The actor is dating Jewish music executive Scooter Braun, who has been involved in post-Oct. 7 Israel advocacy
Instagram/StandWithUs
Sydney Sweeney with freed Israeli hostages Noa Argamani and Avinatan Or
Actor Sydney Sweeney met with freed Israeli hostages Noa Argamani and Avinatan Or, posing for a photo with the pair that began circulating on social media on Tuesday.
The photo of the three was shared by the Jewish advocacy group StandWithUs on its X and Instagram accounts. It is unclear when or where the meeting took place.
While the social media posts did not divulge how the get-together was organized, Sweeney, one of Hollywood’s biggest young actors, has been dating Jewish investor and music executive Scooter Braun, who has become friends with Argamani since her rescue from Hamas captivity in Gaza in June 2024.
Braun has become more involved in pro-Israel activism since Hamas’ Oct. 7, 2023, attacks on Israel, helping finance and organize the exhibition, “06:29 am: The Moment Music Stood Still,” a traveling exhibit honoring the victims of Hamas’ massacre at the Nova music festival. His friendship with Argamani first made headlines in September 2024, when Braun brought her to the Global Citizen Festival in New York to help her advocate for the release of the remaining hostages in Gaza, including Or, her boyfriend. (Or was eventually released in October 2025.)
Sweeney has largely avoided discussing political matters publicly. Most recently, she initially refrained from weighing in as the controversy swirled last summer surrounding her American Eagle’s “great jeans” ad campaign, which used a double entendre that drew accusations of promoting eugenics.
The actor made headlines in November after she declined to apologize to those offended by the ad. “When I have something to say, you will hear from me,” Sweeney told GQ at the time.
“I knew at the end of the day what that ad was for, and it was great jeans,” she continued, explaining that the situation “didn’t affect me one way or the other.”
Sweeney ultimately decided to speak out last month amid continued backlash to the ad and her decision to stand by it. She told People Magazine that she views herself as a person who “leads with kindness” and wanted to clarify her opposition to hatred.
“Anyone who knows me knows that I’m always trying to bring people together. I’m against hate and divisiveness,” Sweeney said. “In the past my stance has been to never respond to negative or positive press but recently I have come to realize that my silence regarding this issue has only widened the divide, not closed it.”
Originally meant to be a photo series, the project expanded to include candid conversations between the A-listers and the survivors
Sabrina Steck/BFA
Bryce Thompson at the Borrowed Spotlight exhibit at Detour Gallery in Manhattan.
Someone you recognize and someone you don’t. Someone who lives in the spotlight and someone who doesn’t — Hollywood A-listers posing with Holocaust survivors.
That was the premise fashion photographer Bryce Thompson conjured up in an effort to amplify the stories of the last living generation of Holocaust survivors. The idea was initially fueled by antisemitism that Thompson, who is not Jewish, saw his friends, neighbors and mother, who converted to Judaism, facing in recent years. But the project — which took three years to complete — assumed even greater relevance after the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas terrorist attacks, the ensuing war in Gaza and the record high levels of anti-Jewish incidents in the U.S. that followed.
A new collection of photographs shot by Thompson, called “Borrowed Spotlight,” debuted on Tuesday to coincide with Yom Hashoah, Holocaust Remembrance Day, with the release of a coffee-table book and weeklong exhibition at Detour Gallery in Manhattan. It features Hollywood heavyweights including Cindy Crawford, Jennifer Garner and Chelsea Handler.
With years of experience photographing high-profile shoots for publications including GQ, ELLE and Glamour, Thompson initially expected that the photos would speak for themselves. But he told Jewish Insider that the most impactful moments were the ones between shots. “Those were the moments they interacted the most,” he said of his photography subjects.
“The moments off-camera that were not being photographed, those are the best moments,” Thompson continued. “That’s what started the conversation piece of ‘please tell us your story.’” Ultimately, ‘Borrowed Spotlight’ “turned into an interview with a Holocaust survivor and a celebrity, less than a portrait series.”

Alongside portraits, mostly candid, the book quotes dozens of comments survivors made in casual conversation with the celebrities they were matched with. Among them was one made by Holocaust survivor and philanthropist Elizabeth Wilf, who was paired with David Schwimmer: “My grandchildren are my revenge, I guess,” Wilf told the “Friends” actor.
“It became me listening and photographing the moments between people sharing their life stories,” Thompson said. “That really kicked off momentum for us. It was hard to walk away from those shoots and not be so emotionally moved that you want to dive right into the next one.”
Initially, Thompson tried to pair survivors with celebrities who had common traits or roots, such as a shared country of birth. “But we found that no matter which celebrity we paired with which survivor, they always had common ground even if they were from different places. We’ve all got something in common with a survivor. The conversations flowed much easier than if we tried to curate it.”
Supermodel Cindy Crawford said in a statement that when she was asked to participate in the book, “It was an instant yes.”
“I’ve always believed in being part of the solution, not the problem,” Crawford said. “The opportunity to meet and converse with a Holocaust survivor felt deeply meaningful.”
Several of the famous participants, including Scooter Braun and Sheryl Sandberg, frequently use their platforms to condemn rising antisemitism.

But not all of the celebrities approached were so eager to participate; some feared it could hurt their careers to speak out against antisemitism so publicly — especially in the aftermath of Oct. 7. “That was sad to see,” Thompson said. “We’re in an industry where cancel culture is prevalent.”
He added that after Hamas’ attack in Israel and amid the war in Gaza “a lot of our yeses turned into maybes turned into nos because people don’t want to take political sides.”
“But our message was clear,” Thompson continued, “we started this project before Oct. 7 as a Holocaust awareness project.”
Thompson told JI that while “Borrowed Spotlight” won’t be an annual project — “that’s ambitious,” he said, “this one took almost three years” — he’s “happy to keep the project alive as long as it’s needed, whether it’s going to Israel to see the survivors of Oct. 7 from the Nova festival or anywhere else we can go to bring awareness.”
Proceeds from book sales will support campaigns to educate younger generations about the Holocaust, according to the organizers. Proceeds from a private auction of select prints will benefit two organizations dedicated to Holocaust remembrance and survivor support: Selfhelp, which provides services and assistance to living Holocaust survivors in New York, and the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington.
The collection’s opening photograph, which did not include a celebrity, was already auctioned this week, going for $20,000. It displays the arm of survivor Joseph Alexander tattooed with a number from his time as an Auschwitz prisoner.
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