
Rumer Willis has raised some eyebrows by revealing she still takes baths with her sisters even though they are all in their 30s.
The eldest daughter of Bruce Willis and Demi Moore said that while some might think the dynamic between her and sisters Scout, 33, and Tallulah, 31, is “crazy and weird”, she stood by it.
Appearing on the What in the Winkler podcast, the Once Upon A Time In Hollywood actress 36, said: "We all still take baths together, my sisters and I. And that’s just the kind of house that I grew up in. People might think that that’s crazy and weird, but I don’t.”
The mum-of-one also went on to share her hope that her daughter will still share a bed with her when she is in her 30s.

Willis shares Louetta, one, who will turn two later this month, with ex-partner Derek Richard Thomas.
She added: "Honestly, I hope Lou will, like, still sleep in bed with me when she’s my age. I still sleep in bed with my mom, and I don’t think it’s weird."
The actress admitted she hasn't "spent a night away" from the youngster since her birth and said they currently "co-sleep".
"I always think about it as, imagine if you took a baby gorilla or a dog when it was two weeks old or three months old, and had it sleep in a different room than [its] mom," she said.

"Everyone would look at you like you were crazy. But yet we’re like, ‘Oh no, that kid can sleep through the night. It’s got to fend for themselves, got to learn how to self soothe.’"
"They can’t even feed themselves... By the way, we as adults don’t even know how to self-soothe. People drink wine, people do drugs, people eat an entire tub of ice cream."
Family is all-important to Willis.
In February, she appeared on ITV's Loose Women and gave a health update on her Die Hard star dad, who has frontotemporal dementia (FTD).
She said: "He's doing great. I think, obviously as many people in California, the thing we're all kind of the most scared, dealing with is just fires and wanting to make sure everything is okay. Because my family, we're all so close, I think what's so beautiful is the way that we rally around each other, [it's] so lovely, because we really are a unit."