During Friday’s episode of her “Dumb Blonde” podcast, the 46-year-old addressed the video that showed her locking lips with Calabasas Confidential star Dylan Wolf at Goodnight Nashville, Jelly Roll’s establishment, back on Saturday, July 4. The internet did what the internet does—it clipped, shared, and speculated. But Bunnie’s real frustration wasn’t directed at her ex-husband. It was aimed at the people recording her without permission while she was trying to move forward with her life.
“He gets it,” she said flatly about Jelly Roll’s response. “Not an issue at all.” What was an issue, though, was the violation of privacy. She’d been through what she called “hell this entire f***ing year,” and she just wanted one moment to herself without someone capturing it for clout. The irony of airing all this on a podcast wasn’t lost, but her point landed: there’s a difference between living your life and being hunted for content.
Bunnie was clear that this wasn’t a romance—she and Wolf, 24, aren’t dating. She’s in what she called a “fun” phase, living without the pressure of a relationship or the shadow of her high-profile marriage. But here’s where the story gets real: Bunnie and Jelly Roll’s split became public last month after he filed for divorce in May, following what she described as a Mother’s Day fight. What emerged from the wreckage, though, was Bunnie’s determination to rebuild her identity separately. “I don’t want to have to be referred to as somebody’s ex for the rest of my life because I have worked so hard to build my brand to be separate from that person,” she said. That’s not bitterness—that’s ambition.
The whole thing taught her a lesson, though one tinged with loss. She realized she can’t be spontaneous in public anymore, can’t just be herself without calculating the cost. “I yearn for a sense of normalcy,” she admitted, aware that her life no longer allows for it. Moving forward, she promised “more integrity and class,” but the vulnerability in that statement cut deeper than any headline ever could. She’s not angry at Jelly Roll. She’s grieving the freedom that comes with being unknown.


