Star reveals truth behind break-up

Star reveals truth behind break-up

Billie Eilish has revealed how she’s feeling about her well-known ex simply months after they known as it quits.

Eilish, 21, began relationship Jesse Rutherford, lead singer from the band The Neighbourhood, someday in 2022, and the usually-private star was surprisingly open about their relationship.

The pair walked pink carpets collectively and even posted about one another on-line.

In an interview with Vanity Fair, she joked he was the “hottest” man and requested everybody to provide her a spherical of applause for bagging him.

“I managed to get my way to a point in my life where I not only was known by a person that I thought was the hottest f**king f**ker alive, but pulled his a**.”

Sadly their relationship got here to a screeching halt in May, and Eilish hasn’t commented on the break up till now.

Naturally, everybody has been desirous to know if the break up was amicable, with Eilish at present revealing on Instagram that the 2 are nonetheless mates.

In response to a fan query about her former beau, she confirmed the connection was over and declared he was a “very good friend only”.

“My homie forever,” she added.

When the 2 first connected there was some slight controversy across the relationship as a result of Rutherford is sort of a decade older than Eilish.

The singer is famously very near her brother and collaborator Finneas O’Connell, and through their relationship, he responded to concern in regards to the age distinction on TikTok.

“Your sister’s dating a 31-year-old man,” a fan commented.

O’Connell stated he wished his well-known sister to be “happy and safe” and identified that she was an grownup.

“She is a 21-year-old adult perfectly entitled to make her own life decisions.”

Eilish isn’t shy about telling followers what she thinks.

Earlier this 12 months she took to Instagram after receiving hate from followers claiming she had modified an excessive amount of as a result of she’d swapped saggy pants for tighter attire.

“I spent the first five years of my career getting absolutely obliterated by you fools for being boyish and dressing like how I did and constantly being told I’d be hotter if I acted like a woman,” she wrote.

“Now, when I feel comfortable enough to wear anything remotely feminine or fitting, I changed, and I am a ‘sellout’ and ‘what happened to her.’ You guys are true idiots. Let women exist,” she continued.

Source: www.news.com.au