When Charli D’Amelio and Landon Barker went public, she was eighteen. He was nineteen. Together, they went to the Grammy Awards. They had matching tattoos. They shared the kinds of photos that an Instagram-savvy generation perceives as a proclamation, not only of love but also of brand, style, and the specific narrative a couple chooses to share with the world. It appeared to be a romantic relationship. It was also happy from the start.
The mechanisms of a Gen-Z public separation differ from those of celebrity splits in earlier generations. The carefully crafted statement issued through a publicist, the tabloid photo, and the anonymous source are still present, but they have been supplanted by something more immediate and detailed. Within hours, an Instagram unfollow can be monitored and reported.
A creator’s choice of TikTok music has interpretive significance. A data point is created when there is no longer a story post where one formerly existed. Millions of fans who have watched these relationships in real time read these signals in the same way that earlier generations read gossip columns. but more quickly and in greater detail.
The D’Amelio Show, which aired on Hulu and chronicled the family’s life in staged but unscripted intimacy, revealed more of the inner workings of the relationship than Charli and Landon would have expected in a more powerful time. An argument, a trip to the Bahamas, and Landon’s admission of “bullshit” were all edited and broadcast to viewers, who subsequently engaged in extensive discussion on the same platforms where the couple had displayed a more polished image of themselves. Later, Charli said that she felt “naive” and “stupid” for publicly defending the relationship while privately navigating the same cycle conflicts that most relationships of that age require but that most people get to process without a production company in the room.
An additional layer was added by the music dimension. Because Landon Barker is a singer, the emotional fallout from a public relationship doesn’t simply go away; rather, it spreads. “Friends With Your Ex” was shot with Charli before to the breakup, but its meaning was altered when it was published in a post-breakup setting. Knowing what had happened, viewers interpreted shots that had been taken under completely different conditions. “Over You” came next, and any breakup involving someone with a platform is now followed by the kind of low-grade interpretative exercise over its theme.

Landon stopped following Charli on Instagram in May of 2024. She was then unfollowed by Kourtney Kardashian. Other Barker-Kardashian family members then did the same. Every unfollow was noted, recorded, and examined. A modern breakup’s digital paper trail is almost comically detailed, consisting of public gesture, public counter-gesture, and then public documentation of the counter-gesture. It also follows a timeline that leaves very little room for the individuals involved to just feel things without having those feelings processed and consumed.