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Madison Beer admits her ‘hair could be on fire’ and she wouldn’t notice around Justin Herbert

Photo by Allen Berezovsky/Getty Images
Photo by Allen Berezovsky/Getty Images
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Madison Beer’s latest comments about Justin Herbert made their relationship sound less like a celebrity rumor and more like something she clearly wants taken seriously.

The singer opened up on Therapuss with Jake Shane, released on June 18, and described a connection that started privately before it became public.

For Herbert, it adds a softer storyline around an offseason already full of pressure.

Quarterback Justin Herbert #10 of the Los Angeles Chargers and Madison Beer attend a basketball game between Los Angeles Lakers and Minnesota Timberwolves at Crypto.com Arena on October 24, 2025 in Los Angeles, California.
Photo by Kevork Djansezian/Getty Images

Madison Beer Justin Herbert relationship takes emotional turn

A Dov Kleiman post shared Beer’s comments about how locked in she feels when talking to the Los Angeles Chargers quarterback.

Beer said: “When I’m having a convo with my boyfriend, my hair could be on fire and I wouldn’t notice. And to be honest with you, he’s the first person I’ve ever felt that way about.”

She added: “Like, the world could be ending around me and I wouldn’t realize. It’s just so mature — he came into my life at the perfect time. Our first date was literally at my house because we were scared to go in public.”

The pair have been linked since 2025, with reports first picking up sightings around a music video set before they later appeared publicly at Chargers and Lakers events.

They are not fully hidden, but they are not oversharing either. Their relationship has become visible through public appearances and selective social posts, not constant online updates.

Justin Herbert enters Chargers season with Madison Beer spotlight growing

Herbert has not publicly responded to Beer’s latest podcast comments, but he has shown affection before. In a birthday post, he wrote that she had “changed my life forever” and called himself “the luckiest guy alive.”

That is rare from a quarterback who usually keeps his public personality calm, quiet and football-centered.

On the field, Herbert is coming off a demanding 2025 season. He threw for 3,727 yards and 26 touchdowns, but also took heavy punishment behind a struggling offensive line and was sacked 54 times.

The Chargers reached the postseason but were knocked out in the Wild Card round by the Patriots, where pressure again became a major problem.

That makes 2026 important. Los Angeles need better protection and cleaner offensive rhythm if Herbert is going to turn strong numbers into a deeper playoff run.

Beer’s comments will grab attention, but Herbert’s next chapter still comes back to the same question: can the Chargers finally give their franchise quarterback enough help?