17) and says she had toyed with the idea of having a vow-renewal ceremony but discarded it. Later, Haart mentions that their 10-year anniversary is approaching (it was Oct. But thank God we found each other and we have a real friendship and that’s what kept us going.” “Getting married at 19 was way too young and I would not want our kids to do that. “I never like to say I regret anything in my life, but circumstances happened again, I definitely would not get married so young,” Haart said. “I don’t regret getting married young because of who I married, but I would not recommend getting married young,” Weinstein said. In a YouTube Q&A in August, the first question the pair answered was whether they regretted getting married when they did. Over time, Haart and Weinstein, along with two of Haart’s three siblings, accompanied their mother into her new life in Manhattan, where her career and marriage thrust them into the world of the rich and Instagram-famous - and, this year, turned them into the stars of “My Unorthodox Life.” Their traditional wedding took place just weeks before Julia Haart left the community and shed her Orthodox practices. Haart and Weinstein were raised in the Orthodox community of Monsey, New York, where couples typically marry shortly after high school. On Thursday evening, Weinstein and Haart confirmed the speculation, with a joint statement that reiterated a theme of the show: that their marriage at a young age - they were 19 when they tied the knot in 2012 - had been a strain. Weinstein had also begun posting daily outfits from a seemingly sparse closet, and Haart’s most recent videos appeared to be filmed in her mother’s apartment. Social media sleuths found clues in the fact that Haart and Weinstein had deleted pictures of each other from their feed. “Ben is freeeeeee!!!!!!” one of the hundreds of people who commented on his picture wrote. His followers seemed to think so, cheering him on in comments. Was Weinstein signaling that he had split from Batsheva Haart, the influencer and daughter of fashion executive Julia Haart whose journey out of Orthodoxy was the subject of the hit series this summer? 2.JTA - Fans of Netflix’s “My Unorthodox Life” started buzzing late Wednesday when Ben Weinstein, the husband of the star’s daughter, posted a picture of himself to Instagram with an intriguing caption: “Officially not-famous.” Season 2 of My Unorthodox Life airs on Netflix Dec. ![]() “But despite all the drama, I always try to see the light at the end of the tunnel, the opportunity in a downturn.” ![]() “Any mindset I had going into Season 2 flew out the door when our worlds came crashing down around us,” he says. ![]() This season, I struggle to find common ground with the man I love, and when our roles are reversed, how it impacts our future plans for a life together.”Īs for his work life, with his future at Elite World Group unknown, the Texas native returns this season to a passion he never thought he’d be able to pursue. In Season 2, Robert tells Tudum: “You’re going to see how I react to the most long-term and meaningful relationship I have ever been in. ![]() They’ve been inseparable ever since - but they acknowledge that their romance has hit a few snags. Robert is in his most “long-term and meaningful” relationship yet - but it’s not without its challenges.Īfter meeting in college at Syracuse University, Robert and his now-partner Ra’ed kept in touch and then reconnected at the start of the pandemic.
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