Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Channing Tatum Opens Up About Why He And Jenna Dewan Ended Up Getting 'Terrifying' Divorce

Channing Tatum and Jenna Dewan
Samir Hussein/WireImage/Getty Images

The 'Step Up' costars were married from 2009 to 2018 despite realizing 'we had sort of grown apart.'

Many people were heartbroken when they heard the news that Channing Tatum and Jenna Dewan were splitting in 2018 after nine years of marriage.

The two first met on the set of Step Up in 2006, and the world saw them as a bubbly and happy couple.


What we didn't know, however, was that the two had been growing apart for years.

Tatum recently opened up about his divorce in an interview with Vanity Fair:

He revealed that he and Dewan "fought" the split for "a really long time, even though we both sort of knew that we had sort of grown apart."

The Magic Mike's Last Dance star explained:

"I think we told ourselves a story when we were young and we just kept telling ourselves that story, no matter how blatantly life was telling us that we were so different."

Tatum continued:

"But when you're actually parents, you really understand differences between the two of you."
"Because it is screaming at you all day long."
"How you parent differently, how you look at the world, how you go through the world."

The Bullet Train actor also opened up about his experience after the divorce, saying that at first it was "super scary and terrifying."

"Your life just turns on its axis."
"This whole plan that you had literally just turns into sand and goes through your fingers and you're like, 'Oh, sh*t. What now?'"

Many on social media chimed in and agreed with Tatum on many aspects of his statements.

Marriage isn't easy, and people often change throughout the course of a relationship and realize their values and priorities are different.

Daily Wire/Facebook

Daily Wire/Facebook

Daily Wire/Facebook

Daily Mail/Facebook

Daily Mail/Facebook

Daily Wire/Facebook

Daily Wire/Facebook

Scary Mommy/Facebook

While the transition was of course difficult, Tatum believed that it was "probably exactly what I needed."

"I don't think I would've ever done the work, I think, on myself in the way that I had to do the work on myself to really try to figure out what next."

He continued:

"And really, it just started with my daughter. I just dropped everything and just focused on her."
"And it was truly the best possible thing that I ever could have done."
"Because in the alone time that I have with just me and her, we've become best friends."

You can catch Tatum in theaters next month as he reprises his role as Mike for the third and final time in Magic Mike's Last Dance.

More from Entertainment/tv-and-movies

Screenshot of Seth Moulton; Donald Trump
MS Now; Alex Brandon-Pool/Getty Images

Dem Rep. Offers Brutally Accurate Reason For Why He Can't Understand 'The Mind Of Donald Trump'

Massachusetts Democratic Representative Seth Moulton made a fitting observation about President Donald Trump's mind after Trump gave a 20-minute address to the nation about his war in Iran on Wednesday evening.

Trump claimed “core strategic objectives are nearing completion” in the Iran war and vowed to strike Iran "extremely hard" over the next two to three weeks. He said that he would finish the job "very fast," without setting any timeline for ending the war. He pledged to "bring them [Iranians] back to the Stone Ages, where they belong.”

Keep ReadingShow less
Solicitor General Sparks Alarm After Telling Supreme Court He's 'Not Sure' If Native Americans Are Birthright Citizens

Solicitor General Sparks Alarm After Telling Supreme Court He's 'Not Sure' If Native Americans Are Birthright Citizens

The relationship between Indigenous American nations and the colonizers and later settlers who arrived and established the United States is complicated.

Indigenous peoples were integral parts of the survival and success of early colonizers. The Haudenosaunee Confederacy's Great Law of Peace offered a blueprint for the United States Constitution and the structure of the federal government including the three independent branches offering checks and balances, ideally.

Keep ReadingShow less
Iraqi soccer fans hold a banner at Dallas Fort Worth International Airport as a man in an orange jacket confronts them and tears it down.
@hussein_pepe96/Instagram

Racist Guy Caught On Video Tearing Through Iraqi Soccer Fans' Banner At Dallas Airport: 'Don't Come To America'

With the United States set to host the 2026 World Cup, a video out of Dallas Fort Worth International Airport is drawing attention for a very different reason: showing a man ripping apart an Iraqi soccer fan’s banner and telling them, “Don’t come to America.”

The video, posted on Instagram, shows a group of Iraqi sports fans standing in an airport holding a banner with Arabic and Spanish writing. The fans were there to support Iraq during their World Cup qualifier against Bolivia, which resulted in a 2-1 upset victory earlier that day.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshots from @themouselets' TikTok video
@themouselets/TikTok

TikToker Edits Dad's Disney Vacation Into Horror Movie After It Keeps Getting Interrupted By 'Work Emergency'

Sometimes you can only realize how bad a situation has gotten when you see it in a photo or video.

TikToker @themouselets works in civil engineering and is a part-time Disney content creator, making frequent trips to the park, but it's still a rare occurrence for her to be able to go with her entire family.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshots from @tts_tiktok22's TikTok video
@tts_tiktok22/TikTok

Videos Of Squirrels Trying To 'Vape' Are Going Viral—And We Don't Know Whether To Laugh Or Cry

Some viral videos come along that leave us unsure whether we should laugh or cry. In the case of squirrels trying to vape, crying is unfortunately the more likely outcome.

E-cigarettes have dramatically increased in popularity in recent years and are often even portrayed as a cool accessory on social media. Unfortunately, disposable, one-time-use e-cigarettes have been made affordable and easily accessible, and instead of properly disposing of them, people often leave them on the ground like cigarette butts.

Keep ReadingShow less