By the time Zach Bryan was publicly burning a Barstool Sports flag on his Instagram, the divorce from Brianna LaPaglia had developed into something significantly greater than a celebrity breakup. It had become a persistent public fight with diss tracks, a $12 million payment accusation, and two very different interpretations of the same two-year romance.
The breakdown itself happened in October 2024. Bryan disclosed it via an Instagram story – abruptly, without warning to LaPaglia, according to her report. The timing landed oddly: fans had already been circulating photos claiming Bryan had an active profile on Raya, the dating app used mostly by celebrities and industry figures. LaPaglia said she was blindsided by the public statement. Whether or not that characterization is totally accurate, the sequence of events — fans uncovering the Raya profile, Bryan posting the separation announcement — generated an immediate narrative that his management and his fans spent weeks trying to recast.
What LaPaglia stated next was what transformed a tabloid tale into something longer. She described what she called an emotionally abusive relationship—a pattern she called “build you up, beat you down”—in a November 2024 episode of the BFFs podcast. She also claimed that Bryan’s team had offered her $12 million and a New York City apartment in exchange for a non-disclosure agreement. She stated she turned it down. The offer was neither publicly confirmed nor denied by Bryan’s side. The claim stood, uncontradicted in any official declaration, and that quiet inflicted its own kind of damage.
Barstool Sports founder Dave Portnoy took his employee’s side loudly and immediately. Portnoy released a diss tune aimed at Bryan titled “Country Diddy” — a term that was purposely laden — and then followed it with “Smallest Man.” Bryan retaliated by taping himself burning a Barstool flag and uploading the footage. It was the kind of maneuver that his following tends to respond to, and it turned the focus from the content of LaPaglia’s charges to the optics of a public dispute. That’s probably not an accident.
The music followed, as it usually does with Bryan. He published a song called “Skin,” which his audience soon perceived as a direct response to LaPaglia — criticizing her of performing moral superiority while speaking harshly of individuals close to her. That kind of track walks a tricky line for an artist whose appeal has always been founded on emotional truthfulness. Whether his fanbase heard it as a wronged guy defending himself or as something less flattering certainly depends on what they already believed going in.
There’s a sensation, watching this play out over many months, that both parties have made decisions about how much of this to keep public — and neither has chosen quiet. LaPaglia turned down a $12 million offer especially because accepting it would have forced her quiet, which is a decision worth taking seriously on its face. Instead of taking a step back and allowing the rivalry to evaporate, Bryan decided to remain active in it through social media and music. The outcome is a story that didn’t conclude neatly, and probably won’t.

After all of this, it’s really unclear where Bryan’s reputation will end up. His streaming stats have not drastically decreased. Dates for his tour are still in demand. But country music’s audience tends to hold musicians to a specific standard when it comes to character, and the question of whether this chapter damages his long-term status is one that will likely be answered slowly, over the next few years rather than the next few weeks.
