Miseryland.
Tori Spelling and Dean McDermott were snapped on a family outing to Disneyland Wednesday, seemingly cordial with each other — if privately miserable — amid their very-likely-in-progress split.
Spelling, 48, donned a pair of Minnie Mouse ears for the occasion, along with an assortment of strained expressions as she steered the couple’s brood — Liam, 14, Stella, 13, Hattie, 10, Finn, 9, and Beau, 4 — through the park. The 54-year-old McDermott did not pick up a matching set of Mickey ears, however, and kept his sunglasses on throughout the day.
Neither spouse wore their wedding band.
Spelling was captured in a heated moment outside an attorney’s office Monday with a notepad that contained the words “custody,” “support” and “assets” …
… along with the puzzling phrase “Pig pen – get quote,” which seems to definitively settle the divorce rumors that have dogged the couple for some time — if not their animal husbandry situation.
Meanwhile, a source told Page Six Wednesday — presumably during the Grimsneyland outing — that Spelling’s “friends are surprised [a divorce] didn’t happen years ago.
“No one is a fan of [Dean],” whom Spelling married in 2006, they added.
McDermott was seen talking with two women before his kids’ soccer game last week and was also photographed sans wedding band at the time.
But he seemed blasé — or at least uninterested — about the split rumors in September, telling the “Feminine Warrior” podcast, “It’s just weird that people need to know … It’s just like, ‘OK, if that’s what you want to think, then think it.’”
Neither McDermott nor Spelling has directly addressed the rumors, though Spelling confirmed they were sleeping in separate rooms in June.
McDermott copped to cheating on Spelling in 2013, which the couple spun into their 2014 Lifetime docuseries, “True Tori.”
And apparently, McDermott isn’t the only person Spelling is shutting out: “She’s cut people off,” Page Six’s insider told us Wednesday. “None of her old friends talk to her much. They used to have girls’ nights all the time before the pandemic. They don’t anymore.”