It's 51 first dates now!
Drew Barrymore has revealed that she and Adam Sandler's daughters watched their cult-classic movie, 50 First Dates, together.
Barrymore, 49, shared the sweet story during Monday's episode of her talk show, The Drew Barrymore Show, while hosting guests Emily Osment and Montana Jordan.
Osment admitted on-air that she had only just watched the 2004 film for the first time, to which Barrymore shared that her daughter had recently seen it as well.
'My daughter and Adam's daughter were watching it at my house the other night, and I was like, "Why are you guys watching this?"' Barrymore said.
Drew Barrymore has revealed that she and Adam Sandler's daughters watched their cult-classic movie, 50 First Dates, all together
Barrymore shares two daughters, Olive, 12, and Frankie, 10 with ex-husband Will Kopelman
Sandler and his wife, Jackie Sandler, also have two daughters, Sadie, 18, and Sunny, 16, pictured above
'Like, don't you get enough of me and your Dad?' she joked.
While Barrymore didn't specify which one of her or Sandler's daughters were watching, it turned out to be a super sweet moment between the families.
Barrymore shares two daughters, Olive, 12, and Frankie, 10 with ex-husband Will Kopelman, while 58-year-old Sandler and wife Jackie also have two daughters, Sadie, 18, and Sunny, 16.
'They were just so happy and I was like, "Oh, but this is so sweet and wonderful,"' the Charlie's Angels star said.
In response, Osment said the sight must have been 'kind of comforting,' to which Barrymore agreed.
The actress explained that it was an especially great moment, since typically, your kids will 'reject so many things about you,' and when you see them 'embracing' something about you, you think it's 'fantastic.'
The movie, which is a romantic comedy, chronicles Lucy, played by Barrymore, who has short-term memory loss.
Henry, a marine vet, played by Sandler, wants to date Lucy, but since she has short-term memory loss, he has to try and court her every single day.
The movie, which is a romantic comedy, chronicles Lucy, played by Barrymore, who has short-term memory loss
Barrymore's adorable story comes just a few months after she gave an urgent warning to parents about the dangers of social media
Barrymore's adorable story comes just a few months after she gave an urgent warning to parents about the dangers of social media.
The actress made the post on her Instagram in late August, writing, in part, about her chaotic childhood and the importance of implementing 'guardrails' on technology to protect children.
'Remember my childhood? How are we allowing kids to just have this much access?' she questioned.
'For brains that are not fully developed? And group texts? These texts can get so toxic.
'We must protect our children from being put in scenarios where they cannot always control the rhetoric of the multiple-party dynamics that get put on record on a cloud only to potentially haunt them one day.'
She said she hoped someone would make a device that had 'so many of the amazing aspects of artistic and inspiring innovations without the pitfalls of social media.'
'What if someone could make a tangible solution I could give to my kids so I could protect them the way I wanted to be protected,' she continued.
'I want to not only protect my kids, but I also want to be able to point to a solution with other parents.'