After Benny Blanco’s Podcast Overshare—Dirty Feet and a Fart—Some Selena Gomez Fans Cry “Divorce”
Benny Blanco’s dirty-feet, on-mic fart podcast bit spurred fans to tell Selena Gomez to “divorce” him—even though they aren’t married. What happened, and why...
A stray fart and a pair of grimy soles shouldn’t spark a breakup campaign—but here we are. After producer Benny Blanco let loose with some too-real humor during a podcast taping, a slice of Selena Gomez’s fandom urged her to leave him, with “divorce” rhetoric ricocheting across feeds despite the pair not being married. The pile-on says less about hygiene and more about parasocial policing—and it’s a textbook case of how one gross-out gag can hijack a pop star’s narrative.
What actually happened in that Benny Blanco podcast clip?
In a recent podcast appearance, Blanco went full overshare: he propped up his bare, visibly dirty feet and punctuated the bit with an on-mic fart, laughing it off as juvenile comedy. The moment zipped across TikTok and X, packaged into bite-size outrage. Swiftly, comment sections filled with fans telling Gomez she could “do better” and calling for a breakup—some even pushing the “divorce” line as shorthand for “dump him,” despite no wedding ring in sight. The flashpoint—and the reaction spiral—was first amplified by celebrity press, which highlighted the clip and the fan backlash in detail [1].
Why is “divorce” trending when Selena Gomez isn’t married?
Online, language is loose and maximalist—“divorce him” has become fan shorthand for “please end it now.” Still, it muddies the facts. Gomez and Blanco went public with their relationship in late 2023 after months of speculation. She acknowledged they were together and, over the past year, both have dropped affectionate crumbs on social media while keeping most details private. That public confirmation—and the couple’s choice to be selectively open—makes any viral hiccup feel like an open invitation for commentary, even when it’s based on a comedy bit rather than a real relationship red flag [2].
The internet’s smell test: What most people miss
Gross-out humor is a sturdy pillar of podcast culture—especially when shows traffic in shock laughs. Blanco, a chart-topping producer who’s long leaned into goofy, unfiltered bits, didn’t stumble into this; he set up a gag designed to be clipped and memed. What often gets lost in the uproar is context: podcasts are built to elongate and exaggerate for effect. A two-second clip traveling without tone, setup, or punchline reads like a character indictment rather than a stagey stunt.
There’s also a collision of brands at work. Gomez’s public persona is earnest and carefully tended—mental health advocacy, philanthropic focus, and glossy red carpet restraint. Blanco’s on-mic persona skews chaotic, kitchen-sink humor. When those aesthetics meet, some fans interpret the dissonance as disrespect to her image rather than routine personality contrast. But a mismatch in comedic style isn’t the same as a relationship mismatch; it’s a reminder that celebrity couples often contain multitudes, and the internet rarely gives them room to be more than a monolith.
Will this actually hurt Selena Gomez—or help her set boundaries?
In the short term, this kind of clip crowds out headlines that might otherwise be about Gomez’s music, acting slate, or philanthropy. In the medium term, it offers her team choices. Ignoring the discourse is a viable strategy; outrage cycles are fast, and a new meme is always around the corner. A light, self-aware quip—from Gomez or Blanco—could also reframe the moment without validating the nastier commentary.
What’s more instructive is what fan demands reveal: a persistent pressure on women in the public eye to manage their partners’ behavior, tone down their own complexity, or make private decisions to appease loud corners of the internet. Gomez has been candid about refusing to live by commenters’ expectations. If she addresses this, expect her to emphasize autonomy over optics. If she doesn’t, that silence is its own boundary—one that says not everything is up for public adjudication.
Practical next steps for fans, brands, and anyone riding the algorithm
- Watch the full segment before reacting. A clipped moment rarely captures intent, and context can change your read of what was jokey versus thoughtless [1].
- Separate taste from ethics. Finding a gag gross isn’t the same as it being a moral failing. Calibrate your response accordingly.
- Don’t feed harassment. Tagging celebrities with insults or breakup demands rarely ages well—and often gets regular fans mass-reported.
- For brand partners: monitor sentiment, but resist knee-jerk pivots. If a storm is about tone rather than conduct, it usually passes.
- For creators: expect the micro-controversy to be a reminder that shock humor plays differently when your partner is a global pop figure.
Your big questions about the Benny clip, answered
- Are Selena Gomez and Benny Blanco married? No. They’re publicly dating; “divorce” in comments is rhetorical, not factual [2].
- Where can I see the clip? Celebrity outlets shared the moment, and the podcast’s official channels circulated snippets—start with the original show page or the outlet that first amplified it to cross-check context [1].
- Has Selena responded? As of this writing, there’s no widely reported official response from Gomez or her team regarding the clip. Coverage has focused on the viral moment and fan reactions rather than a statement [1].
- Is this a career problem for either of them? Unlikely. Podcast shock bits flare and fade fast. Unless a pattern of behavior emerges that contradicts their public values, this reads as a short-lived dust-up.
The bottom line for the Selena–Benny discourse
- One stunt-y podcast moment turned into a referendum on a relationship.
- “Divorce” comments ignore the basic fact: there’s no marriage to end.
- Gomez’s brand and Blanco’s humor can coexist—and clash—without signaling a breakup.
- The smartest move for fans and brands is to add context, not volume.
- Expect the cycle to pass unless the couple chooses to make it a storyline.
Sources & further reading
Primary source: pagesix.com/2026/02/24/celebrity-news/selena-gomez-urged-to-divorce-benn...
Written by
Luna Vega
Entertainment reporter covering celebrity, TV, and pop-culture developments.
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