Court & Lex Split—And Lesbian TikTok Is Tired
Three months after breaking lesbian TikTok with their poly announcement, Court and Lex confirm their separation and the comment section is doing the most.
Featured Image: Photo by Prince Williams/WireImage
Well. That was fast.
Just three months after sending lesbian TikTok into cardiac arrest by announcing they’d opened their marriage to date a man, Court and Lex have officially called it quits. The popular queer couple confirmed their separation in a joint Instagram statement, writing that the decision was mutual, respectful, and drama-free. No bad blood. No villains. Just “two people choosing different paths.”
Naturally, the internet does not believe them.
For weeks, fans had been playing FBI. Court and Lex stopped appearing together. They launched separate Instagram accounts. They didn’t follow each other. Rob—the man formerly known as the plot twist—followed Lex but not Court. Court made friendly snapchats with an unknown woman. Lex appeared with Rob. And suddenly, what was once a family page felt… tense.
Then came the confirmation. And with it, the think pieces we all saw coming.
Critics argue the couple moved far too fast—matching tattoos, kids involved, vibes off. Others claim the polyamory was never mutual to begin with, with theories ranging from “Lex really wanted that man” to “Court was just trying to save her wife.” The discourse, as expected, got messy. Words like “consent,” “pressure,” and “boundaries” floated around, alongside side-eyes about bringing a new partner into a marriage and a household at the same time.
What makes the split extra ironic is that Court and Lex once posted a ragebait breakup video back in January 2025. Manifestation is real, the tongue is powerful, and lesbian TikTok never forgets.
On a serious note (briefly): the exhaustion is real. Not just because another beloved queer couple didn’t make it, but because so many of our most visible examples of WLW love online are toxic, overexposed, and deeply parasocial. I get it, chaos is fun. Tea is fun. But eventually, the girls are tired.
Is the issue lesbian breakups—or is it that we’re too invested in messy internet couples who were never meant to carry the weight of representation? Two things can be true at once.
And now, for what the people really came for, because no breakup is complete without the commentary.
@ziosaaa NO MORE WLW BREAK UPS!!! NO MORE!!!!!!!!!
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