Current:Home > MyWhy Isla Fisher and Sacha Baron Cohen Keep Their 3 Kids Out of the Spotlight -RiskRadar
Why Isla Fisher and Sacha Baron Cohen Keep Their 3 Kids Out of the Spotlight
View
Date:2025-04-23 22:36:05
Confession of a movie star? Isla Fisher and Sacha Baron Cohen aren't looking to put their kids on the ‘gram.
While the Wedding Crashers actress and Borat actor are not strangers to life in the public eye, the pair are largely private when it comes to life with their three kids, Olive, 15, Elula, 12, and Montgomery, 8. The decision to keep them out of the limelight is one that Isla has thought about a lot.
"It's unfair on them!" Isla explained during an April 26 appearance on Lorraine, as seen in a clip published by the Daily Mail. "Kids deserve a normal childhood. I want them to be outdoors and play and run around [and] not feel self-conscious."
And Isla's made a point of not posting about her kids on social media or taking them to premieres and other Hollywood events.
"If you speak about your children or if you take them to a red carpet event, you can't be litigious later on when there is a picture of them in something and say, ‘hey, they deserve anonymity,' but they do," Isla told Today Parents in 2017. "They have rights, too. It's a very conscious decision and truly I would feel really disgusting about myself if I used my family to sell something. It wouldn't sit right with me. It doesn't line up with my values."
While the Confessions of a Shopaholic star prefers to keep the topic of her children private, she doesn't shy away from sharing about her marriage to Sacha, who she has been in a relationship with for over 20 years.
Reflecting on the advice she would give to other couples, Isla exclusively told E! News in June, "I don't want to stand on a soapbox and advise anybody," before noting, "if you marry someone that you have a really good friendship with, everything else seems to fall into place."
At the time, Isla shared that she still has giddy feelings towards her husband after two decades together.
"You still get butterflies in your stomach and people sort of tell you that wears off after a few years," she said. "But when you're with the right person, actually it just doesn't."
For the latest breaking news updates, click here to download the E! News AppveryGood! (1)
Related
- What were Tom Selleck's juicy final 'Blue Bloods' words in Reagan family
- Here's where striking actors and writers can eat for free
- America's farms are desperate for labor. Foreign workers bring relief and controversy
- July keeps sizzling as Phoenix hits another 110-degree day and wildfires spread in California
- Megan Fox's ex Brian Austin Green tells Machine Gun Kelly to 'grow up'
- 'Sound of Freedom' misleads audiences about the horrible reality of human trafficking
- Is 'Hot Girl Summer' still a thing? Here's where it originated and what it means.
- Tupac Shakur ring sells for record $1 million at New York auction
- Google unveils a quantum chip. Could it help unlock the universe's deepest secrets?
- New study shows just how Facebook's algorithm shapes conservative and liberal bubbles
Ranking
- IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
- New Report Card Shows Where Ohio Needs to Catch up in Cutting Greenhouse Gas Emissions
- Erratic winds challenge firefighters battling two major California blazes
- Apple AirTags are the lowest price we've ever seen at Amazon right now
- Who are the most valuable sports franchises? Forbes releases new list of top 50 teams
- The Jackson water crisis through a student journalist's eyes
- Chick-fil-A to build new restaurant concepts in Atlanta and New York City
- Horoscopes Today, July 28, 2023
Recommendation
New data highlights 'achievement gap' for students in the US
IRS, Ivies and GDP
Pregnant Shawn Johnson Is Open to Having More Kids—With One Caveat
Bye-bye birdie: Twitter jettisons bird logo, replaces it with X
Justice Department, Louisville reach deal after probe prompted by Breonna Taylor killing
Sarah Sjöström breaks Michael Phelps' record at World Aquatics Championship
Kansas transgender people find Democratic allies in court bid to restore their right to alter IDs
Blue blood from horseshoe crabs is valuable for medicine, but a declining bird needs them for food