
Blake Lively's ex reveals why it was a 'struggle' to date her
Penn Badgley famously dated his Gossip Girl leading lady Blake Lively between 2007-2010 while starring on The CW soap, which wound up blurring the lines between fiction and reality for him.
'It was the struggle,' the 38-year-old Independent Spirit Award winner confessed on Call Her Daddy Wednesday.
'What starts to happen when you're in this one role for a long time — the aspect of celebrity being a part of it, a huge part of it — there is not enough separation, I think, for anybody.
'You're seen as this person, you're called their name out on the street. You also constantly have to be that person at work.'
Josh Schwartz and Stephanie Savage's critically-acclaimed adaptation of Cecily von Ziegesar's novel series about wealthy Manhattan teenagers aired for six seasons spanning 2007-2012.
The series was followed by a standalone sequel, also titled Gossip Girl, which aired for two seasons between 2021 and 2023 on Max.
Penn admitted he didn't possess the 'emotional maturity to understand how to differentiate' himself from his character - Brooklyn scholarship student Dan Humphrey - 'in terms of self-worth.'
'What people seemed to think of Dan seemed to be what people thought of me,' Baltimore-born Badgley noted.
The Ariana Grande video star was 'starved for many kinds of intimacy' due to his parents divorcing and 'really longed for that kind of connection' with the troubled 37-year-old, who played socialite Serena van der Woodsen.
Back in 2009, Blake confessed to Glamour of Penn: 'At first I was so upset that they hired him. I actually poisoned the whole cast against him. But then they noticed that he wasn't a jerk and was actually a really nice, charming person. Almost immediately I realized that too, but it took me about a week to admit it.'
Lively (born Brown) is currently embroiled in a legal war against her It Ends With Us director-leading man Justin Baldoni, who happens to be close friends with Badgley.
The You producer-star has even invited the 41-year-old filmmaker - who shares his Baha'i faith - to be a guest on his Podcrushed podcast in 2022 and 2023.
Blake and Justin are scheduled to face off in Manhattan US District Court for a sexual harassment and defamation trial beginning March 2026, but the general public have already sided with Baldoni.
Meanwhile, Penn and his wife of eight years - Domino Kirke - are set to welcome twin siblings this summer for their four-year-old son James.
Badgley is also stepfather to the 41-year-old singer's 16-year-old son Cassius O'Kane from her relationship with musician Morgan O'Kane.
The Ariana Grande video star was 'starved for many kinds of intimacy' due to his parents divorcing and 'really longed for that kind of connection' with the troubled 37-year-old, who played socialite Serena van der Woodsen
The Lewis & Clark College drop-out - who also dated Blink Twice director Zoë Kravitz - originally met Domino at a meatball shop in 2014.
Penn gushed: 'When we first met, it was immediate. And before we had time to think, I think we wanted to be together in the deepest way.'
Badgley produced and stars as serial killer Joe Goldberg in the 10-episode fifth and final season of Michael Foley and Justin W. Lo's series You, which premieres this Thursday on Netflix.
The small-screen adaptation of Caroline Kepnes' novel series will also feature Madeline Brewer, Anna Camp, Griffin Matthews, Charlotte Ritchie, and Tati Gabrielle.
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The Herald Scotland
an hour ago
- The Herald Scotland
'Two pints for a fiver' - How Wetherspoons reinvented the pub
The Counting House, Glasgow (Image: Colin Mearns) The Counting House, Glasgow (Image: Colin Mearns) The Counting House, Glasgow (Image: The Counting House, Glasgow) 'It's not the most salubrious bar, but it's where we like to drink,' Donald Munro tells me. He and his partner of more than two decades, Christine Watt, have managed to snag a table outside, but it's in the shade. The Counting House is their favourite place to get a drink when they come into the city centre from East Kilbride. Today's trip was to get a few bits for their upcoming holiday in Benidorm. 'Two pints for less than a fiver,' Christine says, waving at the glasses of half-drunk cider on the table. 'You just can't beat the price, and we like the atmosphere.' And the people watching is good. But it's the price more than anything else, Christine emphasises. A table in the sun becomes free, and they're off. Marion Duffy (Image: The Counting House, Glasgow) The Counting House, Glasgow (Image: Colin Mearns) Sisters Marion and Tracey Duffy are catching up over £4.42 mini bottles of Teresa Rizzi Sparkling Rosé at a table nearby. 'Everyone comes to Wetherspoons!' Marion says, letting out a burst of laughter. The bubbly 42-year-old florist says she has been coming to the Counting House for years, though she can't nail down just how many. It's their favourite location. 'Every year,' she says. 'Maybe four or five.' 'They've got cheap food and it's quite fast,' says Tracey, 43. Though she prefers somewhere a bit nicer for breakfast. For Marion, Wetherspoons has the best variety of people (specifically this one). It's the main reason she is so loyal to the establishments. 'People just chat normally, rather than having to push a conversation,' she says. 'People are really chatty when you go to the bar. When you're out here and you're in amongst it, it's just really lovely.' Last weekend, she met a couple from Australia at the Counting House. 'Only me,' she says, giggling. They have been keeping in touch on WhatsApp, messaging back and forth. A flicker of seriousness crosses her face. 'I don't know if you get this, but see when you meet people and you have a connection and you know that you'll always keep in touch,' her voice trails off. 'It's crazy'. They're in Ireland just now, but they are coming back in a couple of days, 'and they'll probably be back in here'. READ MORE MARISSA MACWHIRTER The beer garden is dissected by one long table. A group of more than a dozen students from Glasgow Caledonian University's podiatry department are celebrating their last exam. I ask them why they have picked Wetherspoons, what's the draw? Gary Mitchell (Image: Colin Mearns) 'Cheap bevvy,' says Gary Mitchell. Quickly and with a smirk. They find it easier to get a seat here than in other places, 'which are expensive'. 'The drilling just adds to it, that's Glasgow, man,' he adds, gesturing at Prince Albert in his white sling. Another student at the table motions to the building behind us. Someone has put a sign in the window that reads 'Trump is a jobby'. Everyone at the table agrees that Wetherspoons just is what it is. 'It attracts a multitude of people, no one is in the same age group or doing the same thing.' A pair of 19-year-old students from City of Glasgow College are sitting in the shade against the side of the building. Behind oversized sunglasses, they watch the sunny tables like hawks, waiting for one to free up. Anna, from Hamilton, and Sophie, from Uddingston, are not too sentimental about being at Wetherspoons. 'It wouldn't be my first choice, but it's cheap and close,' says Anna. It's just an easy option after attending lectures on campus. And the beer garden gets sunshine. No sooner has she said it than a table opens up. They pick up their pitcher of red cocktail and move along. Sophie and Anna (Image: Colin Mearns) The Counting House is just as busy inside as out. JD Wetherspoon reported that the recent good weather had buoyed sales as of late. Despite warnings from owner Tim Martin that pint prices would soon be hiked by 20p to offset elements of the latest budget, like-for-like sales are up 5.6% in the 13 weeks to April 27 across the chain's 795 UK pubs. It's a Tuesday afternoon, and a tour around the Merchant City proves that business is not so booming elsewhere. Punters are dotted around the outdoor tables of independents and smaller chain outlets, but nowhere is enjoying the same success as the Counting House. The latest edition of Wetherspoons News (more than 100 pages of pro-Spoons' copy) boasts that the pub is number three on Google Maps' list of best-loved pubs, making it number one in Glasgow. It also has a special article titled 'Killing Off An Urban Myth', in which the idea that the pub chain buys beer close to its sell-by date to keep the prices low is dubbed a 'ludicrous fairytale'. It is, perhaps, a symptom of the times that price takes precedence over all when it comes to choosing one's watering hole. Getting out and socialising is important no matter how tight one's belt is, and Wetherspoons appears to have dominated the cash-conscious market, though well-heeled punters are always about. The irony is not lost on me as I climb the marble steps leading inside the Counting House, a former bank. It's breathtaking inside. (Image: Colin Mearns) (Image: Colin Mearns) The Counting House, Glasgow (Image: Colin Mearns) The Italian Renaissance-style former Bank of Scotland head office, designed between 1867 and 1870 by JT Rochead, became a JD Wetherspoon in 1996. Scotland's flagship Spoons. The walls are decorated with paintings, drawings, photographs, and quotes about money. Beautiful caryatids adorned with symbolic objects, like scales, watch over punters as they fiddle with the Wetherspoons App, trying to order a pint of Stella. When they are not hunched over their smartphones, patrons are gazing up at the magnificent glass dome ceiling. Earlier in the morning, I had visited two other Glasgow Wetherspoons: The Society Room on West George Street and Hengler's Circus on Sauchiehall Street. The silence inside the pubs during the breakfast hours was unbearable. Neither venue is as impressive as The Counting House, but both embodied the same accessible Wetherspoon spirit. I watched as £5.75 plates of Scottish breakfast were ferried off to tables scattered around each venue's different seating areas, the scent of fried oil wafting through the air. All around, people were clutching white porcelain mugs. Coffee is just £1.71, and the refills are free. Morning, regular John McDonald is poring over a crossword while having his coffee. He tells me he likes that it's so quiet. He comes in once or twice a week because it's open early (7.30am), unlike the coffee shops near his Dennistoun home. 'Nowhere else really provides the same thing,' he says, before joking that the prices keep going up. Love it or hate it, Wetherspoon's provides a crucial meeting place for many people in Scotland. The prices are accessible to many, the quality is consistent, and the staff are friendly. They allow people from every corner of society to brush elbows, often in beautiful buildings. The growing need for such cut-price provisions says more about where we are as a society than anything. And one thing is for certain, everyone in Wetherspoons is happy with the price. Marissa MacWhirter is a columnist and feature writer at The Herald, and the editor of The Glasgow Wrap. The newsletter is curated between 5-7am each morning, bringing the best of local news to your inbox each morning without ads, clickbait, or hyperbole. Oh, and it's free. She can be found on X @marissaamayy1


Scottish Sun
2 hours ago
- Scottish Sun
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North Wales Chronicle
2 hours ago
- North Wales Chronicle
Tom Felton reprises Draco Malfoy character for Harry Potter play
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