


Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt have reached a divorce settlement, ending one of the longest and most contentious splits in Hollywood history — but not every legal issue between the two.
Jolie and Pitt signed off on a default declaration filed in Los Angeles Superior Court on Monday, saying they have entered into a written agreement on their marital and property rights. The settlement was first reported by People magazine.
The filing says they give up the right to any future spousal financial support, but gives no other details. A judge will need to sign off on the agreement. An email late Monday night to Pitt’s attorney seeking comment was not immediately answered.
Jolie, 49, and Pitt, 61, were among Hollywood’s most prominent pairings for 12 years, two of them as a married couple. The Oscar winners have six children together.
Jolie filed for divorce in 2016.
Flavor Flav wants clocks to be part of his gravesite
Public Enemy hype man Flavor Flav is everywhere these days, from the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame to the MTV Video Music Awards and the Olympics. But he’s also thinking about his final resting place.
The 65-year-old rapper and reality TV star told Rolling Stone in a new interview that he wants his iconic prop — a clock around his neck so he always knows what time it is — to be part of his gravesite.
“I might request that on top of my coffin is a built-in clock. And then also when you open up the lid, there’s a big clock,” the man born William Drayton said. “And on the tombstone, it should be a clock.”
He told Rolling Stone he wants his epitaph to say three words: “It’s about time.”
Beckinsale sees sexism in Lively-baldoni dispute
The controversy between Blake Lively and Justin Baldoni has Kate Beckinsale reflecting on her own professional experiences.
Beckinsale took to social media recently and said that while she has never met Lively or her “It Ends With Us” director and co-star Baldoni, she believes Lively’s civil rights complaint against Baldoni highlights “this machine that goes into effect when a woman complains about something legitimately offensive, upsetting, harmful, whatever, in this industry.”
“I’ve been on a film, for example, where I was by the end referred to over the walkie talkie and to my face as ‘that ...’ because I had said I’m finding it difficult,” she recalled. “Everyone in EVERY industry should be taken seriously and not punished when something egregious happens to them at work.”
— From wire reports