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Scott Disick
Scott Disick
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Scott Michael Disick (born May 26, 1983)[1][2] also known by his self styled title Scott Michael Disick, Lord Disick, is an American media personality and socialite widely known for his role as a main cast member on Keeping Up with the Kardashians and its spinoffs.[3][4][5] Disick's popularity on Keeping Up with the Kardashians led to the development of a house flipping show, Flip It Like Disick, that aired on E!.[6] In addition to starring on reality shows, he has pursued multiple business ventures, including starting the clothing brand Talentless, investing in nightclubs, and running multiple vitamin companies.[7][8][9]

Key Information

Early life

[edit]

Disick was born in Eastport, New York, to Jeffrey and Bonnie Disick.[3][10][11] He is an only child.[12] His grandfather, David Disick, developed luxury properties, and his father was also a real estate developer.[12] He attended The Ross School in East Hampton, but did not graduate.[11][13][14] As a teenager, Scott Disick was a book cover model for the Heartland series.[15][16] He has always been interested in architecture and often read Dwell as a teen.[17] He grew up Jewish.[18][19] When he was 18 years old, Disick was arrested for driving while impaired and pleaded guilty to a noncriminal charge.[20][21]

Career

[edit]

In 2007, Disick began appearing on Keeping Up with the Kardashians alongside then-girlfriend Kourtney Kardashian. He has appeared on every season of the show.[22][17][23] In the early seasons, he was well known for wearing suits.[24][17][25][26]

In 2009, Disick starred alongside Kourtney Kardashian and Kim Kardashian in Kourtney and Kim Take Miami, a spin-off of Keeping Up with the Kardashians. Disick received criticism due to a plot line in a March 2013 episode in which he hunted an alligator so that he could make a pair of shoes.[27] The series ended in 2013. Disick also starred on a 2011 episode of the short-lived CW series H8R, where he tried to convince a woman who had expressed her disgust of Disick on social media that he was likable.[28]

From 2011 to 2012, Disick, Kourtney, and Kim starred in a second spin-off series, titled Kourtney and Kim Take New York.[29] A second season plot line followed Disick as he developed a Japanese restaurant called Ryu in the Meatpacking District of New York City.[30][31] Disick was involved in the design of the restaurant as well as the menu development, and he promoted the restaurant on several occasions, including an appearance at Macy's Fashion Night.[32][33] The restaurant opened in 2012, and the opening was featured on an episode of Keeping Up with The Kardashians, but it received poor reviews and Disick backed out of the restaurant shortly after opening.[31][34][35] The restaurant closed 191 days after opening.[31]

On a 2012 episode of Keeping Up with the Kardashians, Disick purchased an online knighting ceremony on a trip to London.[36] He often refers to himself as "Lord".[17][10][37] He had to buy a piece of land to be knighted.[9] Disick was a judge on Miss Universe 2012 alongside Lisa Vanderpump, Brad Goreski, and Masaharu Morimoto.[38][39] In 2012, he was featured on an episode of Punk'd in which his car was towed and he had to barter to get it back.[40]

In 2013, Disick had a web series called Lord Disick: Lifestyles of a Lord, which was a spin-off of Kourtney and Kim Take Miami. The series featured him showing off his car collection and wealthy lifestyle while providing viewers with tips on how to live lavishly.[41][42][43] From 2014 to 2015, Disick starred alongside Kourtney and Khloe Kardashian in Kourtney and Khloe Take The Hamptons.[44][45] The series followed the Kardashian sisters as they opened a pop-up store in the Hamptons and attended events such as the Baby Buggy Summer Dinner.[45][46] Disick struggled with anxiety throughout the series because he grew up in Eastport, a town next to Southampton, and being in the area reminded him of his parents, who had recently died.[47][12] While filming for Kourtney and Khloe Take The Hamptons, Disick and Khloe played themselves in an episode of the TV drama Royal Pains, which takes place in the Hamptons.[48]

Disick made several guest appearances on reality shows in 2015 and 2016. He appeared on an August 2015 episode of Kingin' with Tyga,[49] had a recurring role on I Am Cait,[50][51] and appears on multiple episodes of Rob & Chyna, a 2016 episode of Wild 'n Out,[52][53] and an episode of Kocktails with Khloe.[54] He was considered as a possible contestant on Season 22 of Dancing with the Stars, but was turned down after he asked for $500,000.[55][56][57]

Disick began developing properties in 2015.[3][37] In 2019, he began starring on his own reality show, Flip It Like Disick, which follows his real estate and design business.[58][59][60] The show follows Disick and his team, including Willa Ford, as they renovate luxury homes in the Greater Los Angeles area.[61][62] Throughout the series, they remodel celebrity real estate in hour-long episodes.[37][63]

Business ventures

[edit]

Nightclub appearances

[edit]

Disick has made club appearances at 1OAK nightclub in Las Vegas,[64] Harrah's in Atlantic City,[65] and LEX Nightclub in Reno, sometimes receiving $80,000 for a single appearance.[66][67] Disick has also appeared in clubs internationally in Canada and the United Kingdom, earning $250,000 for his UK appearances.[66][68][69] The appearances were often arranged by Disick's manager at the time, David Weintraub.[66] Eventually, the club appearances began to interfere with Disick's addiction struggles, and he stopped making appearances.[66][9] Disick has also invested in his friends' nightlife businesses.[7][70]

Talentless

[edit]

In 2018, Disick began his own clothing line, Talentless.[8][71][72] He named his clothing line as "a big F-you to everybody in the world that basically said that anybody that was in the reality business 10, 15 years ago didn't have talent."[17][73] He discussed the development of his company on season eight of Keeping Up with the Kardashians.[73] Talentless sells primarily casual clothing such as T-shirts, sweatshirts, and sweatpants.[57] Three percent of every sale from the company goes to the non-profit organization Fuck Cancer.[17][74] The company received backlash in March 2020 and was accused of being insensitive after releasing apparel that stated "Please Wash Your Hands" amid the coronavirus pandemic.[75][76] Colton Underwood, who starred on The Bachelor, was seen wearing one of the "Wash Your Hands" sweatshirts.[77]

Partnerships and other ventures

[edit]

In 2010, when asked if he had a career, Disick stated, "I make a lot of money, and I'm more than capable of supporting myself. I run multiple companies in the vitamin world: QuickTrim, Rejuvacare, Monte Carlo Perpetual Tan."[7] In May 2011, Disick appeared on the cover of Men's Fitness.[78][79][80] A March 2015 episode of Keeping Up with the Kardashians revealed that Disick was the president of Calabasas Luxury Cars, which is owned by his best friend and Flip It Like Disick costar, Benny Luciano.[62][81][82]

Disick was featured in a June 17, 2013, marketing short film by Kanye West's creative content company Donda, in which Disick played Patrick Bateman from American Psycho.[83][84] Disick is friends with rapper N.O.R.E., and is featured in a hip hop skit track on Student of the Game titled "Scot Disick Speaks" and misspelling Disick's first name.[85][86][87] In 2015, Disick guest-starred as "Jim" on two episodes of the online soap opera Youthful Daze.[88]

Disick often posts sponsored ads on Instagram, and once accidentally posted the sponsor's instructions in the caption.[74][89][90][91] It has been estimated that he makes around $15,000 per post.[57] In December 2019, Disick and girlfriend Sofia Richie were criticized for promoting MDL Beast, a music festival in Saudi Arabia due to the country's human rights violations and treatment of women.[92][93] In January 2020, Disick, Kris Jenner, and Khloe Kardashian were featured in several commercials for the video game Coin Master.[94][95]

Personal life

[edit]
Disick and Kourtney Kardashian at Mercedes-Benz Fashion Week 2010

Disick dated Kourtney Kardashian from 2006 to 2015.[96][17] They met at a house party in Mexico thrown by Joe Francis.[97] Disick and Kardashian have three children: a son born December 14, 2009,[98] a daughter born July 8, 2012,[99][100] and a son born December 14, 2014.[101][102] Their relationship was featured on Keeping Up with the Kardashians and its spinoffs. In 2010, they temporarily moved to Miami with one-year-old Mason and Kourtney's sister Kim. Their relationship was on pause after Kardashian claimed Disick had an alcohol problem. After Disick temporarily gave up alcohol and attended therapy, Disick and Kardashian reconciled in mid-2010.[103][104]

In 2011, during the season one finale of Kourtney and Kim Take New York, Disick purchased an engagement ring and planned to propose to Kardashian. However, when Disick asked her opinion on marriage, Kardashian responded that she did not want to change things when they were doing well, so Disick decided not to propose.[105] Disick said in 2013, that they were happy and said "I feel like I used to want to get married more than she did, and then, being that she was always so not interested, I've decided not to be."[106] The couple split in 2015,[107] but have shared custody and co-parent their children.[108][109][110] Scott remains close with Kardashian's family, and as of 2019 they considered him to be family.[110]

His mother died in 2013, following a long illness.[10] His father died three months later.[12] Disick has had problems with alcohol and drug use.[10][111] He was temporarily sober in 2011 and he claimed at the time, "I'm nicer now that I'm sober."[29] In November 2014, Disick entered a rehabilitation facility in Connecticut following the filming of Kourtney and Khloé Take The Hamptons. In March 2015 he entered a rehabilitation facility in Guanacaste, Costa Rica,[112] but checked himself out later that month. After breaking up with Kardashian, Disick entered another rehab facility in Florida.[113][114] In 2016, he went to a rehab facility in Malibu and he said it helped him "restart" his life.[50] In May 2020, Disick entered a treatment facility in Edwards, Colorado, after a relapse.[115]

In 2015, Disick sold his Beverly Crest home to Russell Westbrook.[116]

Disick's Bugatti Veyron

Disick is a car collector, and has owned at least twenty vehicles.[50][117][118] He has owned a Rolls-Royce Drophead, a Maybach, several Ferraris, Range Rovers, and Bentleys.[119][70][120][17][121][122] Several of his cars and his five-car garage were featured in an Architectural Digest video tour of Disick's home.[122] His collection was also featured on an episode of his short-lived web series, Lord Disick: Lifestyles of a Lord.[41] In addition to cars, Disick also collects watches, including Patek Phillipe and Rolex watches.[121][123] During a May 2016 burglary, several watches were stolen from Disick's home.[124]

In fall 2017, Disick and model Sofia Richie began dating.[8][125][126] They confirmed their relationship in September 2017.[127] Throughout their relationship, Disick and Richie often vacationed alongside Kardashian and their children.[128] In 2019, they moved in together in Malibu, California.[129] The couple broke up in August 2020.[130] In 2018, Disick was involved in a lawsuit with Silver Airways for failing to pay more than $225,000 in jet fees.[131]

He lives in Hidden Hills, California [when?]. His home was burglarized in both May 2016 and 2017, with officials believing the latter burglary was an inside job. He was not home during either burglary.[132][124] His home has been featured on Flip It Like Disick and Architectural Digest.[120][133] From February to September 2021, Disick was in a relationship with model Amelia Hamlin, the daughter of American actress and television personality Lisa Rinna and actor Harry Hamlin.[134][135]

Filmography

[edit]

As television actor

[edit]
Year Title Role Notes Ref.
2014 Royal Pains Scott Disick Guest star (1 episode) [48]
Youthful Daze Jim Guest star (2 episodes) [88]

As himself on reality TV

[edit]
Year Title Notes Ref.
2007–2021 Keeping Up with the Kardashians Main role (147 episodes) [74]
2009–2013 Kourtney and Kim Take Miami Main role (22 episodes) [27]
2011–2012 Kourtney and Kim Take New York Main role (17 episodes) [29]
2012 H8R Guest star (1 episode) [28]
Miss Universe 2012 Judge [38]
2014–2015 Kourtney and Khloé Take The Hamptons Main role (10 episodes) [45]
2015 Kingin' with Tyga Guest star (1 episode) [49]
2015–2016 I Am Cait Recurring role (5 episodes) [51]
2016 Punk'd Guest star (2 episodes) [40]
Wild 'n Out Guest star (1 episode) [52]
Rob & Chyna Recurring role (3 episodes) [53]
Kocktails with Khloe Guest star (1 episode) [54]
2019 Flip It Like Disick Main role (8 episodes) [6]
2022–present The Kardashians Recurring cast [136]

As producer

[edit]
Year Title Notes Ref.
2019 Flip It Like Disick Executive producer (8 episodes) [94]

In music videos

[edit]
Year Title Artist Ref.
2014 "Wake Up in It" Mally Mall and Tyga feat. Sean Kingston, French Montana, and Pusha T [137]
2015 "Picture Me Rollin'" Chris Brown [138]

References

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Scott Disick (born May 26, 1983) is an American television personality, entrepreneur, and socialite recognized primarily for his appearances on the reality series from 2007 onward and his nine-year relationship with , which produced three children: Mason (born 2009), (born 2012), and (born 2014). Disick, originating from a family with interests in New York, initially pursued modeling before gaining prominence through the Kardashian franchise, where his dynamic with Kourtney—marked by repeated breakups amid his admitted alcohol and substance issues—drew significant viewer attention. Post-relationship, he has developed business pursuits including the casual apparel brand Talentless launched in 2018, involvement in house-flipping documented in his 2019 series , and earlier supplement products tied to GNC partnerships. Disick has candidly addressed personal challenges, including multiple rehab stints for recovery—such as in 2015—and ongoing management of hereditary alcohol risks discussed with his son, reflecting a pattern of self-reported relapses and sobriety efforts amid public scrutiny.

Early life

Family background and upbringing

Scott Disick was born on May 26, 1983, in Eastport, a community in County on , New York. He grew up as the only child of Jeffrey Disick, a broker and developer, and Bonnie Disick, a homemaker, in an affluent Jewish family of Ashkenazi descent. The family's wealth stemmed from Jeffrey's involvement in property dealings and inheritance from prior generations, including Disick's grandfather David Disick, who developed luxury estates, fostering an environment of financial security and exposure to high-end living from an early age. Disick's upbringing in this upper-middle-class setting on Long Island emphasized material comfort and familial business influences, with the household benefiting from the parents' combined fortune, later estimated at approximately $25 million. As an only child without siblings, he experienced a concentrated family dynamic centered on parental guidance, though his mother contended with extended health challenges that persisted into adulthood. This privileged context provided early familiarity with entrepreneurship through real estate examples, rather than bootstrapped origins, shaping his worldview amid luxury and relative isolation from broader economic struggles. The family's socioeconomic stability, rooted in generational success, offered Disick inheritance prospects that reinforced a sense of entitlement to , evident in his later ventures drawing on these foundational assets. Bonnie's ongoing illnesses, culminating in her death on October 28, 2013, at age 63 after a prolonged condition, and Jeffrey's subsequent passing on January 3, 2014, at age 63 from unspecified causes, marked later familial disruptions but did not alter the core affluent environment of his formative years.

Education and early ambitions

Disick attended The Ross School, a private preparatory institution in , during his high school years but did not graduate. Classmates and reports from the period described him as socially prominent within the affluent student body, often prioritizing social connections and extracurricular activities over academic completion. In his late teens and early twenties, prior to entering the public eye through , Disick engaged in modeling as an initial professional pursuit, appearing on covers of romance novels. This work reflected an early orientation toward image-conscious industries rather than formal higher education or structured paths. He lacked a degree and instead leveraged family wealth and social networks in scene, engaging in informal ventures without evidence of sustained business roles or sales experience before 2006.

Media career

Breakthrough on reality television

Scott Disick entered the public eye through his relationship with , debuting on the E! reality series (KUWTK) in its premiere season on October 14, 2007. As Kourtney's boyfriend, Disick's involvement stemmed directly from their personal connection, which began around 2006 after meeting during a vacation in . His on-screen presence quickly established a distinctive persona characterized by witty remarks, self-aggrandizing claims to —self-styling as "Lord Disick"—and an abrasive, party-oriented lifestyle that often sparked family conflicts. This portrayal, highlighted in early episodes such as Season 1's depiction of interpersonal tensions and Season 4's infamous Vegas incident where he shoved money into a waiter's mouth during Kim Kardashian's birthday celebration, contributed to his solidification as a recurring cast member amid the show's rising viewership. Disick's association with the Kardashians via KUWTK propelled him from relative obscurity to sustained media visibility, with the series' format emphasizing dramatic personal dynamics that amplified his role. Key episodes, including "Scott on the Rocks" from Season 2, showcased clashes with Kourtney's family, underscoring his outsider status and fueling narrative tension that retained audience interest. By the mid-2010s, as the show entered its later seasons, Disick's participation had translated into substantial earnings, reportedly around $4 million annually from filming and related appearances. Following KUWTK's conclusion after 20 seasons in June 2021, Disick transitioned to the family's series , debuting in 2022 with a diminished on-screen footprint primarily limited to co-parenting discussions involving their three children. His appearances in Season 2 and beyond, such as conversations with , reflected a shift toward more peripheral involvement compared to his central role in the E! era. This evolution maintained his television presence without the intensive scrutiny of earlier years, aligning with the family's post-E! production changes.

Expansions into other shows and production

Disick extended his television presence through spin-off series derived from . He appeared in a main role on from 2009 to 2013, contributing to 22 episodes that documented the Kardashian sisters' efforts to launch a in Beach. Similarly, he featured prominently in Kourtney and Kim Take New York across 17 episodes from 2011 to 2012, highlighting family dynamics and business expansion in . These appearances leveraged his established persona to sustain visibility within the E! network's Kardashian ecosystem, prioritizing relational drama and promotional opportunities over standalone narrative development. Beyond scripted family content, Disick pursued hosting roles at high-profile nightlife venues, monetizing his celebrity through event appearances. In March 2015, he hosted a party at 1 OAK Nightclub in Las Vegas shortly after completing a stay at a recovery center in Costa Rica. He scheduled additional nightclub hosting gigs in Las Vegas, including at 1 OAK in October 2016 following prior cancellations, often aligning with periods of personal publicity. These engagements, typically involving DJ collaborations and fan interactions, underscored a pattern of capitalizing on tabloid interest in his lifestyle for short-term commercial gains, with reports noting instances of visible intoxication during some events. In production endeavors, Disick served as an on select projects tied to his public image, though these remained extensions of his footprint rather than independent ventures. His involvement facilitated self-promotional arcs, including narratives around personal recovery following rehab stints documented in earlier spin-offs like Kourtney & Khloé Take the Hamptons in 2014, where substance-related struggles were aired for audience engagement. Such efforts prioritized maintaining relevance amid family show cycles, with limited diversification into non-Kardashian formats.

Filmography highlights

Disick's forays into acting and production beyond have been limited to cameo roles and guest appearances that capitalize on his public persona, with no leading roles in feature films or major scripted series. In 2012, he appeared in episodes of the online Youthful Daze, portraying a character in the low-budget production. His television guest spots include a 2015 cameo as himself on the Royal Pains, where he featured in a single episode amid the show's established . More recently, Disick made a brief cameo in the 2025 Hulu comedy series Running Point, arranged through personal connections with star , underscoring his reliance on celebrity networking rather than formal acting credentials. In music videos, Disick has similarly taken on peripheral roles. He appeared in Mally Mall's 2014 track "Wake Up In It," contributing to the video's ensemble of celebrity cameos. That same approach continued in Chris Brown's 2015 video for "Picture Me Rollin'," where Disick featured in a party scene, delivering a line that referenced his . In 2021, he cameo-ed in Maluma's "Sobrio" video, interacting with models in a segment alongside rapper . These appearances, often uncredited or minor, reflect Disick's status as a reality figure extending into pop crossovers without substantive involvement. Producer credits for Disick remain tied to his core media ecosystem, with executive production on select specials and spin-offs that do not extend to independent scripted projects. This body of work highlights a niche presence confined to self-referential or promotional contexts, lacking broader critical or commercial impact in traditional film or television.

Business ventures

Initial entrepreneurial efforts

Prior to his prominence on , which premiered in October 2007, Disick was involved in his family's activities, drawing from a lineage where his grandfather, David M. Disick, developed high-end properties and his father, Jeffrey Disick, worked as a developer in New York. In the early phase of his television exposure, Disick pursued product endorsements and launches in the health and wellness sector, often leveraging emerging fame for market entry. Around , he introduced Amidren, a supplement marketed as a "total male performance product" targeting men aged 20-40 to address issues like low testosterone and andropause symptoms, positioning it as a private-label venture in the nutrition industry. Concurrently, he endorsed GNC-distributed items including QuickTrim weight-loss aids—primarily associated with the Kardashian sisters but extended through his promotional ties—and Perpetual Tan, a self-tanning line for which he claimed ownership and creative involvement, alongside Rejuvacare skincare. These initiatives highlighted a pattern of opportunistic, fame-dependent hustles rather than standalone successes, with many tied to short-term celebrity buzz and lacking evidence of sustained viability independent of media exposure. Disick supplemented income through promotions, commanding fees of $50,000 to $80,000 per appearance in U.S. venues like 1OAK in during the early , and up to $250,000 for multi-event deals abroad, such as in the —earnings that underscored the ventures' reliance on his reality-TV persona for drawing crowds rather than inherent product merit.

Launch and growth of Talentless

Talentless was founded by Scott Disick in August 2018 as a brand specializing in essential casual apparel, including hoodies, T-shirts, sweatpants, and shorts. The brand's name reflects an ironic response to Disick's public persona, often mockingly termed "talentless," while underscoring a philosophy that entrepreneurial success stems from persistence, creativity, and market savvy rather than innate skills. Disick self-funded the launch, positioning Talentless as an homage to influencers and innovators who thrive outside traditional paths. The line emphasizes timeless, high-quality basics designed for comfort and understated style, initially focused on unisex menswear staples before expanding to womenswear silhouettes. Products are distributed via the brand's site, leveraging social media platforms like for direct sales, alongside partnerships with retailers such as Flannels for distribution across 20 locations starting in 2021. Limited-edition releases, including pandemic-themed items like "Please Wash Your Hands" hoodies, further capitalized on timely cultural moments. By the early 2020s, Talentless achieved substantial growth, reporting a 298 percent year-over-year revenue increase as cited in industry analyses, fueled by acceleration amid shifts toward online apparel sales. The brand's expansion into international markets and collaborations bolstered its multimillion-dollar scale, contributing notably to Disick's overall estimated of $45 million in 2025, derived from diversified ventures including this self-started enterprise. Disick entered the flipping market in 2015 by purchasing a property for $5.98 million, which he renovated and listed for resale at $8.8 million approximately six months later. In another early project, he acquired a farmhouse for around $3.4 million in early 2019, invested in extensive renovations over 17 months, and sold it for $5.6 million in November 2020, yielding a gross profit before costs. These ventures emphasized quick-turnaround luxury remodels in ' enclave, targeting high-end buyers with updates to interiors, exteriors, and amenities like custom playhouses costing up to $100,000. His flipping operations gained visibility through the E! reality series , which premiered on August 4, 2019, and documented his hands-on role in selecting properties, directing design teams, and overseeing renovations of multimillion-dollar homes. The show highlighted flips such as a residence listed initially at $6.89 million after full transformation, later reduced to $6.25 million amid market conditions, underscoring a focus on resale profitability rather than aesthetic awards. Disick contributed directly to design choices, including farmhouse-style exteriors and modern interiors, while managing a team for efficiency in high-value LA properties. Post-Flip It Like Disick, which aired through 2021, Disick continued off-camera deals prioritizing return on investment, such as converting unique homes for celebrity clients including French Montana and Steve Aoki, though specific ROI figures remain undisclosed beyond individual sale records. His approach treated real estate as a diversifiable asset class, leveraging media exposure to access premium listings valued between $5 million and $20 million, with emphasis on cost-controlled flips in gated communities.

Additional partnerships and endorsements

Disick has pursued several peripheral endorsement and partnership deals in wellness, , and beverage sectors. In the early , he promoted supplement and tanning products such as Rejuvacare, Perpetual Tan, and QuickTrim, stating involvement in their operations via GNC affiliations. In , he invested in the all-natural premixed brand VnC Cocktails. Following personal challenges, Disick endorsed detox products including a 2015 deal with a brand and a 2016 sponsored promotion for Bootea supplements on , the latter marred by a disclosure error revealing scripted content. In the , he expanded into beauty with a 2021 partnership as co-owner of In Common Beauty, a prestige line, after years of personal use. That year, collaborations like a Talentless-branded scent with emerged, though tied to his core apparel line. In 2022, Disick partnered with European Champagne house Leo De Verzay to launch a luxury brand, positioning it as a high-end offering available at $34.99 per bottle. These alcohol-related ventures drew scrutiny amid his acknowledged history of heavy substance use, including admissions of excessive drinking in prior years.

Personal life

Long-term relationship with Kourtney Kardashian

Scott Disick and Kourtney Kardashian met in 2006 at a party in Mexico hosted by Girls Gone Wild creator Joe Francis, though they did not experience immediate romantic attraction. They began dating in 2007, appearing as a couple on the October 14 premiere of Keeping Up with the Kardashians, where Disick was introduced as Kardashian's boyfriend. The partnership, spanning nearly a decade, featured repeated cycles of breakups and reconciliations driven by Disick's infidelity and behavioral issues. The first documented split occurred on , 2008, after Kardashian discovered text messages indicating Disick's suspected . They reconciled later that year, but tensions resurfaced; by August 2010, excessive drinking and anger problems led to another separation, resolved only after Disick entered . Disick's repeated admissions of on the reality series underscored a pattern of trust erosion, with public incidents including compromising photographs that strained the dynamic. The relationship ended definitively in July 2015 following Disick's involvement with ex-girlfriend Chloe Bartoli, captured in photographs amid a , which served as the immediate catalyst alongside his relapse into . Kardashian later attributed the breakup primarily to Disick's issues rather than in isolation, emphasizing in a 2022 interview that his unwillingness to sustain sobriety was the core causal factor. Post-separation, while formal co-parenting arrangements were established, relational friction endured; Disick was excluded from Kardashian's May 2022 wedding to in , prompting him to voice struggles with the shifted structure and leading to temporary estrangements from other Kardashians.

Fatherhood and co-parenting dynamics

Disick is the father of three children with Kourtney Kardashian: son Mason Dash Disick, born December 14, 2009; daughter Penelope Scotland Disick, born July 8, 2012; and son Reign Aston Disick, born December 14, 2014. Following their 2015 breakup, Disick and Kardashian established an informal co-parenting arrangement without involving attorneys or courts, prioritizing direct communication and mutual agreement on schedules and decisions. This approach has enabled shared responsibilities, including Disick's participation in family travels and events with the children post-split. Disick has maintained active involvement in his children's lives, such as celebrating his own 42nd birthday in May 2025 with Mason, , and , and engaging in candid discussions about his past alcohol struggles to deter them from similar paths. However, during episodes of and erratic behavior in 2015, Kardashian temporarily restricted his access to the children until he addressed his issues, citing concerns for their well-being. This included Disick missing 's third birthday on July 8, 2015, amid the immediate fallout from their separation. In recovery phases, Disick has emphasized stability for the children through consistent presence and leveraging family resources, though empirical lapses like prior absences highlight uneven reliability during relapses. Recent efforts include proactive talks with son Mason, now 15, about hereditary risks of , reflecting a shift toward preventive amid ongoing co-parenting tensions over issues like .

Post-breakup relationships and family interactions

Following the final breakup with in 2015, Disick pursued several romantic relationships, primarily with younger women, though none resulted in marriage or long-term commitment beyond three years. He was briefly linked to model Christine Burke in late 2015, shortly after the split, with reports indicating a short fling amid his public appearances with various women. In May 2017, Disick was romantically connected to actress during a trip to , ; however, Thorne publicly clarified they were never sexually involved and described their interactions as platonic, while Disick later admitted the association was partly intended to provoke jealousy from Kardashian. Disick's most extended post-breakup relationship was with model , daughter of singer , which began publicly in 2017 when she was 19 and he was 34. The on-and-off pairing lasted approximately three years, marked by reconciliations after splits in 2018 and early 2020, before ending definitively in August 2020 amid reports of on Disick's part. Subsequent links included brief involvements with figures such as model Amelia Hamlin from 2020 to 2021 and various others like Chloe Bartoli and Ella Ross, often spanning months rather than years and frequently highlighted by significant age differences of 15 to 25 years. By 2024, Disick expressed fatigue with dating much younger partners, stating he had "tended to go too young," and as of March 2025, he was reportedly single following a casual sighting with influencer Mary-Grayson Hunt. Despite romantic shifts, Disick has maintained ongoing interactions with the through co-parenting their three children, facilitating access to family events and dynamics independent of romantic ties. In June 2020, shortly after his split from Richie, Disick joined Kardashian and their children for a family dinner, underscoring continued collaborative parenting. Tensions have arisen, such as strains following Kardashian's 2022 marriage to , yet familial closeness persists via separate hangouts with siblings like . A notable 2025 interaction involved Disick publicly trolling by carrying a gallon of during outings like golfing and shopping in , shortly after her interview admission of ignorance about everyday prices like , interpreted as sibling-like banter amid their extended family network.

Health struggles and recovery

Substance abuse history and interventions

Scott Disick has publicly acknowledged struggles with alcohol and cocaine use dating back to at least the early 2010s, with episodes of heavy consumption documented on reality television shows such as Kourtney and Khloé Take Miami in 2010. In June 2014, he was hospitalized for alcohol poisoning following excessive drinking during his birthday celebration at a Hamptons nightclub. These incidents reflect patterns of binge drinking and substance use that persisted despite awareness of health risks, underscoring individual patterns of behavior over external mitigations. In 2015, Disick entered multiple rehabilitation facilities amid escalating issues, including a stay at the Rythmia Life Advancement Center in , followed by treatment in and then a Malibu facility in October for drug and . Reports indicated relapses shortly after discharge, with sources describing him as "out of control" within weeks, highlighting the limitations of short-term interventions without sustained personal commitment. Such cycles suggest that enabling social environments, including high-profile partying, compounded rather than excused repeated choices to resume use. By 2018, Disick claimed , maintaining three years of before entering a facility in May 2020 amid reports of into alcohol and . He departed after a few days, denying substance-related motives and attributing the stay to addressing past traumas, though contemporaneous accounts emphasized treatment needs. In a 2024 reflection, Disick described 15 years of self-destructive substance use as personally inflicted damage, admitting involvement in heavy and alcohol episodes alongside other excesses, which aligns with evidence of challenges in prior failed rehabs. This history illustrates how repeated interventions, while providing temporary structure, have not overridden patterns of driven by personal agency rather than solely environmental factors.

Impact of family losses

Scott Disick's mother, Bonnie Disick, died on October 28, 2013, at the age of 63 following a prolonged illness. Less than three months later, his father, Jeffrey Disick, died in January 2014, also aged 63, with no public disclosure of the cause. These rapid losses coincided with heightened personal challenges for Disick, including ongoing substance issues documented in contemporaneous media reports. Disick addressed the deaths publicly during episodes of , expressing that recalling them induced vulnerability and emotional exposure. He later reflected that the absence of proper grieving contributed to persistent unhappiness and stalled therapeutic outcomes, despite regular sessions. Sources close to Disick indicated the combined impact of parental losses and relational strains intensified his emotional distress, fostering avoidance behaviors without resolving underlying patterns. The response amplified instability evident in Disick's conduct around 2015, correlating temporally with the dissolution of his long-term partnership with , though external factors like repeated public incidents played primary roles. This sequence underscores how acute familial bereavement can exacerbate preexisting vulnerabilities in high-profile individuals under media scrutiny, yet Disick's for subsequent actions remains distinct from the precipitating events.

Recent physical transformations and wellness efforts

In March 2024, Disick's noticeably gaunt and pale appearance during a public outing in prompted widespread fan concern, with observers noting sunken cheeks and speculation about extreme dieting or medications like Ozempic. By February 2025, Disick publicly confirmed using Mounjaro, a tirzepatide-based antidiabetic drug often prescribed off-label for , after it appeared in his during an episode of . He stated he was "not embarrassed" about the method, which he adopted following prior unhealthy habits, including nightly consumption of an entire box of Hawaiian rolls. Reports indicate the regimen contributed to a 50-pound loss, reducing his weight from approximately 240 pounds to 190 pounds over six months. The process was reportedly physician-supervised to mitigate risks like , marking a shift from undisciplined excess to structured intervention reliant on pharmacological support alongside dietary changes. Disick attributed much of the drive to fatherhood, citing comments from his son Mason—such as noting he "looked tired"—as a pivotal motivator to prioritize long-term and model better habits for his children.

Controversies

High-profile behavioral incidents

In a 2010 episode of , Disick confronted a waiter aggressively during a Las Vegas outing, shouting profanities and attempting to shove a $100 bill into the man's mouth after the waiter intervened in an argument. The incident, filmed amid Disick's intoxication, highlighted his confrontational demeanor toward service staff, with him later telling the waiter to "shut your f------ mouth." During a family vacation in in July 2016, Disick failed to acknowledge his daughter Penelope's fifth birthday, prioritizing personal activities over the event while the child was with her mother, . This absence followed similar oversights, such as missing her birthday the prior year amid post-separation tensions, underscoring lapses in parental punctuality during high-visibility family dynamics. On January 3, 2019, Disick posted an photo from an Asian restaurant showing his six-year-old daughter pulling the corners of her eyes upward in a slanted expression while holding , captioning it "Best date of 2019." The image prompted widespread from commenters, who interpreted the gesture as mocking Asian features, though defenders argued it was an innocent childlike face absent malicious intent. Disick did not remove the post immediately, amplifying public debate on in . In a February 2025 episode of The Kardashians, Disick revealed tipping only $2 on a $50 Starbucks delivery order, equating to about 4% gratuity, and explicitly rejected the norm of 20% tipping, stating, "I am not tipping 20 percent." Despite his reported $45 million net worth enabling higher gratuities, he defended the amount amid co-host Benny Blanco's pushback, citing resistance to inflated service expectations. The disclosure reignited scrutiny over his attitudes toward service industry compensation, consistent with prior on-camera interactions portraying entitlement. Reflecting on his reality TV tenure in April 2025, Disick admitted to committing "a lot of bad things" captured on camera, including the waiter confrontation, but rationalized them as "entertaining" contributions to the show's appeal. He expressed partial regret over such behaviors, noting they amplified his public image of and disregard for norms, often linked to fame-derived expectations of leniency. These admissions, shared during a appearance with , underscored a pattern where personal accountability intersected with performative excess for audience engagement.

Public criticisms and accountability issues

Public perceptions of Scott Disick have frequently portrayed him as entitled and lacking full accountability for his past behaviors, with fans and media commentators accusing him of playing the victim despite a history of , , and relational instability during his decade-long partnership with . Online discourse, particularly on platforms like , has labeled him as "toxic" and "annoying," arguing that the enabled his patterns by failing to enforce boundaries, allowing him to evade consequences for actions such as cheating and mistreatment. In a 2021 episode of , expressed frustration with Disick's tendency to avoid responsibility, stating she was tired of him "playing the victim." Critics have highlighted Disick's exclusion from family events, such as Kourtney Kardashian's May 2022 wedding to in , , as a consequence of his prior conduct rather than unfair , with public backlash emphasizing his perceived entitlement after years of "get[ting] high, drink[ing], cheat[ing], and mistreat[ing]." Fan responses on countered Disick's complaints about feeling "left out" by pointing to his lack of consistent contributions to the family dynamic, framing him as having benefited from ' resources without equivalent stability or reliability. This narrative extends to broader critiques of his role in family breakdowns, where conservative-leaning outlets have noted how his prioritization of personal indulgences over stable co-parenting exacerbated divisions, contributing to non-traditional family structures marked by serial relationships and fragmented child-rearing. While Disick has acknowledged regretting certain on-camera behaviors in a 2025 , observers have noted a persistent pattern of incomplete ownership in his public reflections, often shifting focus to external pressures rather than fully dissecting personal agency in relational failures. This has fueled ongoing debates about his image, where entrepreneurial successes like his clothing line are overshadowed by accusations of a decade-long cycle of unreformed habits, with some fans arguing that true remains superficial amid media sympathy.

Responses to scandals and media portrayals

In April 2025, Disick publicly reflected on his appearances, admitting to performing "a lot of bad things" that he later regretted, such as stuffing cash into a waiter's during a filmed incident, while acknowledging these moments contributed to the shows' entertainment value. This response framed past scandals not as isolated moral failings but as performative elements amplified by production demands, implicitly critiquing the medium's incentive to prioritize drama over restraint. Media portrayals of Disick's controversies have frequently positioned him as the archetypal chaotic figure in the Kardashian orbit, with outlets like People magazine detailing antics for audience draw, thereby functioning more as enablers of prolonged exposure than detached exposers. Such coverage, driven by entertainment industry's reliance on sensationalism, often overlooks causal factors like scripted escalation for ratings, perpetuating a cycle where personal lapses become commodified content; this aligns with broader patterns in celebrity journalism, where profit motives in left-leaning Hollywood ecosystems favor narrative dysfunction over resolution. Disick's rebuttals, by contrast, emphasize individual agency in moving beyond these episodes, rejecting victim narratives in favor of self-accountability. Disick has advanced a "found " storyline in recent public statements, attributing mindset shifts to personal milestones without crediting external interventions as primary drivers, as evidenced by his 2025 comments on changes post-quitting alcohol. This self-reliant framing counters earlier media emphases on dependency and , though tabloid sources maintain via ongoing weight fluctuation reports rather than endorsing sustained progress. Complementing this, Disick utilizes for image rehabilitation, posting updates on grooming, , and levity in 2025 to project stability and normalcy, thereby directly challenging persistent portrayals of volatility.

Recent developments

Ongoing business and media activities

Disick has sustained his apparel brand Talentless, launched prior to 2020, with ongoing sales of casual menswear items such as T-shirts and hoodies priced upwards of $100, alongside limited product collaborations including one with luxury scent brand . The brand emphasizes a self-deprecating tied to Disick's public persona, maintaining an online presence and retail availability without major structural expansions reported through 2025. His estimated net worth stands at $45 million as of 2025, accrued largely from reality television compensation—reportedly in the multimillion-dollar range annually—alongside revenue from Talentless and real estate endeavors such as property renovations and sales. Disick continues to invest in high-end real estate, leveraging his experience from prior flipping projects to maintain a portfolio that supports his luxury lifestyle, including ownership of a multimillion-dollar Hidden Hills mansion. In media, Disick features in guest capacities on the series , appearing in key episodes across season three (2023), where he addressed family dynamics, and season five (2024), discussing personal health updates. These recurring roles, focused on co-parenting and familial interactions, have not extended to starring in new standalone series post-2020, with no announcements of independent television or production ventures by late 2025.

Family and relocation considerations

In October 2025, Scott Disick expressed interest in relocating from Los Angeles to New York City with his eldest son, Mason Disick, aged 15, citing the "chaos" from California wildfires earlier in the year as a key motivator for seeking a change from the region's instability. Disick specified plans for an Uptown Manhattan residence where Mason could attend a private school, reflecting a preference for a structured urban environment over ongoing environmental disruptions in California. This potential move faces significant logistical barriers tied to co-parenting arrangements with ex-partner , primarily due to their younger children: daughter , aged 13, and son , aged 10. Disick identified these siblings as the "biggest factor" complicating the relocation, as any shift involving Mason would require coordinated custody logistics amid Kardashian's established family life in following her 2022 marriage to . Disick maintains active family engagement through , sharing posts of outings and milestones with his children, which underscore routine co-parenting stability despite periodic media scrutiny. A recent example includes light-hearted interactions amplified by tabloids, such as Disick's October 2025 photos carrying a of —prompted by Kim Kardashian's unrelated remark on grocery prices—which generated brief online buzz but represented a minor, non-substantive family-adjacent anecdote rather than any deeper relational strain. Overall, co-parenting dynamics with Kardashian remain functional, prioritizing child welfare through shared decision-making on and residence, even as Disick weighs personal relocation preferences against collective family commitments as of late 2025.

References

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