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Exes and Ohs: Jason Biggs and Jenny Mollen Step Out Together Post-Split

Ava HartAuthor
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Ava Hart's Hollywood 360

Sometimes the best thing an ex can do is prove the breakup doesn’t have to be a war. Jason Biggs and Jenny Mollen were spotted linking arms outside a New York City restaurant on Saturday, June 6, painting a picture of civility that’s refreshingly at odds with the messy celebrity divorce narrative we’ve grown accustomed to watching unfold on tabloid pages.

The pair stepped out with their sons, Sid, 12, and Lazlo, 8, in tow—a deliberate choice that signals where their priorities lie. Mollen wore a casual black tank top with white shorts and a gold belt, while Biggs kept it low-key in a white T-shirt and open tan button-down. Nothing about the outing screamed staged or performative; it read like what it was—a family dinner that happened to include two people who used to be married.

The context here matters. Us confirmed in May that the couple had called it quits after 18 years of marriage, and their representatives wasted no time emphasizing that both remained on great terms and were committed to coparenting. That’s the headline most people skip over, the footnote buried in the divorce announcement. But it’s the whole story, really.

What makes this particular reunion worth noting is what Mollen revealed before the split became official. On the“What Matters With Liz”podcast, she got candid about feeling like the spare in their marriage—overshadowed by Biggs’career success, particularly his role in American Pie, which launched him into a stratosphere she couldn’t match. She described the toll of being perpetually sidelined, of feeling like a guest in her own life. That’s the kind of resentment that usually doesn’t dissolve into arm-linked restaurant outings within weeks. And yet here they are.

It’s possible that naming the problem—speaking it into existence—cleared the air enough to make this work. Mollen acknowledged her own baggage, tracing her struggles back to growing up with two narcissistic parents, which shaped how she moved through her marriage. That kind of self-awareness, rare in public breakups, might be what allows exes to actually like each other again.

The real test isn’t a single dinner, though. It’s whether this grace holds up over months and years of custody arrangements, new relationships, and the inevitable complications that follow. But for now, Jason Biggs and Jenny Mollen have shown that splitting up doesn’t require burning everything down.

Ava Hart's Hollywood 360

About the Author

Ava Hart

Ava Hart is a contributor to LocalBeat, covering local news and community stories.

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