Zahara & Maddox Jolie paid for newspaper ads to announce their name changes

In June, there was a flurry of news about Angelina Jolie and her children. Knox and Vivienne graduated from high school and their father didn’t show up or mark the occasion in any way. Ditto for Zahara’s graduation from Spelman College in Atlanta. Around all of the graduation news, we learned that both Zahara and Maddox had recently begun the process to legally change their names – much like Shiloh, they decided to formally drop “Pitt” from their surname and just use “Jolie.” As you can imagine, Brad Pitt continues to be very huffy and stupid about all of this. Well, changing your name is a months-long process in California, and it involves a few different steps. One of those steps is putting an ad in a local newspaper to announce the name change. That’s what Zahara has done.

Another kid of Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie is getting closer to closing the book on the family name … Zahara has taken the next legal step to become Zahara Jolie.

Court documents, obtained by TMZ, show Zahara has completed one of California’s required hurdles for a legal name change by publishing notice of her petition in the Los Angeles Daily Journal once a week for four consecutive weeks and calling for anyone opposing the change to submit a written opposition before the final hearing.

As TMZ previously reported, the 21-year-old filed her petition in June asking to legally change her name from Zahara Marley Jolie-Pitt to Zahara Marley Jolie. The filing states the notice ran on June 16, June 23, June 30, and July 7 … and next up is Zahara’s September 28 hearing, where a judge can approve the request if no one objects.

A source close to Brad tells TMZ … they believe Angelina has caused the rift between Brad and the children … and this is just the latest chapter in the very sad and never-ending campaign to alienate children from their father.

Zahara hasn’t been using Brad’s last name for a while now … but the move follows a path already taken by sister Shiloh, who published a similar legal notice before officially dropping “Pitt” from her name in 2024.

And she’s far from the only one distancing herself from the family name. Maddox and Vivienne have also stopped publicly using “Pitt” in recent years … making Zahara the latest of Brad’s children to move away from the surname.

If the judge signs off, Zahara will officially become Zahara Marley Jolie.

[From TMZ]

Page Six points out that Maddox’s ads ran in the same newspaper on the same days, so this is like a special bonding project for Zahara and Maddox. That’s pretty cool!! “A source close to Brad tells TMZ … this is just the latest chapter in the very sad and never-ending campaign to alienate children from their father.” Again, Zahara is 21 years old and a college graduate. She’s not a vulnerable child right now. She actually was a vulnerable child ten years ago, when Brad terrorized and abused Angelina and all of the kids on a private plane. Let’s just keep it real. Same with Maddox – he’s 24 years old, not a child. He graduated from college years ago. It’s not “parental alienation” as much as grown-ass siblings deciding they don’t want to carry the name of their abusive father.

Photos courtesy of Avalon Red, Backgrid, Cover Images.

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25 Responses to “Zahara & Maddox Jolie paid for newspaper ads to announce their name changes”

  1. LOLA says:

    I continue to be baffled why it’s such an arduous process to change one’s name in the USA. Do people from other countries commenting here have processes like this in their countries?

    • ecsmom says:

      I came here to say the same thing. I can kind of understand having to announce the name change in case creditors or the law or someone trying to sue you. Even still a name change is a matter of record and if someone was trying to find you they could (unless it sealed or something)

      But the statement about anyone opposing the name change is just bonkers. What possible legal reason could another person have that would give them the right to stop you. Even if you are married you are allowed to have whatever name you want. That part seems to be very antiquated and maybe should be reviewed.

      • Bumblebee says:

        There are many old laws on the books that haven’t been removed. This is likely one of them. Most people don’t have everything they do reported on, so no one has noticed this law that ‘inconveniences’ only a few people. When I got married I didn’t have to go through all this to change my name.

      • Ciotog says:

        It’s so law enforcement wouldn’t think you were changing your name to evade the law.

    • Nicki says:

      In France you’re not allowed to change your name at all, other than when you get married.

    • Kirsten says:

      I don’t think this is any more arduous than having to change your name when you get married, even though the steps are different. When you get married you have to change your SSN, driver’s license, and file paperwork with the court, all of which requires other documentation, including your court-certified marriage certificate. And when you apply for a marriage license through the court, that gets published in the local newspaper.

      • Normades says:

        It’s possible but you have to have a really really good reason for it. I knew a guy who was able to change his last name from Verge (penis) to Verger (orchard).

    • Elon says:

      Yes. In my country (Trinidad & Tobago), you have to get a deed poll from an attorney, then submit it to the Ministry of Legal Affairs and the AG. Processing takes 3 months (on a good day). Then you have to update your national ID and every other government card/document and financial institution. As a Commonwealth country, we’re still under the Westminster system.

  2. Amy Bee says:

    Good for them.

  3. Jais says:

    They are in their 20s and of sound mind. Please.

  4. Plums says:

    I was reading that the newspaper announcement thing is a bit of a relic of a California law from back in the day when criminals could just move and change their names to start over in order to evade the law. I hope there are exceptions to it these days, because that kind of red tape feels especially unfair and dangerous for trans people or people fleeing domestic violence.

    • KNB says:

      I find it so bizarre. It’s not like women in California have to take out ads if they change their last names when they get married. Or is this process about changing your birth certificate?

      • Kirsten says:

        When you apply for a marriage license, it does get published in the local newspaper. And you can’t change your birth certificate unless you have a legal name change first, and it’s also a separate process.

    • Alo says:

      Incorrect, you do not have to publish your application for a marriage license in a local paper in California.
      The law in California has just changed as of 7/1/26 regarding name changes/birth cert changes (made it more streamlined) so I am not going to cite the above as wrong or right but do review the recent changes closely if this is of personal interest. I *think* it has removed the ability for someone to object but don’t quote me on that.

  5. Michelle says:

    The hate Angelina and adopted children are getting online is sickening. All pro-pitt media outlets piling it on and using the story for hate clickbait. How much more abuse do they have to tolerate before something is done about it?

  6. ChillinginDC says:

    Maybe he shouldn’t have been a terrible father and refused to take responsibility for what he did.

  7. liz says:

    Generally speaking, if someone has a reason for wanting the record to be sealed (DV and transgender status are almost universally accepted reasons), judges will not require publication and will seal the record.

    In the case of the Jolie family, this is already very public, so asking them to follow the rules as written is not burdensome or dangerous to them (or is not adding to the stress of their already stressful lives).

    The reason for publication and making it a public process is so that people have a harder time fleeing debts or sanctions on professional licenses simply by changing their name.

    Signed, retired lawyer and parent of a transgender young adult.

  8. YankeeDoodles says:

    If you change your name in the U.K., you have to publish an announcement in the London Gazette, which we did. It’s really not a big deal. But it does create a paper trail, so you can’t go underground, assuming you were fleeing debt / bankruptcy / previous spouses / committing bigamy / abandoning minor children / etc…. There are sound practical reasons to advertise a change that is voluntary, and it’s just a formality.

  9. Gale says:

    But, but, but….is it safe for the girls, especially, to change their names from what’s on their birth certificates?? Won’t they lose their right to vote? I worry for women in the USA, every day.

  10. Irisrose says:

    So as far as we know, Pax is the only one who hasn’t changed his name?

    • Jais says:

      Legally? The twins have not either. But they’ve called themselves by just Jolie at Knox’s graduation and I believe Vivian’s name in the Outsiders playbill. This was just Maddox and Z. And Shiloh before.

    • bergamot says:

      Pax was listed as Pax Jolie in Couture credits.

  11. Charlotte says:

    The advertisements are a legal requirement. I’ve used my mother’s maiden name as my middle name since the 1980s, but paid to have it legally changed last year to synch up with social security. Had to run those ads for a month. It was part of the whole process.

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