The 'No one Needs This' entertainer says having a latrine "profound with security" is vital
Leighton Meester and Adam Brody are skilled at maintaining a successful marriage.
Addressing Access Hollywood's Mario Lopez and Pack Hoover on honorary pathway at the 2025 Brilliant Globe Grants in Los Angeles Sunday, Jan. 5, the couple uncovered one of the vital privileged insights to keeping up with their 10-year marriage.
The discussion started after the couple was informed that Nicole Kidman and Keith Metropolitan's "mystery to an effective marriage" incorporates twofold headed showers and separate latrines.
For Brody, 45, the idea was really quite appealing.
"We have true separate latrines," the O.C. alum said. "I go in the workplace. It's great. One layer farther away from the children and one layer all the more profound with protection."
Brody and Meester, 38, secured the bunch in 2014, and are guardians to two youngsters whom several keeps out of the public eye. They invited their first-brought into the world in 2015, and circled back to a second in 2020.
As indicated by the Tattle Young lady alum, she goes to whichever restroom is accessible.
"I just put no thought into the latrine circumstance at all," she said. "Never occurred to me."
In the wake of examining their latrine inclinations, they continued on toward Brody's most recent Netflix series, No one Needs This — which procured him a selection for Best Execution by a Male Entertainer in a TV Series, Satire. (The honor went to Jeremy Allen White for his job in The Bear.)
Brody stars as recently single rabbi Noah in the lighthearted comedy close by Kristen Chime — a solitary, rationalist sex podcaster named Joanne who is searching for affection.
While visiting with Access Hollywood, Brody reviewed how he and his significant other commended his Brilliant Globe selection.
"I didn't really review phoning anyone, but I did receive calls. We were sleeping together, so that was great. I don't think I called anybody," Brody said.
Meester uncovered that she got to see the series — which has proactively been restored briefly season — before it hit Netflix, and right now had a very positive sentiment that it would get along admirably.
"That is to say, I couldn't say whether I'm one to say — I feel like we watched it together before it emerged and I was like, 'It works. It works. It's so great.' And you're like, 'Better believe it, no doubt,' " Meester said. "I believe it's basically impossible to be aware, particularly with streaming now you sort of can't tell. And afterward it emerged and it was like, 'Okay.' "
While Brody may now be known as "Hot Rabbi" to loving fans who fainted over his on-screen sentiment, he told the power source it's his significant other who "gets the great stuff."
"That isn't even similar to the A-material," he said.
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