A source for People Magazine reveals Megan Fox reportedly is no longer wearing her engagement ring and gives more updates on the couple’s well-documented public relationship.
Megan Fox made news recently, after unfollowing fiancé Machine Gun Kelly on Instagram, deleting pictures of the couple together and posting a selfie with the caption “You can taste the dishonesty, it’s all over your breath.”
The caption is a lyric from Beyoncé’s song ‘Pray You Catch Me,’ from her 2016 album ‘Lemonade,’ which revolves around the theme of infidelity.
The actress has since deleted her Instagram account, while Machine Gun Kelly hasn’t posted anything since January.
No longer wearing her engagement ring
There has been no official statement on the status of the couple’s approaching wedding, but a source has told People that the couple did have “a fight over the weekend,” and that Fox is “very upset” with her fiancé and is not speaking to him.
The source added, “They haven’t officially called off the engagement, but Megan took her ring off,” and “They have had issues in the past, but things seem pretty serious this time.”
Neither Fox nor Machine Gun Kelly has commented on the matter, and neither have any of their representatives.
An intense relationship
Fox, 36, and Machine Gun Kelly, 32, have been dating since 2020, and the couple was regularly seen engaging in salacious poses with one another, and often referring to “emo” band lyrics and motifs, becoming a meme amongst internet users, particularly after Fox said they “drank each other’s blood” in a Glamour Magazine UK interview.
“Love is Pain”
The couple became engaged in 2022, just over a year after they began dating. The engagement was announced through each of their Instagram accounts.
Kelly described the ring’s design in an interview with Vogue. Fox’s engagement ring is made of two rings, an emerald representing Fox’s birthstone and a diamond, Kelly’s birthstone. Both rings are held together with a magnet to form “an obscure heart.”
The rings also consist of a band that is reportedly made from real thorns, which Kelly says is “meant to hurt” when the wearer, Fox, attempts to take it off.