Neri Oxman, a beautiful professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, has denied rumors she is dating actor Brad Pitt after two people are said to be having sex with each other for a short time. The New York Times reported earlier this year
Pitt and Oxman met in an architectural project at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where she is a professor of Communication Arts and Sciences at the School Communications Laboratory. Oxman is also a designer, an architect.
Despite rejecting a love affair with Brad Pitt, the female professor admits she is seeking to work with a male cast member on a project.
"He brings together all the elements of fashion and classics - the things that cinema needs," she commented on Brad Pitt.
Oxman is dating William A. Ackman, who is famous for spending more than $ 90 million on a penthouse located in one of Manhattan's super-large buildings.
A friend of Brad Pitt also confirmed that they are just friends, but "she is very impressed."
About being rumored to date, actor Oxman admits she does not mind, but is happy to hear rumors from earlier this year. A former Israeli army lieutenant said she often left the lab - where paparazzi are usually waiting - with several books meant to promote scientific research.
The thing that was her priority was the gold recorder Voyager, a large gold and nickel plated material mounted on two Voyager 1 and 2 ships, which were released from Earth in 1977. It serves as a messenger. Bringing selected images and materials of the Earth, human culture across the universe, in the hope that someday, an extraterrestrial civilization will be able to receive it. The second item that she deliberately gives the paparazzi to grab is the book Feynman Lectures Physics
In an interview with W Magazine in 2017, Oxman used Brad Pitt and his good friend George Clooney as an example of the trend toward reverence for male symbols.
Asked if she thought masculinity was the only problem in architecture, Oxman said: "For the same reason, we have both Brad Pitt and George Clooneys. Adapting the patterns is one of human nature. "
"That idiosyncrasy is useful for general awareness of heroism. But it's not only true in architecture, it's true in the music industry, as well as in the women who work in the theater, even with film directors. This is not just a disease of architecture. It is a phenomenon of human culture and the way we develop prejudices and perceptions. "