Dakota Johnson, famous for her role as Anastasia Steele in the *Fifty Shades* series, manages both her successful Hollywood career and a full family life with ease. At 34, Dakota has not only made a name for herself in film but is also learning about love and blended families.
This article explores Dakota’s rumored engagement to Chris Martin, her smooth transition into being part of a blended family, her friendship with Chris’s ex, Gwyneth Paltrow, and her thoughts on family life and motherhood. Dakota’s family history in the entertainment world adds even more to her unique perspective on life, love, and family.
Dakota Johnson, an actress, producer, and director, has been in Hollywood since childhood, starting her acting career at ten. She’s appeared in over 30 films, most notably as Anastasia Steele in the Fifty Shades of Grey series, a role she reprised in two sequels.
Dakota comes from a family of Hollywood stars. Her mother, Melanie Griffith, has over 80 acting credits in projects like Days Out of Days and Stuart Little 2, while her father, Don Johnson, has acted in over 100 projects, including Knives Out. After her parents’ divorce, both remarried. Her mother was married to actor Antonio Banderas from 1996 to 2015, and he shared a close bond with Dakota, often describing her as his family and expressing his love for her.
Dakota is the only child of her parents together but grew up in a large blended family. She has spoken about her family, saying, “I grew up in a family that was so big, and I just believe in the saying ‘Blood is thicker than water.’” Dakota values the relationships people choose as much as those they’re born into, saying that in her family, her siblings, blood-related or not, are all close and connected.
Her blended family experience has influenced how she views relationships. She believes that family bonds endure through trials, with most of her relatives being creative people. She reflected, “Even the kids, they’re extraordinarily talented people. So you just are dealing with complex people. You grow and you embrace.” Dakota cherishes her family, finding joy in its honesty and openness.
Dakota is in a relationship with Chris Martin, the lead singer of Coldplay. Rumors of their engagement have circulated, especially after Dakota was spotted wearing a ring in 2020, and again in 2021. In 2023, designer Jessica McCormack posted a photo of Dakota wearing what looked like an engagement ring. Sources say the couple got engaged a while ago but kept the news private, focusing on their bond over wedding plans.
Dakota has embraced her role as a stepmom to Chris’s children, Apple and Moses, from his past marriage to Gwyneth Paltrow. She has a good relationship with Gwyneth, who has openly praised Dakota, calling her “an adorable, wonderful person” and sharing that they are close friends. The two have even posted photos together, showing their bond.
Dakota and Chris’s relationship has brought her closer to his children. She once described her connection to them, saying, “I love those kids like my life depends on it.” She often spends time with Apple and Moses and has been spotted on family outings, like grabbing coffee or going on family vacations.
Despite the family’s nontraditional structure, Dakota feels at ease with it. Growing up in a blended family herself, she feels it’s natural. Her experiences have made her open to one day having children of her own, saying, “I’m so open to that. I really want to experience everything that life has to offer.” She sees motherhood as a “crazy, wild, and magical” experience and is ready if it happens.
Dakota’s family background has influenced how she approaches her current relationships. Her connection with Chris and his children has brought her happiness, shaping her ideas about love, family, and the future.
20+ Things That Could Even Puzzle Sherlock Holmes
Once in a while, we come across things in our household that we can’t identify. If this happens to you, just know that you can ask the experts on Reddit. Here, people from all around the world share their knowledge and help figure out the purpose behind some really mysterious things.
Now I’ve Seen Everything can now say we haven’t really seen everything and here are some mysteries the internet managed to solve!
1. “Part with spokes rotates, spokes (of different diameters) match up to hole in the opposite side of the tool. Sharpie marker for size.”
Answer: It is for punching holes in leather or similar things. Like, for a belt.
2. “This little plastic basket/holder inside the far corner of a trolley — I asked the supermarket staff, they had no idea.”
Answer: It’s a bitz box (a place for small items, like pens, batteries, etc.).
3. “I know it’s a chair, but what’s with the extended arms?”
Answer: It looks like a plantation/planter chair. You’d put your sore, swollen legs up on the arms after sitting on a horse all day, like a pregnant woman with her legs up in the same fashion. This is why the back is so sloped as well. If you sat up straight it wouldn’t be comfortable to put your legs up like that, but in a reclined position, it’s good for blood flow and airflow.
4. “Small, light blue, rubber capsule with a tear-off end.”
Answer: It’s a cosmetics serum capsule.
5. “My coworker saw this toilet in the women’s restroom at the Huntsville Space Center. Why is it shaped this way?”
Answer: It is a woman’s urinal. It encourages women to urinate from a standing position without the need to sit on a shared seat.
6. “I’m waiting for the bank to open and they have this card facing the street. What is it used for?”
Answer: It’s definitely a safety signal. We switch ours quarterly and it’s to let other employees know that it is all clear to open. Typically we had 2 employees “open” the branch while the rest waited in the parking lot or across the street for “all clear.” The openers go in, turn off the alarm, search the building, and check everything, then set the signal.
7. “In the middle of the wall in my 1906 house”
Answer: It’s a capped-off gas line from when they used gaslighting.
8. “Found this in Guam in shallow water, 3 meters in diameter. Never seen anything like it.”
Answer: This is absolutely a rocket part.
9. “Opposite of hole-y: what is this not-really-spiky kitchen spoon for?”
Answer: It’s a spaghetti server.
10. “What is the S-shaped metal ornament on this house?”
Answer: It’s an anchor plate or wall washer. It’s meant to keep masonry in place and made aesthetically pleasing because they’re visible. There is a bolt going on the other side, in the center, holding the bricks in place.
11. “What is this piece of seemingly old tech? Found in a pile at a university.”
Answer: That’s a very old wearable computer.
12. “My house (built in the mid ’70s) has one of these in almost every room.”
Answer: The 3-prong ones were for TV and FM antennas, and the center one was for an antenna rotator to get better reception.
13. “This is an on-gate blocking road access to some cell towers. Why so many locks and how would someone even open it?”
Answer: You can open the gate by unlocking only one padlock. The way it’s designed means that multiple people can use the gate, and if one person loses their keys, only their padlock needs to be replaced. As opposed to one padlock with many keys, you’d need to give tons of people the new key.
14. “What are these shredded balls on my property?”
Answer: Juniper-hawthorn rust — it’s a fungal disease. It starts as a gall then the tentacles appear around spring or after rain. It probably won’t kill this tree but it can seriously mess up secondary host apple trees. The only way to get rid of it is to prune then burn the removed branches. Don’t forget to disinfect your tools after.
15. “A cast iron circle with raised edges and a zero”
Answer: I think it’s a support for an old waffle maker.
16. “I found this while cleaning out an old cedar closet. Had a bendy spring in the middle. Looks like it hangs on a door?”
Answer: I think it’s a vintage hat display stand. If you Google it, there are a lot that have the springy bit and the pull cord (it probably lets you pull the hat down and to the sides to examine it rather than touching the hat itself). Yours seems to be held by sliding onto a table edge rather than sitting on the table itself. So you’re holding it sideways.
17. “What is this stuff growing out of the nail holes in my ceiling?”
Answer: That’s termite frass. You’ve got bad termites and you’ll want to deal with it ASAP.
18. “I just bought a house and this weird triangle holder thing is by my kitchen sink. What is it?”
Answer: It’s a dishtowel holder. Take the corner of your dishtowel and put it to the back of the triangle, then pull down on the towel and it’s held in place.
19. “Found this buried in the garden, very tough glass.”
Answer: My father repaired TVs for decades. I can confirm this one is the glass back.
20. “I bought these at a thrift store. Thought it was a bar spoon but I’m not certain.”
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Answer: They’re ice cream spoons.
21. “I found this in our kitchen drawer when I moved in, none of my roommates have any idea. What is this thing?”
Answer: It’s a part of a tea infuser.
22. “Found these when clearing out my dad’s wardrobe. Any idea what you’d hang on them?”
23. “It is made of steel/iron and is heavier than it looks. We’re not sure if it’s a tool or some type of kitchenware.”
Answer: Apparently it’s a meat tenderizer.
24. “Delicate wooden whisk type thing that fits into a small vase item with openings on both ends. What is it? I’m so curious!”
Answer: It’s a matcha whisk and whisk holder.
Which one of these did you instantly know the purpose of? Do you have any mysterious things around your house that you can’t figure out? Share them with us and let’s solve the mystery together!
Preview photo credit MamaBearsApron / reddit
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