Following the Supreme Court's decision to curtail the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA) on Wednesday, Brad Pitt and fiancé Angelina Jolie have reportedly set a wedding date, according to Thursday's segment of VH1's The Gossip Table.

The highly anticipated wedding might even be as soon as this summer, insiders told In Touch Weekly's Contributing Senior News Editor Noah Levy, who was present on the show. He said chances are it will be a very private and exclusive event.

Pitt had said on The Ellen DeGeneres Show in 2011 that he and Jolie won't be getting married until everyone in the U.S. "had the right to get married."

"We live in this great country that is about freedom," he added. "It is defined by our freedoms and equality and yet we allow this discrimination to go on every day and that's not what we're about. That's not what makes us great. And until that is reversed, I just don't get it."

With the end of DOMA, the federal government can no longer refuse to recognize same-sex marriages in the states where it's permitted. Same-sex couples are also now granted the benefits they were once refused by the federal government. The Supreme Court vote was 5 to 4.

"DOMA instructs all federal officials, and indeed all persons with whom same-sex couples interact, including their own children, that their marriage is less worthy than the marriages of others," Justice Anthony Kennedy wrote as part of the majority opinion.

Pitt and Jolie began their relationship in 2005 after meeting on the set of the movie Mr. and Mrs. Smith. In 2006, Pitt legally adopted Jolie's two children Zahara and Maddox. Together the couple raises four other children as well.

For those wondering how Pitt and Jolie make their relationship work with their busy schedules and six kids, Levy also had the answer to that.

"In Touch just spoke with Brad Pitt and he reveals that the reason why the [relationship] works is because he loves the chaos, he actually doesn't mind all the insanity," he said.