logo
Angelina Jolie's daughter Shiloh, 19, enjoys Fourth of July sweet treat with rumored love interest Keoni Rose

Angelina Jolie's daughter Shiloh, 19, enjoys Fourth of July sweet treat with rumored love interest Keoni Rose

Daily Mail​21 hours ago
's daughter Shiloh spent the Fourth of July with her gal pal Keoni Rose.
The duo enjoyed an Independence Day sweet treat as they stopped by Fonuts bakery in Studio City.
Shiloh wore a black 'BANG' sweatshirt, shorts, and chunky trainers while Keoni bared her midriff in a tattered grey tank top and low-slung sweatpants.
The duo emerged victorious from the bakery, bag of goodies in Shiloh's hand.
Shiloh, who is the daughter of Angelina and Brad Pitt, and her pal have been rumored to be dating ever since they put on an affectionate display last November.
Shiloh, 19, and Keoni appear to have bonded over their shared passion for dancing.
Keoni has a background in ballet dancing. She is also interested in acting, modeling and screenwriting.
The pair were seen sharing an affectionate moment back in November, with Keoni sweetly brushing some of Shiloh's hair away from her face.
They have been seen together numerous times since, as recently as last week.
Shiloh is the daughter of Angelina and Brad Pitt. In addition to Shiloh, the former couple share five kids: Maddox, 23; Pax, 21; Zahara, 20; and twins Knox and Vivienne, 16.
Recently a source told People that the children are doing fine after the finalization of the Pitt/Jolie divorce: 'The kids are amazing and thriving,' said the insider.
Brad and Angelina began dating after shooting the 2005 film Mr. & Mrs. Smith together, and they tied the knot years later in 2014.
But Jolie filed for divorce in 2016, just days after an infamous incident aboard a private jet in which she accused Brad of being physically and verbally abusive toward her and her children. She claimed her then-spouse was intoxicated at the time.
In the wake of their separation and divorce, Brad's relationship with his children began to suffer.
A source told Us Weekly on Thursday that the actor's 'biggest regret' is his inability to repair his relationship with his children.
The insider described Pitt and Jolie's eight-year-long divorce proceedings as 'such a divisive, toxic situation.'
The source indicated that events preceding the split — like the plane altercation — and the subsequent rancorous court battle 'turned the kids against him as well,' though they noted that the Tree Of Life star 'doesn't blame [Jolie] for everything.'
Although Pitt reportedly hopes to save his relationship with his children, a source previously revealed to DailyMail.com why he sees his relationship with his children as 'unfixable.'
Us Weekly's source said his 'biggest regret is he can't repair [his relationship with his kids],' adding, 'The case is over but there are no winners.'
While it was a 'relief' to finally be done with the divorce proceedings, the source added that its 'lasting impact is something he's going to live with forever.'
Pitt's strained relationship with his children was epitomized by his daughter Shiloh's petition in court to drop his last name in August 2024.
His daughter Zahara has also referred to herself since going to college only by her mother's last name, and his daughter Vivienne used only 'Jolie' for her last name when she was credited in Playbill for her work assisting her mother in producing the Broadway musical The Outsiders.
The oldest two, his adopted sons Maddox and Pax, have been particularly vocal about their distaste for their father.
Pitt still has visitation with his youngest twins as part of his custody agreement with Jolie because they are under 18, but he reportedly rarely sees his adult children.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Bride mercilessly mocked over ‘diabolical' wedding surprise for husband as they say he must be looking for an annulment
Bride mercilessly mocked over ‘diabolical' wedding surprise for husband as they say he must be looking for an annulment

The Sun

time23 minutes ago

  • The Sun

Bride mercilessly mocked over ‘diabolical' wedding surprise for husband as they say he must be looking for an annulment

WHEN people share videos of their wedding day, it's often met with praise and swooning over the happy couple. But one bride has been mercilessly mocked after sharing the surprise she had in store for her husband and wedding guests. 2 Alexis Jennings decided to share the surprise on social media, three years after her big day. She wrote over the clip: "That time I performed a dance on my wedding day knowing my religious family would look down on it.'" In the clip, the brunette bride danced to Beyonce 's End of Time while wearing an all-white tracksuit and a black shirt underneath. Her husband, who was mostly out of the shot, could be seen sitting still watching her moves. While she is dancing, children run past the stage and some wedding guests can be seen completely ignoring her. The awkward dance saw her two-step left to right, pretending to march and whipping her hair around. "Debated doing this for so long that by the time I convinced myself to do it, I only had less than two months to learn the choreography," she captioned the post. "DO WHAT YOU WANT ON YOUR WEDDING DAY LADIES. My man loved it. "To further explain, I purposefully wore this covered up outfit and played down the dance moves out of respect for said religious family." But her 'religious family' at the wedding seemingly didn't have much to say about her moves - some members even recorded her and looked excited. I wasn't going to spend thousands on a wedding dress so got an Oh Polly one for £75 - no one would know it wasn't pricey Instead, it was the people in the comments of her TikTok that were quicker to judge the dance. The clip has since gone viral on her TikTok account @ alexojennings with over 14 million views and people didn't hold back with their opinion. One person wrote: "He's googling annulment facts as soon as this clip ends." "That man deserves the world for not laughing," penned a third. Meanwhile a fourth said: "Painful to watch. Hope you had fun though." "The best part is that you didn't have to do this at all,' claimed a fifth Someone else added: "The fact her friends let her go ahead with this tells me she needs better friends." Despite the nasty comments, the bride stuck to her guns over the controversial dance. "Y'all roasting me is killing me, she commented. "The mean comments are only telling me what I already know - you're not gonna hurt my feelings. It's TIKTOK doing its "thang." It's all love." In fact, she was so unbothered by the hate that she posted a second clip of the dance as a response. In this follow-up video, she continued the solo dance to Beyoncé's Upgrade U. Alexis had similar right-to-left movements, something she chalks up to having to 'improvise' due to forgetting the moves.

Man spends two days looking for his lost waller, but can you see it?
Man spends two days looking for his lost waller, but can you see it?

Daily Mail​

time28 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Man spends two days looking for his lost waller, but can you see it?

A frustrated social media user spent two full days searching for his missing wallet... only to discover it was right in front of his eyes the entire time. Sharing a bathroom photo where the cash holder went missing on Reddit, the snap quickly went viral as the Internet obsessively tried to spot the camouflaged item. At first glance, the image shows a perfectly ordinary bathroom, with some people calling the photo one of the best optical illusions they've seen in months while others spotted the wallet on the floor in seconds. Reddit users dove into the challenge - with many admitting they had absolutely no clue what they were even supposed to be looking for and had the caption not mentioned a wallet they'd have been stumped. One person said: 'If you didn't say this, I would've never understood this photo,' one person confessed. Another joked: 'As a dude, most of our wallets are just big black squares, so it's immediately where my mind went.' One said: 'I literally didn't register that it was supposed to look like the floor pattern until I got to the comments. I was so confused. Others claimed they'd never have spotted it: 'If I walked in that bathroom, I'd probably never see it,' wrote one. 'You'd probably step on it and find it immediately,' another added. 'Oh so that's where I lost my wallet five years ago…'

The Midults: I'm cross with my ungrateful goddaughter
The Midults: I'm cross with my ungrateful goddaughter

Telegraph

time38 minutes ago

  • Telegraph

The Midults: I'm cross with my ungrateful goddaughter

Dear A&E, I have noticed that my 15-year-old goddaughter has not thanked me for a present in the past few years. I send something for every Christmas and birthday, and I used to love getting the little scribbles and drawings. These days I don't even get a text, and it's making me not want to send anything ever again. Should I tell her mother how I feel? Or suck it up because she's a teenager and doesn't prioritise? We used to have a good relationship, but we haven't seen each other much lately. – Ticked-off Dear Ticked-off, Obviously this is rude. Don't we abhor rudeness? Wouldn't it be infinitely more satisfying, given the effort you made, if you were instantly rewarded with a perfectly pitched thank-you letter? ChatGPT would never forget to send a malleable missive, but teenagers aren't AI, and they aren't emotionally intelligent either. They are wandering the world in a hormonal vortex of their own, sliding between one existential crisis and another, triggered by anything from the break-up of their favourite band to pointed whispering on the bus. Not forgetting causes and atrocities, and the horror of skinny jeans returning. Anyone who disputes this has just forgotten what it is like. Being a teenager is pretty awful; you lose your collective mind. Never forget that there was a national helpline set up when Take That broke up in 1996. Your goddaughter probably (definitely) struggles to say thank you to her actual parents, let alone the random woman who sends her presents every year, as lovely as they may be. Especially since her mother probably (definitely) can no longer be bothered to police the process. We know, dear Ticked-off, that feeling like some random woman is not nice. Particularly as you clearly take the present-giving aspect of god-parenthood seriously. Most of us would rather avoid buying presents at all – the pressure, the cost, the pressure again. Unless you are Meghan Markle; consider gift-giving one of your many love languages; and are happiest indulging in hours of calligraphy and petal-scattering a day, present buying is extremely stressful. Presents for teenagers? Intimidating. Your goddaughter neglecting to acknowledge this effort? Well, it makes you feel invisible, doesn't it? We are no strangers to this gratitude vacuum. Emilie, who usually has an extremely long and elastic tether about things, got fed up with a friend of hers' children never responding to the tenners she sent in the post. She stopped. But Emilie was brought up in a feverish 'thank-you letter' environment. One year, she and her sister wrote the thank-yous as they opened their presents. Emilie slightly regrets her decision to stop sending the money – particularly when she sees how thrilled and grateful her own teenagers are when unexpected things arrive. Even if it takes them a bit of nagging to respond. Annabel's goddaughter went a bit quiet during her teenage years and then astonished her recently with a two-sided love-bomb of a letter. Annabel, impatient in almost every aspect of her life, had decided to hang in there, and she reaped the rewards. So, perhaps instead of viewing this in strictly transactional terms, why not think a little differently? Here we have two females: one, a teen, feeling confused and buffeted by the world in general, and the other, you, taken for granted. Why not change things up? Instead of sending presents, which were delightful and magical when she was young, you could consider converting this into time and space together. Perhaps you might take her out for an experience. Instead of walking away, is it time to deepen your relationship? She might appreciate having another sort-of-family-member-but-not grown-up in her life. You might appreciate it too. You could take her out to the theatre or to dinner or for a manicure – Annabel took another set of goddaughters out for lunch and a piercing last Christmas. Wouldn't it be more rewarding if being a god-parent became about offering yourself up as another trusted adult to help steer your goddaughter's journey through life? Instead of seething at the rudeness (and we still agree it's rude) of teenagers, why not lean into the situation? Why not use this as an opportunity for connection rather than disconnection? Some readers might disapprove of this approach, thinking it wrong to reward bad manners, to double-down when people are behaving in a disappointing fashion. Sure, you could absolutely cut your goddaughter off, or talk to her mother about the lack of gratitude, and see how that works out for you. Or you could quietly think about how you can reconfigure all this so that you gain something lovely and meaningful, a new set of memories you can cherish as much as the adorable hand-written scribblings of the toddler you once knew. And, dear Ticked-off, with this new relationship, who knows, you might find you get a really beautiful yield.

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