cameron after his accent change request, 'No. That was pretty good. Thanks,' costing him the part. Page Six reached out to reps for the actor and director for comment but did not immediately hear back. Although Leonardo DiCaprio was eventually cast as Dawson opposite Winslet as Rose DeWitt Bukater, the What's Eating Gilbert Grape star didn't make Cameron's job any easier in his own audition. In 2022, the Oscar-winning filmmaker told GQ that when he asked DiCaprio, now 50, to read the script during an impromptu test shoot, he told him, 'Oh, I don't read.' However, when Cameron let him know that if he didn't read, he wouldn't get the part, DiCaprio reluctantly agreed to run through lines and knocked the audition out of the park. The famed director said, 'Kate just lit up … dark clouds had opened up and a ray of sun came down and lit up Jack. I'm like, 'Alright, he's the guy.''

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store