It has been several months since “A Star Is Born” that starred Lady Gaga and Bradley Cooper was released, but rumors insisting they have developed real-life romance continues today. The speculations around their relationship were further ignited when the actor’s breakup with long-time partner Irina Shayk was confirmed earlier this month.
Lady Gaga and Cooper have not been seen together since the awards season concluded. The singer-actress has also previously dismissed online speculations sparked by their very intimate on-stage performance of “Shallow” at Oscars 2019. The “Million Reasons” singer insisted that all of it was staged and directed and nothing was real because they are artists who wanted the audience to see love from their performance.
However, that did not stop the rumors, especially when Cooper and Shayk’s split was later announced. Now, another ludicrous claim insists that Lady Gaga is still very into Cooper and is in fact caught in a love triangle with Jennifer Aniston. But fact-checking news outlet Gossip Cop was quick to shut down such rumor.
Meanwhile, another report from Grazia (via Mirror) says Lady Gaga is “devastated” that the media and online comments keep on linking her name to Cooper and Shayk’s breakup as if she had something to do with it. A source of Grazia said, “She feels it’s outshining the work they did on the movie, which is the last thing either of them wanted. Gaga doesn’t want to be seen as the other woman."
Lady Gaga, however, does not seem to be bothered by all the Hollywood rumors. In fact, she is currently now back to work and performing live concerts. One, in particular, caught the interest of many fans. While performing at the Enigma in Las Vegas, she reportedly shared a kiss on the lips with long-time friend and trumpet player Brian Newman. He is married, but before the people get suspicious, the smooch was likely just part of the performance.


Paramount’s $108.4B Hostile Bid for Warner Bros Discovery Signals Major Shift in Hollywood
Google and NBCUniversal Strike Multi-Year Deal to Keep NBC Shows on YouTube TV
Gulf Sovereign Funds Unite in Paramount–Skydance Bid for Warner Bros Discovery
Disney’s Streaming Growth Hinges on International Expansion and Local Content
George Clooney Criticizes Trump’s Tariff Threat, Calls for Film Tax Incentives
Oscars 2025: who will likely win, who should win, and who barely deserves to be there
How Marvel’s Fantastic Four discovered the human in the superhuman
Trump–Kushner Links Raise Concerns as Paramount Pushes $108B Warner Bros Discovery Bid
Trump-Inspired Cantonese Opera Brings Laughter and Political Satire to Hong Kong
Squid Game Finale Boosts Netflix Earnings, But Guidance Disappoints Investors
FCC Chair Brendan Carr to Testify Before Senate Commerce Committee Amid Disney-ABC Controversy
Trump Faces Mixed Reception at Kennedy Center Amid Conservative Overhaul
Pulp are back and more wistfully Britpop than before
Trump Signals He May Influence Netflix–Warner Bros Merger Decision 



