Filming wrapped last summer in Washington, D.C., for what Netflix billed as the heartfelt send-off to its Emmy-winning makeover series. Tensions boiled over one day when Karamo stepped away from the group.
His mother, visiting the set and listening through production headphones, picked up chatter from Antoni Porowski, Tan France, and Jonathan Van Ness. They reportedly dissed his personal lifestyle decisions, words that hit hard enough for her to relay them straight to him.
That moment fractured things beyond repair. Karamo later described the show as a mixed bag, one that brought joy but also draining dynamics he needed to escape. Reports from sources close to production paint a picture of off-camera friction that Netflix’s polished edits never captured.
By premiere week on January 21, 2026, Karamo had unfollowed those three on Instagram, keeping ties only with newcomer Jeremiah Brent and ex-castmate Bobby Berk.
Fans quickly spotted the digital cold shoulder, fueling Reddit threads and TikTok breakdowns. One viral clip dissected how the “Fab Five” vibe masked real grudges, drawing parallels to Berk’s 2023 departure amid whispers of his own spat with Tan.
Karamo’s choice to bow out of CBS Mornings and NBC’s Today left hosts like Gayle King reading his statement aloud: a plea to prioritize peace over forced smiles.
Mental Health Stands Firm
January 20 brought the no-show drama to a head. Karamo’s assistant emailed hosts just an hour before airtime, explaining years of mental and emotional wear, backed by a therapist’s advice to skip the spotlight. He thanked fans and crew in absentia, stressing the show’s core lesson: guard your well-being from toxic forces.
In a Washington Post chat around the drop, Karamo called wrapping the series liberating. It freed him from settings and folks he saw as threats to his stability, letting him chase projects true to his voice.
Social media amplified his stance; he posted a farewell clip in the finale episodes, urging kindness and self-work without naming names.

Queer Eye (Credit: Netflix)
Co-stars stayed mum publicly at first. Antoni later clapped back at a fan’s Instagram jab about fake family vibes, noting complicated bonds don’t erase their shared wins.
Bobby Berk, watching from afar, sidestepped the mess, focusing on his own post-Queer Eye path after contract talks and rumored Tan friction. No reps responded to outreach from outlets like PinkNews, leaving the air thick with unanswered questions.
Fab Five Fractures Widen
Queer Eye’s run since 2018 racked up 37 Emmy nods and transformed lives on screen. Off it, cracks showed early. A 2024 Rolling Stone probe alleged fractured ties and production gripes, especially around Jonathan. Berk’s unfollow of Tan back then sparked exit rumors he chalked up to timing, not beef.
Karamo’s move fits a pattern. He and Antoni once aired a past feud publicly, blaming a meddler for off-camera ice. Now, with season 10 streamed and viewed, the wholesome hero narrative feels tested. Fans split: some defend the group’s humanity, others call out hypocrisy in life-fixing experts who can’t sort their own circle.
Karamo eyes fresh starts, from podcasts to advocacy, unburdened. The rest push forward, but those unfollows linger like a quiet exit sign. Queer Eye ends not with a group hug, but with a reminder that even Fab transformations skip the hard ones at home.
On January 11, 2026, at the Beverly Hilton, Nick Jonas arrived sharp in a black tux with wife Priyanka Chopra Jonas and their three-year-old daughter Malti Marie in mind. Halfway through Nikki Glaser’s hosting gig, cameras caught him slipping outside alone, sipping water by palm trees, chin in hand.
Social media lit up fast. One X post nailed it: “Social anxiety got the best of him,” racking up likes before Nick replied the next day.
“Yeah… it hit me like a gut punch,” he typed back, nodding to his fresh single out January 1. The clip spread across TikTok and Instagram Reels, fans nodding along from personal spots.
Outlets like E! and People dissected the tux-clad pause as a real talk beacon in Hollywood’s gloss fest. Priyanka stayed inside, but Nick’s quick exit sparked chats on event pressure even for A-listers.
No big drama followed, just nods to mental health norms. Past stars like Justin Bieber owned similar breaks, but Nick’s tie-in to his music made it pop.
Self-Talk Track Resonates Deep
“Gut Punch” dropped as the lead from Sunday Best, Nick’s first solo album in nearly five years, set for February 6. He debuted bits at a Las Vegas brunch gig on November 30, 2025, at the family spot Nellie’s, playing for 170 fans with chats on dad doubts and hubby stresses.
Lyrics cut sharp: lines about hurting his own feelings, getting mean to himself, and needing to chill the inner critic.

Nick Jonas (Credit: CNN)
Church choir roots shape the soulful warmth, pulling from life’s wins and bumps as Malti’s dad. Collaborators like JP Saxe and MUNA’s Josette Maskin amp up the honesty.
Nick called it hypercritical thoughts on being present, not looks or age. Fans lip-synced on TikTok, sharing their self-hate stories, turning the track into a quiet anthem.
The promo is tied neatly to the Globes slip. That “gut punch” line mirrored the fan’s guess, flipping viral worry into promo gold without forcing it.
Solo Surge Meets Screenplays
Post-Jonas Brothers peaks, Nick eyes solo ground. Spaceman hit 2021; now Sunday Best dives personal after Broadway’s Last Five Years and films like Power Ballad with John Carney. Jumanji fans wait on part three whispers; Ralph Lauren runway nods hint more.
Family anchors him. Priyanka’s film grind pairs with his shifts; Malti turns the self-checks real. No big scandals or vanishes, just steady pivots from band heartthrob to introspective artist-actor dad. Globe’s moment humanized the shine, reminding crowds behind spotlights that they wrestle too.
The track climbs charts, brunch clips trend, and album pre-saves spike. Nick’s not fading; he’s reshaping, one honest lyric at a time. Fans grab seats for what’s next, betting vulnerability pays off big.