Mar. 15, 2025
Seann William Scott.Photo:Amy Sussman/Getty
Amy Sussman/Getty
Seann William Scottfiled for divorce from wife Olivia on Tuesday.
Scott married Olivia (née Korenberg), a Los Angeles–based interior designer, on Sept. 21, 2019, and in the filing listed their date of separation as Oct. 2, 2023. He asked for joint legal and physical custody of 3½-year-old daughter Frankie Rose, born in June 2020.
Seann William Scott and wife Olivia in March 2019.Jose Perez/INSTARimages.com
Mar. 15, 2025
Bret Easton Ellis and Todd Michael Schultz.Photo:Owen Kolasinski/BFA/Shutterstock
Owen Kolasinski/BFA/Shutterstock
Todd Michael Schultz, author Bret Easton Ellis’ partner of 14 years, was arrested and charged with trespassing, authorities said.
Schultz, 37, was arrested on Tuesday at the West Hollywood condominium where he lives with the 59-year-old novelist (American Psycho,Less Than Zero, The Rules of Attraction), police confirm to PEOPLE.
There is no evidence that suggests Ellis had anything to do with the alleged trespassing, authorities said.
Mar. 15, 2025
Photo: Terry Chea/AP/Shutterstock
California native John Clauser was named as one of the winners of this year’s Nobel Prize for physics.
Clauser, 79, was awarded the prize alongside French scientist Alain Aspect and Austrian scientist Anton Zeilinger. In the announcement, the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences praised the trio for their work in “pioneering quantum information science,” NBC News reported.
In a post onsocial media, that featured a sweet drawing of the scientists, the Academy wrote they were honored “for experiments with entangled photons, establishing the violation of Bell inequalities and pioneering quantum information science.
Mar. 15, 2025
A stranded American is speaking out about the ongoing crisis in Peru, where protests have broken out amid unrest over the ouster of former president Pedro Castillo.Miami-Dade Fire Rescue Capt. Brian Vega was on vacation andvisiting a town near Machu Picchuwhen the trouble began, according to ABC affiliate station WPLG. Now, he says he’s one of hundreds of Americans struck there.“They’re rioting, burning things down,” he told the outlet of the protests.
Mar. 15, 2025
Among the thousands of people who walked through Westminster Hall to pay their respects toQueen Elizabethwas an American student who wanted to witness history.
Isabella Heffernan, a 19-year-old student studying bio-ethics at Stanford University, waited five hours in line to file past the late monarch’s coffin ahead of the state funeral on September 19.
“I personally don’t have a connection to the Queen, but I thought it’s a moment in history,” Heffernan tells PEOPLE.