Riley Green is one of the most eligible bachelors in the country music genre. Fans are agog waiting for him to pair off with some attractive woman. He has already fended off buzz about him and duet partner Ella Langley, as well as Megan Moroney. (Everyone has denied any romance rumors.) Now, there is a new tidbit of speculation swirling. People are wondering if Green wrote the unreleased song "POS Like Me" as a response to Moroney's track "Who Hurt You?"
Videos by Wide Open Country
This Is Green's Time To Shine
What is certain is that this is Riley Green's moment in the sun. Fresh off an acting stint in the Yellowstone spinoff Marshals, Green is one hot dude. He will also be a coach on The Voice next season. That gig will give him even more nationwide exposure. Charm, charisma, and country - that's Green's surefire winning formula.
Singer Carly Pearce summed it up nicely in Rolling Stone. "It was a perfect storm of him being completely on his A game with his writing, his artistry and his looks, and having this pop culture moment with Ella. People were wrapped up in 'Are they together? Are they not?' He was just ready." Pearce did a racy duet with Green, "If I Don't Leave, I'm Gonna Stay."
Pearce added, "He has movie star looks, but a down-home heart. Girls want to come and see him, and the guys want to be his friend. That's really so hard to get both."
He Defends His Privacy
Whether it's squashing chatter about his dating life or anything else in his off-stage world, Riley Green likes his privacy. He made that very clear to the outlet. The "Worst Way" singer shared with the outlet, "There's nothing about my personal life that I feel like is anybody's business. What would you tell a stranger about your personal life in your everyday life? I kind of look at it like that. What I do on social media or [in] interviews is more of what the entertainer Riley Green would be doing and what I think somebody would like to hear about."
Having said that, he deftly tackled the Megan Moroney song controversy. He shut it down bluntly and fast. "What I was doing was I was playing this song that I'd written, you know, for my fans. And I wrote 'POS' like six months before that. It just happened to be that day I was at home and I was wanting to post a song, and it got talked about a lot."
