
I tried to find out if the fossil I bought online was real. Then I realized I might be asking the wrong question
I always wanted to own a fossil, and once the algorithm picked up on that desire, ads flooded my Instagram feed. It then became impossible to resist the thrill of purchasing a piece of one of the largest predators that ever existed: Spinosaurus, a semiaquatic meat-eater that could reach almost 60 feet (about 18 meters) in length — longer and heavier than Tyrannosaurus rex.
When the package arrived, in a pretty glass dome and with a preprinted certificate of authenticity that stated it came from North Africa, the long pointy tooth looked the part to my untrained eyes: yellowish brown, with varying textures and a stonelike appearance. But some obvious cracks that suggested the specimen had perhaps been patched together from multiple fragments left me wondering: Was it real?
To find out, I took it to London's Natural History Museum, where Susannah Maidment, a senior researcher and fossil expert, examined it.
'Yeah, it's a fossil, for sure,' she said. 'It's got a rounded cross section with ridges down the front and back, so it's probably a Spinosaurus tooth.'
To my relief, I hadn't been duped. But it turns out my fossil wasn't as rare as I thought.
'This is almost certainly from Morocco, because almost all Spinosaurus fossils that we know of are from the Kem Kem formation of Morocco, and they're intensively excavated there,' Maidment added, referring to a fossil bed in southeastern Morocco that has yielded an abundance of predatory dinosaur specimens. 'The thing about teeth is that dinosaurs and other reptiles shed them continuously, so one dinosaur will have many, many teeth over its lifetime. And so they're very common.'
As a result, according to Maidment, I probably paid too much for it. However, her next observation quickly replaced that concern with another: 'This … has almost certainly been illegally exported and illegally excavated,' she said.
'This specimen — you have it illegally.'
Last year, a Stegosaurus skeleton nicknamed 'Apex,' measuring nearly 27 feet long (about 8 meters), sold for $44.6 million at a Sotheby's auction in New York City, becoming the most valuable fossil ever sold at auction.
Hedge fund manager Ken Griffin reportedly scooped up the specimen, which was discovered in 2022 on private land in Colorado, and it is currently on loan at New York's American Museum of Natural History.
The sale was just one in a series of recent high-profile auctions that sent near-complete dinosaur skeletons into private ownership. But the trend can be traced back to the sale of Sue, one of the most complete and largest T. rex fossils ever found. It was unearthed in 1990 and sold at auction in 1997 for $8.36 million after a long legal battle over its ownership.
Even though Chicago's Field Museum of Natural History purchased Sue and still has it on display, the pooling together of private funds led to its acquisition and kick-started the era of big-ticket fossil auctions. Seventy-one T. rex specimens are now in private hands, versus 61 held by public trusts, according to a recent study.
Peter Lovisek, a fossil broker and curator at Fossil Realm, a gallery in Ottawa, said a key turning point for the market — 'where these pieces began to be seen as cultural icons, artworks, investment assets' — was the auction of a 40-foot-long T. rex named 'Stan,' which sold for $31.8 million in 2020.
The media frenzy surrounding Stan, which is part of a planned exhibition at the upcoming Natural History Museum Abu Dhabi in the United Arab Emirates, brought fossils into the mainstream, Lovisek added.
'Since then, Instagram has become a hub for the fossil industry,' he said. 'A major part of our strategy is to focus on Instagram storytelling, and Instagram is connecting curators, dealers, diggers.'
CNN reached out to Instagram for comment but has not received a response.
You are now spoiled for choice if you want to buy fossils online. Most online shops offer a range of price points starting at a few dollars and going up into the low thousands, whereas Lovisek said he takes a more upmarket approach, from a few thousand dollars to the six-figure range.
And things are just getting started, according to Salomon Aaron, director of David Aaron, a London gallery dealing in ancient art and fossils. 'I think the dinosaur trade is actually still incredibly undervalued,' Aaron said. 'Relative to the art market, we are very much at the beginning, at the start of the dinosaur fossil trade.'
On the other hand, it's been over 200 years since the first dinosaur fossil was given a name, Megalosaurus, in 1824. Specimens have now been found on every continent, and more than 50 countries have contributed named species to science, with the United States, China, Argentina, Brazil, Canada, France, Germany, India, Mongolia, South Africa, Spain and the United Kingdom topping the rankings.
One enduring misconception, perhaps fueled by the multimillion-dollar auctions, is that fossils are rare. 'Across the world, people assume that everything's going to be unmanageably expensive, but that's not the case,' said Matt Dale, who owns Mr Wood's Fossils, a fossil shop in Edinburgh, Scotland, which also sells online. His cheapest dinosaur fossils are priced under 10 pounds (about $13.50), and include bone fragments, teeth and eggshells.
'I get a lot of questions that I hear again and again. One, where do you get all this stuff? Two, is it real? And three, why is it so cheap?' Dale said. 'The bulk of the stuff in my shop comes from unusually rich sites, where there's an awful lot of material, which makes it much more practical and feasible to collect it and sell it on a commercial basis. There's an artificial impression of how rare fossils are, and that's just — that's not the case for some things.'
Most fossil shops in the world will have some of these affordable items, Dale said, including ammonites, or shelled mollusks, from Madagascar; fish from Wyoming's Green River Formation; shark teeth from South Carolina and Florida; and trilobites from the Erfoud area in Morocco's northern Kem Kem region — the same place from where my Spinosaurus tooth likely comes.
After telling me that she thought my fossil was illegal, Maidment explained that 'the Moroccan fossil law states that you must have a permit for excavation and that you must have a permit for export, and you can only get a permit for export if you have an excavation license. Unless your seller is able to show you both, they have certainly excavated it illegally and exported it illegally.'
The online shop I bought the Spinosaurus tooth from is based in the UK and has a page on its website that asserts its commitment to ethical sourcing of artifacts. The company didn't respond to requests for an interview or comment on the origin of my fossil. Other online retailers offering similar merchandise that I contacted also didn't respond to my interview requests.
However, the shop could have legally purchased the fossils from a third party, or at one of many fossil trade shows such as Arizona's Tucson Gem, Mineral & Fossil Showcase. Held annually in January and February, the Arizona event bills itself as the largest gem and mineral show in the world. CNN reached out to the Tucson Gem, Mineral & Fossil Showcase for comment but has not received a response.
Morocco is not the only country imposing restrictions on fossil exports with the goal of preserving its cultural heritage. Export bans are also in place in Argentina, Brazil, China and Mongolia.
'All around the world, different countries have different laws. In the UK and the US, if you find something on your land, you can do whatever you want with it,' while in some parts of South America, for example, the person who discovers an artifact has a weaker claim, Maidment said.
Brazilian fossils in particular, according to a law established in 1942, don't belong to the finder, noted Taissa Rodrigues, a professor of paleontology at the Federal University of Espirito Santo in Brazil. 'It belongs to the country,' Rodrigues said. 'That means, if you find a fossil, you're not its owner, so that's why you're not allowed to sell it, because it's not up for you to decide.'
But Morocco seems to fall into a sort of legal gray area when it comes to fossil exports, said Maidment and David Martill, emeritus professor from the UK's University of Portsmouth. Despite laws in place intended to regulate export of these artifacts, almost all fossils excavated in Morocco end up on the commercial market, according to Martill. A small portion fuel the local souvenir market, and the rest go to fossil dealers who sell them to shops and online retailers throughout the world, he said.
'I am very familiar with the fossil black market in Morocco, because I work there, and we have huge problems at our (excavation) sites, where commercial fossil dealers who are black market smugglers come and excavate illegally from our sites, probably from the specimens that we're digging up,' Maidment said, speaking of those who operated without a proper permit. 'Sometimes we find the fossils, and then they take them, and then they sell them on European websites for up to 30,000 euros. So it's a huge, huge problem.'
Morocco's Ministry of Energy Transition and Sustainable Development, which regulates 'the fields of geology, minerals, hydrocarbons and energies,' has not responded to CNN's requests for comment.
The full extent of the questionable movement of fossils across borders is hard to pin down, but it has included important specimens such as Ubirajara jubatus, a feathered dinosaur species first described in a now-retracted 2020 paper from a one-of-a-kind skeleton that had allegedly been illegally exported to Germany from Brazil.
Germany's State Museum of Natural History Karlsruhe returned the rare remains to Brazil in 2023 among a wave of similar high-profile repatriations, including a 56 million-year-old crocodile fossil that Morocco recovered from the United States. A few years earlier, in 2015, actor Nicolas Cage returned a T. rex skull he bought for $276,000 at auction in 2007 to the Mongolian government.
It's more difficult for smaller, less expensive fossils that have been illegally exported to make it back to their country of origin, although in 2022 French customs returned nearly 1,000 fossils from the Araripe Basin in Brazil that had been stolen to be sold online.
Neither Martill nor John Nudds, an honorary lecturer in the department of Earth and environmental sciences at the UK's University of Manchester, would go as far as calling my fossil illegal.
'There's a bit of a gray area,' Martill said. 'I can't technically go there and dig fossils without the permission of the ministry in Rabat.' But he added that locals 'can dig fossils, they can cut fossils, they can polish fossils, and tourists can buy the fossils. And if you go to any fossil fair, you'll find Moroccan fossils for sale, and that will include Spinosaurus teeth.'
Nudds said he knows of at least one reputable wholesaler based outside Morocco that sells 'an awful lot' of Spinosaurus teeth exactly like mine. 'That's why I'm pretty confident that these are OK to come out of Morocco,' he said.
Part of the reason why fossils may occupy a legal gray area, Nudds added, is some ambiguous wording in UNESCO's 1970 Convention, which was designed to prevent the illegal export of items of cultural importance across many categories. The category that includes fossils is described as 'Rare collections and specimens of fauna, flora, minerals and anatomy, and objects of palaeontological interest.'
According to Nudds, the wording makes it unclear whether the objects of paleontological interest are in their own category, which would include all fossils, or if they are part of the 'rare collections,' which would not.
But when it comes to my tooth, he said he believes that unless the shop I bought it from has smuggled the item out of Morocco, then it is selling it legally, even if it bought it from a smuggler. 'There may be an ethical issue,' Nudds said, 'and there may be a moral or even a scientific issue, but not a legal issue.'
Elmahdi Lassale, CEO of M2 Rocks & Minerals, a Moroccan wholesaler and exporter of minerals and fossils that sells directly to retailers in the US, UK and Europe, confirmed that under Moroccan law, since 2020, fossils are classified as geological heritage. Excavating and exporting them isn't strictly off-limits, according to Lassale, but to do so commercially, a license must be obtained from the Ministry of Energy Transition and Sustainable Development as well as a validated customs certificate.
In practice, it means that before each export, Lassale sends the ministry a list of the individual items he wants to sell. 'Normally we just send the descriptions and the names of the items,' he added, 'but sometimes they ask to send a real specimen, to see it in person.'
When I asked if he deals in Spinosaurus teeth, he said he doesn't, because it's unlikely that the ministry would approve their export. 'If we talk about dinosaur bones or teeth, it's (almost) impossible to export from Morocco (even) with a license,' Lassale said.
Among the items he gets permission to export are trilobites, ammonites, shark teeth, and Mosasaur and Plesiosaur teeth and vertebrae. However, he said he is aware that other fossils do get out of the country via 'illegal suppliers' as well as 'through informal shipments via tourist luggage and small couriers, creating a mixed online market of documented and undocumented specimens abroad.'
He estimated the total trade of fossils in Morocco to be worth $30 million to $40 million annually, including official and unofficial exports, and that about 80% of fossils are exported. In a large trade show such as the one in Tucson, he said, there will be on average around 200 Moroccan fossil dealers.
Martill and Nudds viewed my fossil during separate video calls.
'You've got a genuine fossil, but I think it's a repair,' Martill said. 'There's a possibility that the tip belongs to a different specimen. You can see some glue — they often find broken examples, and they will just do sympathetic repairs.'
However, the human cost of obtaining even an imperfect specimen can be serious, he said. 'Let me tell you now that the man who dug that out of the ground risked not only his life but his lungs as well,' Martill said, adding that he has gone into fossil mines in Morocco and spent time with miners.
The fossil trade in Morocco is the main source of income for more than 50,000 people, including diggers, miners, artisans, middlemen and wholesalers who go on to export the fossils, according to a 2018 study.
Martill said he believed my tooth came from Hassi el Begaa, a village in the Kem Kem region.
'This is a place where the mines go in from the side of the hill,' Martill said. 'They go in horizontally, for maybe 50 to 100 meters (164 to 328 feet). They then turn to the left or the right, and that's when you lose any hint of sunlight. You're well underground, and the place is incredibly dusty. The miners are often working without masks. They have little head torches, and they dig with tiny crowbars fashioned out of the steel that you use to reinforce concrete. They're not sophisticated tools.
'They do this all day long and then shovel out all of the sand in a wheelbarrow, tip it down the side of the hill and look for the fossils. They're working extremely hard — they're hand-digging a mine,' Martill added. Taking all that into account, he said, what I paid for my tooth fossil 'is probably pretty cheap.'
Lassale agreed the fossil diggers in Morocco often work in challenging conditions, including temperatures as high as 40 degrees Celsius (104 degrees Fahrenheit), and with minimal protective equipment, while earning about 120 to 180 Moroccan dirhams (about $13 to $20) daily. He added that his company only partners with artisans and cooperatives that provide safety measures such as shade tents, water and protective goggles to workers, though he said such practices are not common industrywide.
'It's very easy to make a lot of money with this, but it's not easy to dig out minerals or fossils — small artisans, they put their health at risk' to support their families, Lassale said.
He noted that mines and shafts dug to reach fossil deposits have been known to collapse sometimes, causing fatalities. 'Unfortunately, we hear about that every year — not just fossil but also mineral mines,' he said.
Would I be in trouble if my fossil tooth turned out to be illegal? Experts told me I likely wouldn't, even if the specimen had been illegally exported — the responsibility would likely be on the wholesaler.
But things could be different for fossils from countries that have strong restrictions on fossil exports. That's why experts recommend prospective buyers avoid anything advertised from countries such as Brazil, Argentina, China or Mongolia.
'I guess the best advice would be to only buy something if you can see it and hold it in your hand,' Nudds said. 'If you're going to buy online, then maybe avoid those countries which do ban exports, because that's where you're more likely to find forgeries.'
Fakes don't seem to be widespread, but they're more common on the cheaper end of the market, according to Lovisek of the Fossil Realms gallery in Canada. 'There's so much scrutiny with the higher end, that the real problem is not forgery, but misrepresentation — claiming there's less restoration than there is, or claiming it's more real bone than there is,' he said.
Other than such deceptions or distortions, when it comes to how to purchase a fossil properly, experts offered guidance that would apply to buying pretty much anything online: Do your research, look for a reputable seller, and ask for paperwork or proof that the item is sold legally and ethically.
Perhaps the more important question is should you buy a fossil at all?
I still look at the Spinosaurus tooth on my bookshelf and marvel that it's the oldest thing in my house by at least 94 million years.
But given the complexities around fossils' cultural status and scientific relevance, the dangerous working conditions in some excavation areas, and the fact that many countries are now recovering fossils exported illegally, it's no surprise that the answer to that question has stirred disagreement, even within my small cohort of paleontologists.
'Do not buy your fossils online,' said Maidment of London's Natural History Museum. 'Unless you can absolutely verify that they are being sold legally, and that they're in your country legally, it's best to just not to do it at all. My view of fossils — it's something that belongs to all of us. It's part of our heritage. It shouldn't be something that one person owns.'
Martill has a different view, particularly for smaller, less rare specimens that don't hold as much value for researchers. 'There are billions of fossils in the ground. There's no point in them staying in the ground. And scientists like me, there's only so much that you can do with one isolated dinosaur tooth. It's a common fossil; it's scientifically uninteresting,' he said.
'I think it's great that you can have a fossil. You got something there which is 90 to 100 million years old,' Martill added. 'There is a possibility that you could buy a tooth and actually own a piece of the fantastic history of the life on Earth.'
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Their wedding programs said, "Today after 6,992 days on 27th July 2023 in Geneva, surrounded by loving family and friends, we are so happy to celebrate this special moment together!" In 2005, Robin Roberts and Amber Laign were set up on a blind date. In an Instagram post marking their 15th anniversary, Amber shared, "15 years ago I met you for drinks on a blind date that both you and I tried to Your grace caught my eye right away and the ease of the evening continued to flow through dinner 😘 We had a second date soon after and I couldn't believe how at ease I was with you as we shared each other's lives sipping lychee and apple martinis 😳 You left for Tahiti the following day and during that time apart I grew this feeling inside of me that still, is very present Having you by my side is a gift as we continue to navigate this thing called life. I drive you crazy....I know which is why I love you even more to this day." For nearly two decades, the couple has stood by each other through everything, including their breast cancer diagnoses. On a 2023 episode of Good Morning America, several months after Amber completed radiation, Robin said, "I'm hesitating because I haven't said it out loud yet … I'm saying 'yes' to marriage. We're getting married this year. It was something we had talked about, but we had put it off. She became ill but … it is saying yes to that, and that next chapter." Robin and Amber got married in September 2023. They announced it in the most adorable way possible — an Instagram post from their dog! The picture of Lukas in a bowtie was captioned, "My mommies are MARRIED!!!! Married?……yes….married!!! 👰🏾♀️👰✨" Cristiano Ronaldo first met Georgina Rodríguez at the Gucci store in Madrid, where she was working as a sales associate, in 2016. By early 2017, they were official. In her Netflix docuseries I Am Georgina, she said, "We had a very special start to our relationship... Many times, he'd come after work. He would come, I remember once, once in a Bugatti. My coworkers went crazy. They get there on the bus, and I would leave in a Bugatti. I mean, people couldn't believe it." Alongside raising Cristiano's oldest three kids, the couple went on to welcome three children together — Alana in 2017 and twins Bella and Ángel in 2022. Sadly, Ángel passed away. Cristiano and Georgina often faced speculation on when they'd finally tie the knot, especially after they relocated to Saudi Arabia, where it's illegal for unmarried couples to live together or have children. In Georgina's Netflix series, Cristiano explained why he was waiting to propose, even though he was "1,000% sure" he would marry her one day. He said, "I always tell her, 'When we get that click.' Like everything with our life, and she knows what I'm talking about. It could be in a year, or it could be in six months, or it could be in a month." In 2025, after almost a decade together, Cristiano finally popped the question with an absolutely massive ring. Sharing the moment on Instagram, Georgina said (translated from Spanish), "Yes I do. In this and in all my lives." In 2011, Ryan Gosling and Eva Mendes fell in love while playing love interests in The Place Beyond the Pines. In 2023, he told GQ, "I wasn't thinking about kids before I met her, but after I met Eva, I realized that I just didn't want to have kids without her. And there were moments on The Place Beyond the Pines where we were pretending to be a family, and I didn't really want it to be pretend anymore. I realized that this would be a life I would be really lucky to have." The couple went on to welcome two daughters — Esmeralda in 2014 and Amanda in 2016. Eva largely took a step back from working to care for their family, while Ryan continued acting. In his 2017 Golden Globes acceptance speech, he said, "You don't get to be up here without standing on the shoulders of a mountain. While I was singing and dancing and playing piano … my lady was raising our daughter, pregnant with our second, and trying to help her brother fight his battle with cancer." Eva and Ryan notoriously value their privacy. In a 2020 Instagram comment, she explained why she doesn't post more pictures of him, writing, "As far as Ryan, I'll only post flash backs of things that are already 'out there' (like pics from movies we did or stuff like that). My man and my kids are private. That's important to me so thanks for getting that. Have a beautiful day. Sending so much love!" Since their privacy is so important to them, it was no surprise that they decided to keep their wedding a secret! In 2022, Eva subtly confirmed their marital status while appearing on the Australian show Today. She said, "Everyone is so welcoming here, and my husband, Ryan, is here, and we are having the best time." In 1985, Tina Turner flew to Europe for a concert, and music exec Erwin Bach picked her up from the airport — and it was "love at first sight." In 2013, she told Oprah's Next Chapter, "He had the prettiest face. You could not miss it. It was like saying, 'Where did he come from?' He was really that good-looking. My heart went bu-bum. It means that a soul has met. My hands were shaking." Afterward, she invited him to visit her in the US with a bold proposition: "When you come to LA, I want you to make love to me." She said, "He looked at me like he didn't believe what he was hearing." Erwin visited Tina in Nashville before seeing her again in LA. In 1989, he popped the question. She said, "I said, 'I don't have an answer.' It wasn't yes, it wasn't no... Marriage says ownership. I didn't want that 'my' anything, anymore. I had enough of that." In 1995, the couple moved to Zurich, and in 2009, Tina retired from music. Then, in 2013, they had a big wedding at their estate. Erwin was there for Tina in a big way when she got diagnosed with kidney cancer a few years later. In her 2018 memoir Tina Turner: My Love Story, she said, "He said he didn't want another woman, or another life. Then he shocked me. He said he wanted to give me one of his kidneys." They remained together until her death in 2023. Don Cheadle and Bridgid Coulter met on the set of the 1997 drama Rosewood. At the time, they were both actors, but she stepped away from acting because they agreed one of them would always stay home with their kids, Tai and Imani. While Don was away working, Bridgid would rearrange the furniture. Once, when he got home, he asked, "Is there going to be a month when I return home, and this is just how our furniture lives?" Alongside her friends' admiration for her design prowess, his question inspired her to pursue a new career in interior design. In 2021, they had an intimate wedding at home. Don told Entertainment Tonight, "It was just beautiful. It was just for us in our backyard, our two kids. It was for us. It was special." Addressing why they waited 28 years to wed, he said, "Our accountant proposed to both of us, and he showed us the numbers, and we said, 'Yeah, we should probably do it.' ...It came up a lot of times. But every time, we were like, 'But we're already together?' He's like, 'Yeah, but this is a better reason to be together.' Really, it's because our accountant proposed to us. I wish there were some big, sweet, romantic story, but the romance happened, you know, the first year." And Bridgid joked, "You've got to make sure. I wasn't sure. Now, I think I'm almost sure." Josh Hartnett and Tamsin Egerton met while filming The Lovers in 2011. In 2024, he told Interview magazine, "[We met in] the most Hollywood way imaginable. We played husband and wife in the worst movie either of us have ever made. No offense to the director; it'll remain nameless. It just got lost in post-production. We were shooting here in London, and both had significant others, and both realized that wasn't going to work because we really liked each other. So I broke up with my girlfriend, she broke up with her boyfriend, and then after we stopped filming, we started to date." He continued, "But I was living in New York and she was living in London, so we went on a few vacations together. Then she came out to the States, and we went on a long road trip, where she met my parents, and it kept going. And then she kept staying with me, and I kept staying with her. We were living a lot of the time between houses together, and then she got pregnant, and then we got married." Josh also shared that they "were engaged when she got pregnant." The couple welcomed three children before getting married — a daughter in 2015, and two more children in 2017 and 2019. They lived between the US and the UK (her home country) for years but spent lockdown in the UK. Then, when they were expecting their third child, they decided to stay in her hometown of Hampshire for good. Tasmin and Josh got married in November 2021, but they kept it private until March 2022. Then, in 2024, they welcomed their fourth child together. Because Josh is in the UK on a marriage visa, he can only work out of the country for 180 days a year, giving him time to film one movie. He's perfectly happy with that because it gives him more time with his family. RuPaul and Georges LeBar met on a night out at the NYC club Limelight in 1994. In 2017, RuPaul told Entertainment Tonight, "Literally, on the dance floor at Limelight. He was dancing like a crazed person. I went over and said, 'What are you doing?' You know, and that was that. Yeah, he's a rancher. He has a ranch in Wyoming. A very large ranch." The couple decided to get married after the 2016 presidential election. RuPaul said, "What's happening politically right now, you know, you never know what could turn around at this point. Who thought that this would happen, what's happening in Washington right now. We are devoted to each other. We don't stand on ceremony. We thought, 'We don't have to get married.' But then, in light of what's happening currently in the world today, what's happening in Washington, we thought, 'You know what? Let's do it. Let's just do it, because there's too much at stake with our businesses' ...So, that's why we did it." So, in 2017 — on their 23rd anniversary as a couple! — they had an intimate wedding at the LA home. RuPaul said, "He works the ranch, I work Hollywood, and we meet up in fabulous places. You know, he needs breaks from time to time, because it's a very different life. So, we plan little getaways once a month, you know? New York or Maui or San Francisco or Vegas. We do that. It works [for us]. This concept of marriage that we were raised with is so different from the real style of relationships that linger for years and years... It takes — it's different. There's sickness and in health, and rich and poor. It takes a real commitment to be able to stick with someone no matter what, and see them as their authentic self … it's real life." In 2001, Amy Adams and Darren Le Gallo met in an acting class, but they were just friends for about a year. In 2008, she told Vanity Fair, "I had another boyfriend, and Darren was dating some girl. I did scenes with him, and I liked him and thought he was really sweet... I was really focused on the classes — he was a little scared of me." However, over one life-changing weekend, they costarred in the short film Pennies. Amy said, "I got to know him outside of class, and I just found him to be such a genuine, caring person. And assertive! He demanded that we go out on a date. He said, 'I know you're getting over this [other] guy, but I'm taking you out on Wednesday.' I think that was it exactly. And I was like, 'And so you are!' That was six years ago." In 2008, they got engaged, with People reporting they planned to tie the knot the following year. However, the couple took their time getting down the aisle. They welcomed their daughter, Aviana, in 2010. Five years later, Amy and Dan — who'd been together for 14 years at that point — got married in a small ceremony at their friend's house. In 2017, Amy told E! News, "I avoided getting married for a really long time because I don't like people looking at me... I don't like to be the center of attention. When I'm promoting a film, I can sort of be there for the film, and I can be there for the director. But when it's a just a night like tonight [an awards show where she was honored], it becomes very singular." Madam Secretary costars and onscreen spouses Téa Leoni and Tim Daly quietly started dating in the summer of 2014. About a year later, their costar Geoffrey Arend told People, "I heard a rumor about it, and everyone was like, 'No, no way!' And I'm like, 'Maybe.' ...Nobody really knew. You don't want to go to your boss and be like, 'Hey, so who are you dating?' So now I think we're all really protective." In July 2025, they tied the knot in a private ceremony with their families. In the '80s, George Takei decided to join Frontrunners, a gay running club, where he met speedy and "dashingly good-looking" Brad Takei (née Altman). After making the first move, George got Brad to do marathon training with him. By 1985, they were officially a couple, but George wasn't publicly out because he feared how it would affect his career. In 2020, Brad told Variety, "I was never identified publicly as George's boyfriend or partner." However, after 20 years with Brad, George made the decision to publicly come out as gay and share his relationship with the world. In 2008, same-sex marriage was briefly legalized in California for the first time, so they decided to tie the knot at the Japanese American National Museum in LA. George's Star Trek costars Walter Koenig and Nichelle Nichols served as the best man and the best woman. George told Variety, "She said, 'If Walter can be the best man, why can't I be the best lady?' We wanted to reflect diversity in our wedding, and that's what I remember — the powerful diversity." In 1971, Lily Tomlin saw Jane Wagner's teleplay J.T., then reached out in hopes of writing together. In 2020, Lily told Variety, "A friend brought her to my hotel room, and I tell you, in two minutes, I fell in love with her. She had on hot pants, stretchy boots that went up to her knee, and a little backpack. I don't know what it was, but I was in love." The next day, Lily had to fly to Chicago for a performance, but immediately after, she returned to New York, where Jane was. She continued, "I called Jane immediately, and I said, 'Look, I don't have much time, but I have to see you.' She agreed to see me, and we had our first date." Same-sex marriage finally became legal in California in 2013, so, after 42 years together, Lily and Jane had a private wedding in LA. In 2014, Robin Thicke met April Love Geary at a Labor Day party, but he was still married to his first wife at the time. However, Robin and April later reconnected at a nightclub and started dating. They made their red carpet debut at the 2015 Cannes Film Festival. In 2018, they welcomed their first child together, Mia. Then, on Christmas Eve, they announced their engagement. On Instagram, April wrote, "YES YES 1000x YES 😭😭💍" Over the next few years, they grew their family, welcoming two more kids — Lola in 2019 and Luca in 2020. Four years later, Robin told People, "Wedding plans are a priority. We're looking at 2024, and we're very excited... She's really the most amazing woman a man could ask for." Their wedding plans finally came to fruition in 2025. Robin proposed to April for the second time, and one week later, they tied the knot in a celebrity-filled ceremony in Cabo San Lucas, Mexico. Joy Behar and Steve Janowitz started dating in 1982. On a 2020 episode of The View, she recalled, "I don't know if you know this about me, but I met my husband at a semi-nudist colony. It's true. He was naked; I was not. Because for a man to see me naked, I have to be in his will." However, she didn't speak to him until a movie night event later that evening, when they were both wearing clothes. In 2009, they were engaged, but then Joy got "cold feet" and called it off. However, two years later, they tied the knot in NYC. In part, Joy decided she wanted to get married when same-sex marriage was legalized in New York. But that wasn't the only thing that changed her mind. She told Rachel Ray, "I waited until all the parents were dead. So I have no in-laws at all. He has none, and I have none. 'Cause marriage is mostly about in-laws, I find. They always want you to visit them and come for lasagna." And finally, after her first husband's death in 1998, Bo Derek "didn't expect to end up with anyone again." However, after five years had passed, she met John Corbett, who needed a date for his friend's Oscars party. In 2015, John told Today, "I said, 'I'm not dating anyone,' and [the friend] said, 'I'll get you a date, Corbett!' And he set me up with Bo." In 2020, Bo told Fox News, "It was just an attraction, a comfort. He makes me laugh all the time. He's full of life, full of joy. I became attracted to him, and I still am. We take things day by day, and I think we are still there." For a long time, marriage didn't feel important to them. She said, "I think when you're beginning a young family and you're going to have children and set up this new family tree branch, it's obviously a wonderful commitment, and it's meaningful. But for us in our lives, it hasn't been yet.' However, the couple decided to get married over the holidays in 2020 — and they kept it secret from the public for almost a year! In 2021, John told The Talk, "We're pretty private people. We didn't make an announcement. All our friends and family knew, but this is the first time either one of us has said anything publicly about it, because, really, we haven't had an opportunity. So, [co-host Jerry O'Connell] you're my buddy, and now I guess I'm telling all of America, or the world... After 20 years we decided to get married. We didn't want 2020 to be that thing that everybody looks back at and hated. We thought, 'Well, let's get one nice thing out of it.'" Do you love all things TV and movies? 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