Dwayne Johnson and Kevin Hart have spent years building one of Hollywood’s most entertaining friendships, a bond powered by mutual ribbing, exaggerated competition, and enough chemistry to anchor multiple blockbuster films together. This week, that same image worked against them when a false rumor about the end of their friendship swept across social media and picked up speed before anyone stopped to question where it actually came from.
How a roast night became a rumor machine
The trouble traces back to Netflix’s live roast of Kevin Hart, a star-studded event that brought together comedians, athletes, and celebrities for a night built entirely around outrageous jokes at Hart’s expense. Johnson showed up as one of the evening’s most anticipated surprise guests, and his set leaned fully into the anything-goes spirit of the format. Part of his performance involved playful and raunchy humor directed at Hart’s wife, Eniko Hart, the kind of material roast audiences expect but that lands very differently when clipped and stripped of context.
Shortly after the special aired, a post on X alleged that Johnson had sent inappropriate messages to Eniko and that Hart had ended their friendship as a result. The claim spread fast. Entertainment pages picked it up, fans debated it with confidence, and the rumor began circulating as though it were confirmed news.
Johnson and Hart’s friendship has no confirmed crack
Despite how far the story traveled, neither Johnson nor Hart has made any public statement suggesting a falling out. No credible outlet has verified the central claim about private messages, and there is nothing beyond the original social media post to support the idea that their relationship is in trouble.
The timing is what made the story feel believable. When a viral claim arrives in the same week as footage of Johnson making edgy jokes about someone’s wife, the two things start to feel connected even when they are not. That is how unverified posts grow legs, by latching onto something real and letting people fill in the gaps.
Why their dynamic made the rumor easy to believe
Johnson and Hart have always built their public friendship on performance. Their chemistry is rooted in insults, playful one-upmanship, and jokes that sound like genuine tension but are clearly engineered for laughs. It is the same energy that powered their work together on Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle, Jumanji: The Next Level, and Central Intelligence, films where their comedic friction became the entire selling point.
That style of friendship is entertaining precisely because it mimics conflict without actually being conflict. But it also creates a gap that rumors love to fill. When every public appearance between two people is already theatrical, it becomes harder for casual observers to recognize when something is a bit versus when something is real. A roast joke about Eniko sounds outrageous in the room and even more outrageous out of context, which is exactly the kind of content that social media tends to amplify without nuance.
Dwayne Johnson and the cost of viral misinformation
The confirmed version of events is far less dramatic than what spread online. Johnson performed at a roast, delivered provocative material in a format designed for exactly that, and some viewers found the Eniko jokes uncomfortable. That discomfort, paired with an unverified post, was enough to generate a news cycle that neither man invited or addressed.
Until Johnson, Hart, or Eniko says otherwise, the friendship appears intact. What this moment really highlights is how quickly a comedy bit can be repackaged into something it was never meant to be, and how little it takes for a punchline to become a headline.

