
Brad Pitt Recalled AA Meetings After Angelina Jolie Divorce
Content warning: This post discusses struggles with alcohol.
On September 19, 2016, Angelina Jolie filed for divorce from Brad Pitt, five days after an alleged altercation on a private jet, whereby Brad was accused of physically and verbally assaulting his then-wife and the oldest of their six children, Maddox, who was 15 at the time.
Brad — who vehemently denied the allegations — was investigated for alleged child abuse, but was subsequently cleared of any wrongdoing. The FBI, which has jurisdiction in the air, also decided further investigation was not necessary.
After eight years of intense legal fighting, Brad and Angelina's divorce battle finally concluded in late December last year.
Brad publicly gave up drinking shortly after his split from Angelina, telling GQ in May 2017 that his relationship with alcohol had 'become a problem.' 'Even this last year, you know — things I wasn't dealing with,' he said. 'I was boozing too much…And I'm really happy it's been half a year now, which is bittersweet, but I've got my feelings in my fingertips again. I think that's part of the human challenge: You either deny them all of your life or you answer them and evolve.'
Discussing the need to 'renovate' himself, he added: 'You strip down to the foundation and break out the mortar… For me this period has really been about looking at my weaknesses and failures and owning my side of the street.'
Years later, in 2019, Brad revealed that he joined Alcoholics Anonymous soon after the 2016 split, telling the New York Times that it was 'really freeing to just expose the ugly sides of yourself…there's a great value in that.'
And now, nearly nine years down the road from his divorce from Angelina and his subsequent move to sobriety, Brad has reflected on his experience in AA during the latest episode of the Armchair Expert podcast, saying he was struggling deeply and was open to 'trying anything and everyone' that might help.
'I was pretty much on my back… on my knees, and I was really open,' he told the hosts, Dax Shepard and Monica Padman. 'I was trying anything and everyone. Anything anyone threw at me. It was a difficult time. I needed rebooting. I needed to wake the fuck up in some areas. And it just meant a lot to me.'
Dax has talked very candidly about his previous addiction struggles, and it was actually at AA where he and Brad became friends. Dax recalled that 'a bazillion famous people' had come to the AA meetings before, meaning the non-famous people in the group weren't fazed by being in the presence of celebrities, perhaps until Brad Pitt showed up. 'It was pretty overwhelming,' Dax remembered, adding that he was surprised by Brad's willingness to be 'so fucking honest' in the group.
The trio got into an honest conversation about what it's like to join AA and talk honestly about your experiences when you're someone as famous as Brad. Interestingly, the Oscar-winner called AA an 'amazing thing' and said he felt 'quite at ease' being vulnerable.
'Everyone was so open…It gives you permission in a way to go, 'OK, I'm gonna step out on this edge and see what happens,'' Brad said, adding that he 'grew to love' the meetings. 'I just thought it was just incredible men sharing their experiences, their foibles, their missteps, their wants, their aches, and a lot of humor with it. I thought it was a really special experience.'
A bit later in the podcast discussion, Monica asked whether Brad was nervous about his fellow group members having an 'extra interest' in his personal story, perhaps in light of how publicly his divorce was playing out around that time. However, he said he was 'assured by another friend that this was a safe place.'
'I am a stubborn fuck,' he admitted. 'But also, when I've stepped in shit, I'm pretty good at taking responsibility for it and owning up to it. And now it's a quest to, you know, 'What do I do with this? How can I right this? And make sure it doesn't happen again?''
Brad also said he had a similar 'desperate' approach when talking to a therapist about his personal struggles, saying: 'When I jumped into therapy then, I was just like, 'Blah, blah, blah, and I did this and I did that and da da da da.''
You can watch Brad's full conversation with Dax and Monica here.
If you or someone you know is struggling with substance abuse, you can call SAMHSA's National Helpline at 1-800-662-HELP (4357) and find more resources here.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New York Post
39 minutes ago
- New York Post
This is the only celebrity who has a dish named after her at Nobu
She's so nice — this dish was named twice. Cindy Crawford is the one celebrity who has ever been honored with a menu item at the famed sushi hotspot Nobu. Chef Nobu Matsuhisa affectionately renamed kakiage — a Japanese tempura dish — 'Cindy Rice' after the supermodel, who was a regular at Matsuhisa, his first restaurant in Los Angeles, which opened in 1987. 'One day, at lunchtime she came and said, 'Make me anything,'' the celebrity chef told The Post ahead of the nationwide release of his documentary 'Nobu' on July 4. 'I used to do photoshoots in LA all the time, and I wanted Nobu always for lunch, but . . . if I didn't have a chance to eat right away . . . I wanted something that could maybe sit for one hour or two hours,' she explained in the film, which was directed by Matt Tyrnauer. 3 Chef Nobu Matsuhisa, who got his start as a dishwasher and delivery boy in Tokyo, now has an empire of 56 restaurants and 45 hotels around the world. Courtesy of Nobu Soon after the entree was crowned Cindy Rice, Crawford requested her namesake dish at the New York location of Nobu. The staff was baffled. 'The New York people didn't know . . . So the manager called me and asked, 'What's Cindy Rice?'' Matsuhisa, 76, recalled, laughing. The famed cook — who got his start as a teen-aged dishwasher and delivery boy in Tokyo — said his first A-list customer was Robert De Niro, even though he didn't know it then. The Oscar-winner was so impressed with the food, he approached Matsuhisa about opening a restaurant with him in New York. 'I did not know what he did. Never saw his movies,' Matsuhisa confessed. 3 Cindy Crawford and her husband Rande Gerber, pictured here leaving Nobu Mailbu, are featured in the documentary 'Nobu,' which will be released nationwide on July 4. / The actor is now a partner at Nobu — an empire of 56 restaurants and 45 hotels everywhere from Malibu and Maui to Budapest and the Bahamas. It was De Niro's idea to name the eatery Nobu. 'He said, 'Matsuhisa is too long. How about your first name, Nobu?'' Matsuhisa explained. 'He's a great idea man.' The first Nobu opened in Tribeca in 1994. That location closed in 2017, but there are still two in Manhattan — Nobu Downtown in FiDi and Nobu Fifty Seven in Midtown West. This year, the brand will be debuting its first hotel in Manhattan — in the Plaza Athenee hotel on the Upper East Side, which closed during the pandemic. 3 Matsuhisa called Robert De Niro, a partner at Nobu, 'a great idea man.' Dave Allocca/Starpix / Shutterstock Matsuhisa has since welcomed a who's who of celeb customers, including Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce, David and Victoria Beckham, and Ben Affleck and Jennifer Lopez, who made their debut as a couple by kissing outside its New York location in 2002. (And when they got back together in 2021, their first public smooch was at Nobu Malibu.) With all his brushes with fame in his nearly 60-year career, Matsuhisa didn't hesitate to name his favorite customer — Princess Diana, whom he cooked for in Nobu's London Old Park Lane location in 1997, just months before her death. 'I was really nervous . . . She said to me, 'Chef Nobu, I read about your history.' I was so surprised and impressed. And then I cooked for her . . . tempura, black cod. She liked it,' he fondly remembered.
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
Washington Post reporter arrested on child pornography charges after FBI search and is placed on leave
A Pulitzer Prize-winning Washington Post reporter was arrested and placed on leave after being charged with possessing child pornography on his work laptop. Thomas Pham LeGro, 48, was arrested Thursday and taken into custody after a search of his District of Columbia home. LeGro made his first appearance Friday in U.S. District Court. The charges reportedly stem from an FBI search at his home Thursday, where agents seized several electronic devices. State Rep Used Biden-themed Username To Distribute Child Porn, Feds Say A review of LeGro's work laptop allegedly revealed a folder that contained 11 videos depicting child sexual abuse material, according to a news release from U.S. Attorney Jeanine Ferris Pirro. Read On The Fox News App During the execution of a search warrant, authorities said they found what appeared to be fractured pieces of a hard drive in the hallway outside the room where LeGro's work laptop was found. "The Washington Post understands the severity of these allegations, and the employee has been placed on leave," a Washington Post spokesperson told Fox News Digital in an email Friday. High School Teacher Caught In Undercover Sting Operation After Explicit Chats With 'Teen Girl' Online: Police The George Mason graduate was part of a team of Post reporters awarded a Pulitzer Prize for coverage of the Senate candidacy of Roy Moore in 2018. 205 Arrested In Fbi Child Sex Operation, Patel And Bondi Announce LeGro, who has been with the publication for more than a decade, served as deputy director of video, overseeing a group of video journalists. He also briefly worked for PBS. Pirro thanked FBI Assistant Director in Charge Steven J. Jensen and Chief Pamela Smith of the Metropolitan Police Department for their ongoing efforts in the investigation. The case, part of the Department of Justice's Project Safe Childhood initiative, is being investigated by the FBI Washington Field Office's Child Exploitation and Human Trafficking Task Force, according to the article source: Washington Post reporter arrested on child pornography charges after FBI search and is placed on leave


Forbes
4 hours ago
- Forbes
FBI Warning Issued As 2FA Bypass Attacks Surge — Act Now
The FBI issues Scattered Spider attack warning. When the Federal Bureau of Investigation issues a cybersecurity alert, you would be well advised to pay attention and take action. Whether that's involving malicious SMS messages, AI-powered phishing attacks, or, as I recently reported, the skyrocketing number of ransomware threats. And ransomware is the subject of this latest, critical, warning from the FBI. This time involving the Scattered Spider threat group which has made headlines after taking responsibility for multiple retail sector attacks including that against Marks & Spencer in the U.K. which is estimated to have cost the high street chain at least $600 million. Now the group is targeting the airline industry, the FBI has warned, both directly and through the entire supply chain. Here's what you need to know. FBI Confirms Scattered Spider Attacks Targeting Transportation A June 26 report from ransomware analysts at Halcyon warned that there were 'indications that Scattered Spider is also now targeting the Food, Manufacturing, and Transportation (particularly Aviation) sectors in the US.' This has now been confirmed by the FBI which provided a statement to me by email that said: 'The FBI has recently observed the cybercriminal group Scattered Spider expanding its targeting to include the airline sector.' The statement continued to confirm that the ransomware group is using the same methods during this surge of attacks into new sectors, namely 'social engineering techniques, often impersonating employees or contractors to deceive IT help desks into granting access.' Specifically, Scattered Spider looks to bypass mutli-factor authentication, commonly referred to as MFA or 2FA, by using various methods to get those help desks to 'add unauthorized MFA devices to compromised accounts.' Scattered Spider has been on the FBI radar for a number of years, with a joint cybersecurity advisory alongside the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency published in 2023 in response to what it described as 'activity by Scattered Spider threat actors against the commercial facilities sectors and subsectors.' The FBI told me that it is currently actively working with aviation and industry partners 'to address this activity and assist victims,' and urged anyone who thinks their organization may have been targeted to contact their local FBI office. In the meantime, beware of anyone asking for unauthorized 2FA devices to be added to accounts and follow established security processes and procedures to the letter, no matter what the person making the request may say.