Tom Segura and Christina Pazsitzky Announce Divorce After 18 Years of Marriage
Oh good. Another "amicable" split that conveniently drops right when a podcast tour needs a press hook. Tom Segura, 47, and Christina Pazsitzky, 50 — the married comedy duo behind "Your Mom's House"

A TMZ source, freshly minted for the occasion, says the couple separated "a couple of months ago" but remain totally chill and plan to keep co-hosting their podcast together. Because nothing screams "we've moved on" like sitting across a mixing board from your ex and riffing about marriage for a living.
Here's the thing: the timeline receipts tell a messier story.
They sold us the marriage for 14 years
Segura and Pazsitzky tied the knot in November 2008, dropped "Your Mom's House" in 2012, and spent the next decade-plus turning their actual relationship into content. The open mic meet-cute? Bits. The hike date rejection? Bits. The Austin, Texas relocation for "a slower pace and easier travel while touring"? Bits. Smelly neighbor having aggressive sex next to their one-room apartment? Absolutely bits.
When your entire empire is "married couple being married on mic," an "amicable" split announcement isn't just news — it's a product pivot.
Watch the next 30 days:
- First episode back. Cold open acknowledgment? Tone shift? A "comedy divorce" arc that suspiciously mirrors their old material?
- Joint tour dates still on the books. If they're playing married-couple venues through Q4, this is a soft launch, not a breakup.
- Back-catalog control. 14 years of "Your Mom's House" is essentially a shared asset now. Zero word on how that gets split.
The PR playbook is already running
Segura and Pazsitzky's reps had nothing to say to the L.A. Times. Textbook "no comment" while TMZ seeds the narrative. Expect a joint Instagram statement by end of week — something about "love and respect," "co-parenting our beautiful children," and a casual plug for the next tour stop.
Cynical take: the "amicable" framing is doing Olympic-level heavy lifting. It protects the podcast brand, keeps the tour viable, and buys runway for whatever content lane they pivot into. Two comics who built a dynasty on marriage material don't just lose the bit — they rebrand it.
Prediction: within 30 days, one of them quietly lands a Netflix special that's suspiciously, conveniently about going through a divorce. The algorithm is already drooling.