Jason Sudeikis Opens Up About Dating After Olivia Wilde Breakup

Jason Sudeikis is opening up about his love life almost six years after ending his relationship with his ex-fiancée Olivia Wilde.
I Ted Lasso star, 50, shared on the Tuesday, June 2, episode of the “Friends Keep Secrets” podcast that she is not single yet.
Cohost Lil Dicky then asked Sudeikis what it’s like to be single, the comedian replied, “Ups and downs.”
Dicky’s wife and partner Kristin Batalucco followed by asking the actor if he’s “more than a romantic guy.”
“I like to have relationships with people,” explained Sudeikis. “I’m not at a point in my life where it’s fun or satisfying to date multiple people at once.
Sudeikis said the way he looks at relationships has changed since becoming a father. The actress shares son Otis, 12, and daughter Daisy, 9, with Wilde, 42.
“There’s also something new about anyone I date, that he’s never been number one on the call sheet, as showbiz says. “Maybe more than me.”
He added, “Then there’s that little bit as you get older, you’re like, ‘Oh God, I’ve got to make sure my cup is full so other people can get overflow.’
Elsewhere on the podcast, cohost Benny Blanco asked Sudeikis if she wanted more children. “I would like it if I fell in love,” the former Saturday Night Live said the star.
Sudeikis also opened up about life as a father.
“It’s a relative,” he replied when asked if he was a strict father. Like manners and things like ‘please’ and ‘thank you.'”
The actor also praised that his children know humor.
“Oh my god, they’re so funny. They’re getting funnier and funnier as they go. Daisy was funny about jumping,” he gushed.
Sudeikis and Wilde began dating in 2011 and got engaged in January 2013. They welcomed son Otis the following year and daughter Daisy in 2016.
However, by late 2020, the couple had separated, and Wilde was later linked to her Harry styles.
In the discussion of July 2021 no GQSudeikis said he is still considering the separation of the community.
“I’ll have a better understanding of why in a year, and even better in two, and even bigger in five, and it’ll go from being, you know, the book of my life to chapter to section to line to word to doodle,” he said at the time.
He added, “That’s an experience you learn from or make excuses for. You take responsibility for it, you’re accountable for what you do, but you also try to learn something beyond the obvious.”





