Ariana Grande's ex-husband Dalton Gomez has agreed to protect her privacy by not sharing any 'tapes' or recordings from their two-year marriage.
According to new legal documents, obtained by The
Blast, the former couple, will not release details about the collapse of
their short-lived marriage amid reports she has moved in with her
boyfriend Ethan Slater.
In their settlement agreement, both
parties are barred from releasing or publishing 'any photograph (and
related negatives), tape, film or like embodiments in all forms whether
now or hereafter created or other record or recording of any aspect of
any activity in or about any home, office or other property owned.'
Additionally,
he is prohibited from writing a tell-all book about their relationship
or doing any interview about the 'details of their marriage.'
He also cannot 'give any interview, write, appear in connection with, or assist or cooperate in the preparation or presentation of any book, article, interview, program or other production or publication of any kind whatsoever concerning the other party.'
Grande has also agreed to the restrictions and confidentiality provision, which the documents points out 'shall be fully enforceable by each party.'
The
filing also explicitly states that Gomez 'acknowledges that (Grande's)
privacy and the non-disclosure of confidential information regarding him
are vitally important.'
The Into You hitmaker's divorce proceedings were quickly settled as they reportedly had an ironclad prenup in place.
The real estate agent received a check from the Grammy winner with the payment being worth a total of $1,250,000 and also tax-free.
The former couple will also split the 'net proceeds' when their Los Angeles home sells, and Grande will additionally pay $25k of Dalton's attorney fees.
Despite the pair's divorce being finalized, a source informed the entertainment tabloid that there is no bad blood between Ariana and Gomez - who tied the knot in 2021.
'There is still a
strong mutual love and respect between Ariana and Dalton and they
wanted to make sure everything was done right in lockstep with one
another,' the insider expressed.
The former Nickelodeon star filed her divorce paperwork last month on September 18 - with Dalton also filing the same day.
In
documents previously obtained by TMZ, Ariana's lawyer, Laura Wasser,
had cited the reason for their divorce as 'irreconcilable differences'
with the date of separation listed as February 20, 2023.
Sources
informed the outlet that all was 'worked out' between the former couple
'before going to the courthouse' and added the actress plans to 'cut
Dalton a check' to officially dissolve the marriage.
The pair
notably filed for divorce months after their listed date of separation,
and an insider explained to TMZ that the reasoning was so that they
could 'iron out details and settle.'
According to the source,
Grande and Gomez have 'no hard feelings' and added 'they've been really
caring and respectful of one another every step of this process.'
The Grammy winner and the real estate agent first began dating in January 2020 and the pair became engaged in December the same year.
In
May 2021, the two said 'I do' during an intimate yet romantic wedding
ceremony at her Montecito home. However, earlier this year in July, news
of their shock split came to light.
A source close to the pair told DailyMail.com at the time of the breakup news that, 'Ariana and Dalton have nothing but respect for one another. They're still friends and want to remain that way moving forward.'
'There was no cheating, no resentment between them, the marriage just simply didn't work out. These things happen,' the insider added.
According
to Page Six, Dalton had flown out to London to visit Ariana - who had
been filming the live adaptation of Wicked since December 2022 - in an
attempt to repair their marriage but it 'didn't work out.
Since
their split, the songstress has been romantically linked to actor and
her fellow Wicked co-star, Ethan Slater - who also filed for divorce
from his wife, Lilly Jay, in July, leaving her 'devastated.'
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