A certain type of cultural moment can reveal something about us that we would probably prefer to keep hidden. One of those instances is the aftermath of Barry Keoghan and Sabrina Carpenter’s split. It’s important to take a moment to consider that what began as celebrity rumors—a source telling People they were “career-focused” and taking a break—spiraled into something much more repulsive.
Carpenter and Keoghan dated for about a year. They made their official red carpet debut at the Met Gala in May 2024, were photographed at Paris Fashion Week, and went on what sounded like a genuinely charming museum date in Los Angeles. It ended in December of that year. The official explanation was fairly straightforward: insufficient runway, two aspirational young people with demanding schedules. It frequently occurs.
But what came next was not ordinary. Due in large part to anonymous tips on DeuxMoi and the type of internet forensics that pop music fandoms have quietly perfected over the past ten years, rumors of infidelity started to circulate almost immediately. The public was already familiar with Carpenter’s song “Please, Please, Please,” in which she sings about not wanting to be embarrassed. Keoghan’s appearance in the video only served to facilitate the development of the story. All of a sudden, the split was more than just a breakup. It was proof.
Given how kindly Carpenter had spoken about Keoghan in interviews, it makes sense that fans who had been supporting her would channel their disappointment into something that went beyond multiple boundaries. remarks regarding his appearance. assaults on his acting career. Additionally, there have reportedly been people sitting outside the house of Brando, his three-year-old son, and his mother, as well as knocking on his grandmother’s door. It’s really hard to read past that part.
Nearly eighteen months after the breakup, Keoghan spoke on SiriusXM about the impact with an openness that felt natural rather than premeditated. He claimed that the animosity had made him fearful of both going out and using the internet. “It’s made me shy away,” he remarked. “It’s made me really go inside myself, not want to attend events, not want to go outside.”
Although he was cautious to point out that people are also compassionate, the cruelty had become specific and persistent enough to feel problematic. The conversation shifted from celebrity press management to something completely different when he said that his son would eventually be old enough to read everything.

Here, you can hold two objects at once. It’s understandable to be disappointed if Keoghan cheated and the story about it was persistently spread rather than definitively verified. It’s acceptable for people to feel protective of their favorite artists. However, there is a gap between feeling something and doing something, and the individuals who showed up at a grandmother’s house bridged that gap in a way that merits clear identification.
Of course, there is precedent for this pattern. The Jake Gyllenhaal scarf issue and Taylor Swift’s fan base. Joshua Bassett and Olivia Rodrigo’s early fan base. The general pattern is always the same: a beloved woman creates art that implies she was wronged, and the internet rallies as if justice is due. The songs are excellent. Less so with the pile-ons.
The Keoghan case is worth looking at separately because the effects were more noticeable and long-lasting. He has talked about giving up on his career because he worries that the harassment will eventually interfere with his ability to do his job. It’s not a small thing to lose to an internet cycle for someone who is genuinely one of the more intriguing actors of his generation—his performance in Saltburn alone suggests a real career ahead of him.
One kind of fan culture is friendly, group-oriented, and genuinely significant. There is also a version in which it is impossible to distinguish between punishing someone else and protecting someone else. That distinction was not established by the breakup of Barry Keoghan and Sabrina Carpenter. However, it was difficult to ignore.
