She’s not his bloody Valentine.
MGK finally reacted to the dating speculation that swirled around himself and newly-single Sydney Sweeney in May after their cozy Las Vegas interaction was caught on camera.
Andy Cohen brought up the viral moment on “Watch What Happens Live” Sunday night while reading fan questions.
“Kyle P. wants to know if you and Sydney Sweeney were more than just friends?” the host, 57, asked over the weekend.
MGK, who formerly went by the stage name Machine Gun Kelly, simply replied, “Kyle P. Shut up, dude.”
The singer, 35, did not elaborate further as Cohen and the audience members burst out laughing.
Bravo viewers expressed confusion over the answer, with one Instagram user asking, “So did he answer?”
Others claimed, “That’s a yes.”
Reps for MGK and Sweeney did not immediately respond to Page Six’s requests for comment.
Notably, Sweeney was fresh off of her breakup from longtime fiancé Jonathan Davino when she and MGK made headlines earlier this year.
In an exclusive video obtained by Page Six, the “Euphoria” actress, 27, embraced the Grammy nominee at the opening of the Palm Tree Beach Club at the MGM Grand Hotel in Las Vegas.
MGK and the “White Lotus” alum leaned into each other and smiled while chatting, with Sweeney placing her hand on the rapper’s arm at one point.
She subsequently made an appearance in the Instagram slideshow MGK shared from his Sin City trip.
The songwriter has, notably, been in an on-again, off-again romance with Megan Fox since 2020, with the couple welcoming a baby girl named Saga in March.
News broke during Fox’s pregnancy that the duo had called it quits over MGK allegedly texting other women, and the actor broke his silence on the drama in his new “Lost Americana” album last week.
In “Treading Water,” he sang about “lies” and the home he “broke” — and vowed to “change” for his daughter.
MGK wrote the vulnerable song while in rehab from November to January, which he briefly mentioned on the “Popcast” podcast Friday.
He did not divulge details about his stay, telling listeners that his “music speaks better” to his experience.
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