TLDR
Within a week of publicly batting away divorce buzz, Pink and Carey Hart stepped out for a cozy family dinner in New York City, turning a simple restaurant reservation into a clear, very public show of unity.
Pink Turns Rumors Into a Love Story
Paris might have had the runways, but New York had the story everyone was really watching. At the center of it sat Pink and Carey Hart, who chose a beloved West Village trattoria as the backdrop for a very visible answer to very private questions.
According to Page Six, the singer and her husband were spotted at Via Carota with their family, just days after she shot down fresh speculation about trouble in the marriage. “Summer House” star Bailey Taylor told Page Six Radio that the “So What” artist and Hart were tucked into the restaurant’s private dining room, but their chemistry did not exactly stay hidden.
Pink and Carey Hart have NYC family outing, new hotspot hits Meatpacking District and other sightings The singer and her husband were seen dining in a private room at West Village eatery Via Carota and later in the week, Tina Fey hit the GreenRow store o… https://t.co/FT5pPf0s3t pic.twitter.com/N1xRxYONdc
— NahBabyNah (@NahBabyNahNah) March 9, 2026
“She is definitely not getting a divorce because I saw her and her husband at Via Carota, and they were in the private room, and she came out with her family,” Taylor said, adding that the pair were “all on each other.” Taylor added that Pink came off “so sweet,” even apologizing when someone accidentally bumped into her.
For a couple whose love story has weathered separations, reconciliations, and parenting on a global stage, the choice of venue mattered. Via Carota has long been a low-key magnet for artists, writers, and downtown power players, the kind of place where a table can function as a statement without a single word being spoken.
As The New York Times has noted, the Italian spot built its reputation on intimacy and detail. That is exactly the sort of room where a rock star and a motocross legend can let cameras see what their publicists do not need to say. On this night, the image being sent was simple: together, affectionate, family-first.
Old Hollywood Energy in Modern Manhattan
Pink and Hart were far from the only names turning the city into a living society page. At WSA, model Brooks Nader and Kiana Alexis worked the room at the Layer Zero launch, while “Sex and the City” author Candace Bushnell browsed the racks like it was a real-life sequel.
Across town, Nicole Kidman and Jamie Lee Curtis brought studio-era glamour to a private afterparty for their Amazon series “Scarpetta” at Cafe Zaffri inside The Twenty Two New York. A source told Page Six that Kidman was “mostly mingling with castmates, posing for photos and soaking in the moment,” adding that “she looked stunning, glowing like a quintessential Hollywood star.”

On the West Side, the Gansevoort Meatpacking hotel introduced its newest marquee attraction, contemporary American restaurant Estelle’s. Named for co-owner Sean Largotta’s grandmother, the dining room serves caviar and duck fat tots, prime hanger steak and fries, halibut with sunchokes, and a theatrical “Tomahawk for Two.” It is the kind of menu built for Instagram, anniversaries, and the kind of celebratory nights publicists quietly circle.

Meanwhile, backstage at the Love Rocks NYC benefit for God’s Love We Deliver, the guest list read like a Gen X fever dream. Gina Gershon, Hank Azaria, Whoopi Goldberg, Bill Murray, Julianne Moore, Matt Friend, and tennis legend John McEnroe gathered behind the curtain while Elvis Costello, Mary J. Blige, Linda Perry, and Susanna Hoffs of The Bangles took the stage. It was charity, but it was also legacy maintenance, one duet at a time.

Power Women, Quiet Moves, Big Signals
Downtown at The Eighty Six, Keegan-Michael Key settled into one of the ten coveted tables with friends, laughing by a roaring fire. Across the week, the mood in Manhattan skewed less red carpet and more private-booth power networking.
On Friday, that energy shifted to SoHo, where Tina Fey joined Arianna Huffington and Sheryl Sandberg for the opening of sustainable home brand GreenRow. Page Six reported that the “Saturday Night Live” alum “shopped around the store” and was “warmly chatting up fellow guests and store employees.” It was a tableau of three very different brands of influence, united in one retail space.
Later in the weekend, “The Bear” standout Ayo Edebiri slipped into Ambassadors Clubhouse New York, one of the city’s most coveted reservations. Dressed in a black baseball cap, long black coat, and jeans, she kept the focus off fashion and on conversation with a friend. For a rising Emmy winner, low-key can be its own kind of flex.
Further uptown, the real transformations were happening behind salon doors. The ELIUT Salon on the Upper East Side drew a steady stream of high-profile clients seeking blowouts before runways, parties, and private dinners. Hair, in this world, is never just hair. It is an asset, a calling card, proof that a public image is being maintained down to the last strand.
Threaded through all of it was one simple truth. In New York, a reservation, a salon chair, or a store opening can double as a press release. Pink and Carey Hart may have only been in search of pasta and family time. What everyone else saw was the latest, carefully unbothered chapter in a marriage the world keeps trying to read.
Join the Discussion
When a celebrity couple quietly answers rumors by being visibly affectionate in public, do you read it as romantic reassurance, smart media strategy, or a little of both?