Meagan Good’s friends warned her against dating actor Jonathan Majors when he was facing an assault trial with ex-girlfriend Grace Jabbari.
However, she ignored their warnings and followed her heart.
According to Vibe, the actress appeared on TODAY With Hoda And Jenna.
They asked Meagan if her friends had asked her not to date the Creed III star “to see how everything kinda shakes out” with his trial.
Majors was charged with one count of aggravated harassment, two counts of assault in the third degree, and one count of harassment in the second degree.
Meagan Good Didn’t Have Doubts About Dating Jonathan Majors
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Meagan’s response to the question was:
“Uh, yeah every friend advised me, but at the end of the day, one thing I know is I can always look at myself in the mirror when I trust my spirit, when I trust God, when I ask God, and when I move to the beat of my own drum.”
Meagan added that she takes her loved ones’ advice into account, but she ultimately must live her own life.
“I can always look and say, ‘OK, I’m proud of that.’ No matter whatever happens, I have peace in my heart, and I have harmony in my heart.”
She added:
“[I can only] give God an account of what I did, and so I wanna be responsible for the choices that I make, and I also wanna live the life that I wanna live.”
Meagan Good then gushed over the actor, revealing:
“The support we’ve been able to give each other, the pouring into each other, the honest conversations, the love, the respect, just the care and the thoughtfulness, it’s just been really wonderful.”
The Q&A session came after Good’s latest film, Divorce In The Black, premiered.
Meanwhile, Majors received an award for perseverance at the Hollywood Unlocked Impact Awards.
In his acceptance speech, Majors addressed the accusations leveled against him.
“As a Black man in the criminal justice system, I felt anger, I felt sadness, hurt, surprise. When they snatched me up out of my apartment in handcuffs…I didn’t feel like Jonathan Majors, Mr. Creed, Mr. Kang; I felt like a little scared, weak boy, despite the support and evidence that was in my favor, I knew sh*t was bad. And it was bad because of who I was and what I am. This is what happens to Black people all too often.”