Last summer, as Liam Neeson and Pamela Anderson promoted The Naked Gun, rumors swirled that the two were dating. Their press appearances were charming, their on-camera chemistry undeniable, and audiences loved watching the unexpected pairing unfold in real time. The film was a hit, earning over $100 million globally, and for a moment, their flirtatious dynamic felt like an extension of the movie’s fun.
Then came the TMZ headline: Was it all a publicity stunt?
Both of their teams denied it, saying the connection was genuine — yet the two have made few appearances together since, leaving fans to debate whether the romance was real or simply excellent marketing.
If the speculation felt familiar, it’s because it is. Hollywood has been blurring the line between onscreen and real-life romance since the beginning of the studio era, and today’s audience is sharper than ever at spotting the signs. Over the years, celebrities themselves have confirmed that some relationships were exaggerated for the cameras, encouraged by producers or strategically amplified by publicists.
And according to PR insiders, the truth behind so-called fake romances is far more layered — and far less scandalous — than people assume.
‘Relationships are stories — and every celebrity has a brand’
Sarah Schmidt, president of PR firm Interdependence, doesn’t view celebrity romances through a tabloid lens — she sees them as narrative extensions. “In Hollywood, every person carries a personal brand,” she tells Yahoo. “A strategic relationship is never about creating fiction; it is about shaping how two brands can work together in a way that expands the story.”
That story can take many forms. Sometimes it supports an onscreen romance. “A whisper of chemistry offscreen can lift the entire project and give audiences something to follow beyond the big screen,” Schmidt notes. Sometimes it’s about broadening reach — the way Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce’s real-life spark created a crossover between two massive, previously separate audiences. Real romance sells too. And sometimes, she says, it’s simply about showing a new side of someone: “Today’s audiences want a peek behind the curtain. … The talk value can be powerful.”
But modern fans are quick to recoil from anything that feels manipulative.
Rumors swirled while Pamela Anderson and Liam Neeson were on a press tour for The Naked Gun. (Cindy Ord/Getty Images for SiriusXM)
“Even the overly curated Instagram feed has completely lost power because audiences are hungry for something that feels more human,” Schmidt says. “If there is even a hint of inauthenticity, they pull back. Instead of elevating the brands, it can make both parties look calculated and out of touch.”
Which is why she emphasizes that most “PR relationships” aren’t fake at all — they’re real connections that get a strategic spotlight. “In most cases, the relationships are amplified, not completely fabricated,” she says. “The teams can help shape how that connection lives in public, guiding timing, visibility, and the larger storyline, but none of this replaces the human truth underneath.”
Schmidt believes the audience often oversimplifies. “People assume there are only two options: pure emotion or complete strategy,” she explains. “But celebrities are in a constantly evolving spotlight, and every personal choice carries public and brand consequences. Their team steps in to guide how the story unfolds, not script a fantasy.”
Hollywood told on itself — which is why fans now look for clue
If fans seem hypervigilant about celebrity romances, it’s because the industry has repeatedly admitted that some storylines were more performance than passion.
On The Hills, Brody Jenner later revealed that his romance with Lauren Conrad largely “played pretty well on-screen” because producers encouraged it. “We never actually dated,” he told Entertainment Tonight. Spencer Pratt later claimed that Jenner’s refusal to continue the “fauxmance” created behind-the-scenes tension.
Nick Lachey described something similar when recounting his lone date with Kim Kardashian. No paparazzi followed them into the movie theater — but “mysteriously … 30 photographers were waiting outside” when they left. “There are certain ways to play this game,” he said. “And some people play it well.”
Rachel Bilson has been refreshingly open about her brief flirtation with Bachelor alum Nick Viall. “We were messing around … with the internet,” she said. Nick added they were “both epically single” and admittedly “wanted the attention.” They even considered leaning into a faux romance to promote a podcast they planned to start together before Bilson backed out.
And then there’s model Melanie Iglesias, who alleged that while she was dating actor Ryan Guzman, his team encouraged him to appear single — including conveniently timed flirting sessions with co-star Jennifer Lopez at afterparties — to help promote their thriller The Boy Next Door.
Jennifer Lopez, left, and Ryan Guzman, center, get close at a Golden Globes party in 2015. (Rachel Murray/Getty Images for TWC)
Glen Powell and Sydney Sweeney admitted to leaning into relationship rumors to sell Anyone But You. None of these stories are scandals. They’re signals — a reminder that celebrity relationships have always lived at the intersection of emotion and narrative.
‘Fake dating happens more than you think — just quietly’
If Schmidt represents the big-picture approach to managing celebrity narratives, Nicholas Weatherhead represents the part of the business people think they know — but rarely hear confirmed so directly. He doesn’t sugarcoat it: Strategic romance rumors absolutely happen.
“100%. It happens a lot more than the general public thinks, and it’s usually done in a very controlled, deniable, almost invisible way in the shadows,” Weatherhead, CEO of the Supreme Agency, tells Yahoo. While he’s adamant that “it’s rare to fabricate a full relationship from thin air,” he says that exaggerated or opportunistic pairings are far more common than fans realize.
The idea seldom originates from the celebrities themselves. According to Weatherhead, the spark for a “PR-friendly” romance typically comes from the top tiers of a team — publicists, management or the studio. Publicists often lead the way “since we are in constant communication with media, seeking out data around who’s trending, folks in need of personal rebrands and those who might need a burst of positive press.”
Sometimes the calculus is surprisingly pragmatic: Two careers that would benefit from being seen together, two narratives that complement each other or two people with genuine chemistry who can be spotlighted for mutual gain. If both teams agree, the strategy moves forward discreetly. Weatherhead says the process can be as simple as one team floating the idea to another, followed by a quiet conversation about boundaries, visibility, timing — and, in some cases, whether there’s compensation or a defined duration attached.
Only once everyone is aligned does the public-facing part begin. “They seed stories, arrange photo opportunities or let reporters speculate,” Weatherhead explains. Nothing overt. Nothing traceable. Just subtle cues that allow the audience — and the tabloids — to fill in the blanks.
To insiders, certain patterns are almost comically obvious. “Hooking up out of nowhere right before a press tour, album/movie release or some sort of other tentpole cultural moment — only to break up immediately following — huge red flag,” he says. The sudden spark, the perfectly timed joint appearance, the abrupt fade-out once the project lands — these are the beats PR professionals recognize instantly.
And the execution is rarely elaborate. Weatherhead calls paparazzi walks and party photos “the easiest and most organic-looking tactic in any management team or publicist’s arsenal.” A well-timed exit from a restaurant, a casually coordinated afterparty arrival, a perfectly framed photo at a charity event — these moments are simple to arrange, quick to circulate and believable enough to avoid raising suspicion from casual fans.
Of course, once two people spend that much curated time together, the lines can blur — sometimes in sweet ways, sometimes in complicated ones. And occasionally, the fallout becomes its own Hollywood spectacle.
The bottom line
Most celebrity romances aren’t fake. But they do unfold on a stage where timing, optics, chemistry and narrative can all play supporting roles. Sometimes a relationship gets amplified. Sometimes it gets gently shaped. Sometimes it’s simply two people who enjoy each other — and their careers get swept along for the ride.
But one thing is always true: The public will try to decode every kiss, hug, press stop and pap walk like it’s a riddle.
Because in Hollywood, love isn’t just romance … it’s content.





