Stephen A. Smith had something to say about how Megan Thee Stallion chose to end her relationship with Klay Thompson, and he said it plainly.
During a recent episode of his podcast, the ESPN analyst took issue not with what the rapper claimed happened but with the decision to bring it to the internet at all. His position was straightforward. Whatever took place between Megan and Thompson was their business, and in his view it should have stayed that way. He questioned why a simple, dignified public statement about the end of the relationship was not enough and why it was necessary to detail the alleged wrongdoing for a public audienceHe pushed the point further by noting the absence of any formal commitment between the two, suggesting that the level of public accountability being demanded did not match the nature of the relationship they had.
Stephen A. Smith and the breakup that went everywhere
The comments followed a social media post from Megan Thee Stallion over the weekend in which she appeared to direct pointed accusations at Thompson, alleging infidelity and describing the emotional weight of standing by someone through a difficult period only to be told he was uncertain about monogamy. The post spread rapidly and reignited a conversation about how public figures handle the ends of their relationships in the social media era.
Thompson has not responded publicly to the allegations or commented on the breakup in any capacity. The Dallas Mavericks guard and four-time NBA champion has remained silent as the story has circulated across sports and entertainment media.
Stephen A. Smith is not the only voice in the room
Smith was not alone in offering an opinion. A prominent radio personality also weighed in, taking a somewhat different angle on the situation. While he did not dispute the possibility that infidelity occurred, he framed it as unsurprising given Thompson’s profile, wealth, and lifestyle. He suggested that Thompson may have genuinely attempted to be the partner Megan needed but struggled against patterns that were deeply ingrained long before the relationship began.
The radio host pointed to the fact that Thompson had introduced Megan to his family as evidence that he had been serious about the relationship at some level. In his reading, the situation was less about deception and more about a man trying and ultimately failing to be someone different than he had always been.
Stephen A. Smith and the broader debate about public breakups
What the reaction to this story reflects is a genuine cultural tension around how relationships, especially those involving celebrities, are processed and publicized. Megan Thee Stallion has been one of the more candid public figures in music when it comes to her personal life, and her willingness to name what she experienced has resonated with a significant portion of her audience who see it as honest and relatable.
Smith’s objection sits on the other side of that equation. His argument is rooted in the idea that some things lose something important when they are shared with millions of strangers, and that privacy is worth protecting even when someone has been wronged.
Neither position is without merit, which is exactly why the conversation has not slowed down. Thompson remains the only person directly involved who has yet to speak, and his silence has only added to the noise surrounding a story that shows no sign of quieting on its own.

