---
layout: post
title: "Aaron Rodgers Calls Out His Exes as 'Relevance-Seeking' Liars, and the Internet Has Thoughts"
description: "NFL star Aaron Rodgers went on a rant about his ex-girlfriends, claiming they're lying opportunists. Here's what we know."
date: 2026-03-06 04:00:21 +0530
author: adam
image: 'https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1768622180477-5043d6dcdfcc?q=80&w=2070'
video_embed:
tags: [news, entertainment]
tags_color: '#a91e63'
---
Aaron Rodgers just went full scorched earth on his exes, and honestly, it's the kind of messy we didn't expect from a guy who usually keeps things relatively private. During an appearance on "The Pat McAfee Show," the quarterback didn't hold back, calling out unnamed ex-girlfriends as "relevance-seeking" liars who need to "move on" and "stop lying."
Here's the thing though: Rodgers didn't just throw shade. He got specific about the types of people he's dealt with over the years. He mentioned dealing with individuals who were "clinically bipolar," "depressed," and yes, "relevance-seeking." He also called out exes who allegedly called the paparazzi on him and leaked information about his whereabouts.
The irony? He's telling them to stop living a public life while he's on a podcast with thousands of listeners.
## The Exes Strike Back (Kind Of)
We all know who he's talking about, right? The man dated some seriously high-profile women: NASCAR racer Danica Patrick, "Newsroom" actress Olivia Munn, and Golden Globe nominee Shailene Woodley. Each of them has had their own take on their relationship with Rodgers, and none of it's been particularly glowing.
Patrick has publicly described their relationship as "emotionally abusive." Woodley called it "beautiful" but "not right." Munn suggested there were unhealthy family dynamics at play. These aren't exactly throw-away comments made in anger, either. These are women who've had time to reflect and have chosen to speak about their experiences.
When someone like Rodgers dismisses all of this as "lying" and "relevance-seeking," it starts to feel less like moving on and more like gaslighting. And yeah, we're using that word because it fits.
## Meet the Mystery Wife
In the middle of this whole rant, Rodgers mentioned he got married last year to a woman he met in 2017, whom he's only identified as "Brittani." According to him, she's the complete opposite of his exes: she doesn't want to be a public figure, she made comments about never living in Green Bay, and she's just not interested in the celebrity lifestyle.
"I have a super small circle," Rodgers told McAfee. "The people that are in that tiny circle, they know, and they've met her, and they love her."
Fair enough. But here's where it gets weird: He's publicly defending this relationship while simultaneously publicly attacking multiple exes on a major podcast. That's not exactly keeping things private, is it?
## The Pattern Nobody's Talking About
What's actually interesting here isn't what Rodgers said about his exes. It's what his pattern of public comments reveals about him. This is the same guy who's been an outspoken supporter of [Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.](https://infeeds.com/tags/?tag=news), seemingly accused Jimmy Kimmel of being connected to the Epstein list, and got roasted for nearly hitting a child with a golf ball at a celebrity tournament.
At what point do we ask: Is the problem always everyone else, or is there a consistency in how Rodgers handles conflict?
## The Bigger Picture
Look, relationships end badly all the time. Sometimes both people are at fault. Sometimes one person is. But when someone has dated multiple high-profile women who all have similar things to say about the relationship, and that person's response is to go on a podcast and call them liars and attention-seekers, it raises questions.
Not about the exes. About what we're actually listening to.
Rodgers clearly feels wronged. Maybe he is. But taking to media to dismiss multiple women's experiences as "relevance-seeking" feels like its own form of seeking relevance. And that's the part that might be worth thinking about.