Comedian Tom Segura’s estranged wife, Christina Pazsitzky, is addressing the couple’s shocking split after 18 years of marriage.
“Thank you for all the kind messages. This is a really difficult time for our family,” Pazsitzky, 50, wrote in picture of a handwritten note shared via her Instagram Stories on Saturday, July 18, addressing listeners of her and Segura’s podcast “Your Mom’s House,” who she referred to in the note as “mommies.”
“Episodes of YMH are pre-recorded in advance — hence no mention of recent events,” she continued in the message. “Just know your Mommy loves you and will see you very soon.”
News broke on Monday, July 18, that Pazsitzky, who is also a comedian, and Segura, 47, called it quits a few months ago — a decision that was reportedly amicable. (TMZ was the first to report the news.) The pair, who said “I do” in November 2008, share two sons, Ellis and Julian, whom they welcomed in 2016 and 2018, respectively.
The comedians are not just coparents — they’re also collaborators. During their marriage they also worked on a number of projects together and in addition to their podcast, including the Netflix comedy series Bad Thoughts, created by Segura and featuring Daniella Pineda, Robert Iler and Arturo Castro, among others.

According to TMZ, the estranged couple will continue to co-host their “Your Mom’s House” podcast in the wake of their split and as they navigate their public divorce.
The pair have both joked openly about their relationship through the years, with Pazsitzky and their sons appearing multiple times in several of Segura’s standup jokes.
“I love my husband. I laugh at his jokes. I think he’s fantastic,” Pazsitzky said while performing her 2017 Netflix special Mother Inferior. “And then all day, every day, I wanna punch him in his dumb face. And it’s not the big things that make you wanna kill your spouse. It’s little stuff.”
The former couple also made headlines earlier this year when they got “stuck in the Caribbean” following their vacation after President Donald Trump approved military action in Venezuela.
“We can’t go home. We’ve been stuck for extra days. Airspace becomes opened and then closed. It’s fun,” Segura said in a video shared via Instagram in January, appearing alongside his wife. “I’ll tell you the fun part is that you go to the airport and they tell you, ‘You’re gonna leave now,’ and then they go, ‘Just kidding, you’re not.’ Every day is just a mystery. Will we get home?”








