Hilary Duff branded 'insufferable' after claiming she 'never fights' with husband Matthew Koma

2 weeks ago 9

Hilary Duff is facing a bit of heat after revealing she 'never fights' with her husband Matthew Koma aside from an annual 'drag-out' spat. 

The singer, 38, made the revelation in a chat with Interview Magazine, claiming they 'literally never fight' with the exception of a massive, once-a-year argument. 

'Boring - insufferable broad,' one commented. 

'Not her romanticizing toxicity gross girl bye,' another posted. 

'She’s a lil toxic you guys,' one commented. 

'They're still pretty early in marriage, get back to us in a decade,' one joked with a laughing-crying emoji.

'Well if that works for you guys to neutralize things and keep the fire and passion burning throw another phone in the bush then. Lol,' another said.  

Hilary Duff claimed she and her husband Matthew Koma 'literally never fight' with the exception of an annual 'drag-out' spat

Duff and her husband have been married since 2019 but apparently have only had seven major fights, based on her revelation 

Duff claimed she and her spouse 'literally never fight' - with the exception of an annual 'drag-out' spat that once saw her throw his phone into the bushes. 

'Everyone’s like, “How is it working with your husband? Do you guys fight a lot?” I’m like, “We literally never fight,"' she said in chat with Dakota Fanning for Interview magazine. 

'Yeah, you guys never really fight,' Fanning said. 

'Well, that’s not true. We have one drag-out fight once a year. He actually brought it up the other day. He was like, “We haven’t had a fight in such a long time.” I’m like, “Are you ready?”' she said. 

'Are you ready?' Fanning said with a laugh.

'I’m not. Last time I threw his phone in a Bougainvillea bush and it felt so good. It was during the fires. We had been displaced, we had all the fucking kids, and we just needed to have it out.   

'But we don’t usually fight, and making the record—I don’t speak this language. He makes music all day, every day since he was 15 years old. So I’m like, “That sound, what is that? Get that out of here.” 

The couple have been married since 2019 and are raising four children together - daughters Banks, seven, Mae James, four, Townes Meadow, one, and the son Duff shares with ex-husband Mike Comrie, 13-year-old Luca Cruz Comrie. 

Duff's revelation comes not long after Koma sparked controversy over his own comments about their relationship. 

The pop star sat down with Rolling Stone last week for a lengthy interview in which she discussed her new album, Luck... Or Something, and her recent return to the stage, as well as her personal life.

But when she made a brutally honest confession regarding the fears she has that her partner is going to one day leave her for someone 'cooler,' it raised eyebrows.

And Koma's response to her insecurities only added fuel to the fire.

The revelation was made during Duff's chat with Dakota Fanning for Interview Magazine

'I always think Matt's going to leave me for some coolio indie songwriter that he works with,' Duff admitted during the interview.

Koma then replied: 'Which is so insane. But also very real. Those are real things to get hung up on emotionally.'

The exchange quickly went viral on X, formerly Twitter, where it sparked immense backlash for the producer and DJ, who wed Duff in 2019.

'Why is that a real thing for your wife to be insecure about, Matthew?' one user quipped. 

The smoldering shoot saw Duff reveal more than fans may be used to seeing 

Duff and her husband not only are raising a family together but also joined forces on her new album

'If my man said this publicly I would cheat on him,' announced another.

'Divorce,' someone else simply typed.

'Why would you say her feelings are REAL?' asked a different disgruntled fan.

'Wild a** response,' read a fifth post, while a sixth said: 'Uh… He doesn't sound particularly reassuring regarding her fear here. WTF?'

'I'm sorry but a good man will never ever, ever, ever make you feel that way…' insisted another user.

'This does not sound like a healthy relationship,' theorized someone else.

'He gives me the ick,' announced a different user.

Others, however, came to his defense, with one writing: 'It sounds like he's just trying to validate her feelings as a human being, that they're justified, while also implying that would never happen.' 

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