Madison Beer, 25, and Nick Austin, 24, have sparked breakup rumors after four years of dating.
The lovebirds have seemed to unfollow each other on social media this week, which has worried fans.
The stars have also not posted about each other in recent weeks.
The last time he appeared on her Instagram page was in early August when they went to a fair together. On September 26 he posted a photo where he was hugging Beer.
The TikTok star and New York native first sparked dating rumors in August 2020, but waited to make their relationship Instagram official until March 2021.
Madison Beer and Nick Austin have sparked breakup rumors after four years of dating. The lovebirds have seemed to unfollow each other on social media this week, which has worried fans
The stars have also not posted about each other in recent weeks. The last time he appeared on her Instagram page was in early August when they went to a fair together
Over the past decade, Beer has not only crafted a successful music career, but has created a powerful social media presence as an influencer with some 31million followers.
Madison has previously been romantically linked to Blake Griffin, Zack Bia, and Jack Gilinsky.
She also was reportedly close to Brooklyn Beckham prior to his relationship with new wife Nicola Peltz.
The All Day And Night songstress originally announced that she would be working on a full-length studio album in 2018, before eventually releasing Life Support in 2021.
The performer released a single entitled Hurts Like Hell that same year, although it was not one of the 17 tracks included on her record.
The singer later released her album’s cover art in February of 2020, after her first single from the record, Good in Goodbye, debuted the previous month.
Life Support made its debut in February 2021 and peaked at the number 65 spot on the Billboard 200 chart.
Madison’s album received generally positive reviews from critics, many of whom praised her willingness to work with concerning subject material.
On September 26 he posted a photo where he was hugging Beer
The TikTok star and New York native first sparked dating rumors in August 2020, but waited to make their relationship Instagram official until March 2021
This comes after Beer said she thinks ‘a lot of people’ misunderstood Chappell Roan’s complaints about fame.
The Femininomenon hitmaker was met with some criticism when she called out ‘abuse and harassment’ from ‘entitled’ fans, and Madison has insisted the backlash was misplaced.
Speaking to NME magazine, she argued that ‘a lot of people have taken what [Roan] said wrong’.
She added: ‘How I took it was she was talking about the people who do things that are inherently wrong, like sit outside of her house or follow her home from an event.
‘You can’t do that to people, you have to allow people to be human.
‘And I think we forget that people, like our favourite artists, are human beings at the end of the day.’
Over the past decade, the performer has not only crafted a successful music career, but has created a powerful social media presence as an influencer with some 31 million followers (pictured in 2021)
The 25-year-old star supported the idea of artists being able to set their own boundaries, and she dismissed the idea that Chappell – whose real name is Kayleigh Rose Amstutz – was being ‘ungrateful’.
She said: ‘I don’t think she’s ungrateful for her fans. People have said, ‘You signed up for this. You have to deal with it now.’
‘And I think that’s not true. Just because she makes music and people might like it, it doesn’t mean that she signed up for that.’
Madison urged people to ‘have more empathy’, pointing to how Chappel was ‘got famous so fast’ this year.
She added: ‘People forget this is probably also overwhelming as f*** for her… She’s a person, and now suddenly she has the biggest crowd at Lollapalooza.
‘And it might not always all be positive, even if it’s always what you dreamed of and always what you’ve wanted.’
In a series of TikTok videos last month, Chappell blasted fans for a certain ‘type of behavior’ towards celebrities and insisted it shouldn’t be accepted by those living in the public eye.
In a series of videos on TikTok, she said: ‘I don’t care that abuse and harassment, stalking, whatever, is a normal thing to do to people who are famous. I don’t care that this crazy type of behavior comes along with the job, the career field I’ve chosen. That does not make it OK. That doesn’t make it normal. That doesn’t mean I want it. That doesn’t mean that I like it.’