Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

Entertainment

No Doubt’s Gwen Stefani and Gavin Rossdale file for divorce

They were married for almost 13 years, and the reason for their recent split is “irreconcilable differences.” Rossdale is the front-man of the rock band Bush.

The former musical couple, has three songs together, and they are seeking joint custody of their children: Zuma, Apollo and Kingston. According to the New York radio airwaves, Stefani is worth $80 million, while her husband is worth $32 million, and there was no prenuptial agreement, so they would somehow need to divide their assets evenly.

According to a joint statement, Stefani and Rossdale acknowledged that while they may no longer be partners in marriage, they shall remains partners in parenthood, and will be doing their best to raise their three kids in a “healthy and happy environment.” People described their parting as “amicable,” and the songstress’ top priority is to ensure the security of her kids during this split.

Similar to other celebrity divorces, they have requested privacy from the media during this difficult time, over this personal matter.

Stefani and Rossdale had met back in 1995, when No Doubt opened for Bush during their headlining tour for their album Sixteen Stone.

Markos Papadatos
Written By

Markos Papadatos is Digital Journal's Editor-at-Large for Music News. Papadatos is a Greek-American journalist and educator who has authored over 24,700 original articles over the past 20 years. He has interviewed some of the biggest names in music, entertainment, lifestyle, magic, and sports. He is a 19-time "Best of Long Island" winner, where for three consecutive years (2020, 2021, and 2022), he was honored as the "Best Long Island Personality" in Arts & Entertainment, an honor that has gone to Billy Joel six times.

You may also like:

Social Media

UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer on Thursday hinted at possible measures limiting children's access to social media.

World

AI tools make deepfakes easier to create and harder to detect than ever before.

Business

If intelligence becomes a metered utility controlled by a handful of providers, then decision making becomes capacity-constrained infrastructure.

Business

Factors like convenience and workflow efficiency increasingly outweigh model preference in day-to-day usage.