"Being in a public relationship, if things aren't working out, it sucks even more," Greg explained on fellow Bachelor Nation alum's Jason Tartick's Trading Secrets podcast April 22. "It's hard."
Greg, 30, didn't divulge too many details on why he and Victoria, also 30, split, but he did confirm the relationship has ended.
"It's sad to be honest with you," he added. "It's really sad. I just want to respect her during this time and not go into detail on anything. Yeah we definitely ended things. She's amazing and I know she'll continue to do amazing things."
And while he didn't reveal the reason the duo called it quits, he did note that the public scrutiny surrounding their relationship—Victoria was briefly engaged to Bachelor Nation alum Johnny DePhillipo shortly before igniting a romance with Greg—was one thing that always brought them closer together.
"Anything she does gets scrutinized," he continued of Victoria. "She has a really good heart. Seeing someone go through that type of s--t—especially someone you're in a romantic relationship with—it's really tough. I hated that part of it all. But it definitely grew us really close."
The couple reportedly separated months ago, People reported, and they had been soft launching single life on social media. While Victoria—who first appeared on Peter Weber's season of The Bachelor—teased to E! News that "Grippo babies," may have been in the future for the pair in Nov. 2022, Greg was seen for the last time on her Instagram feed back in December 2023.
Meanwhile, Greg—a contestant on Katie Thurston's season of The Bachelorette—last posted for Victoria on her 30th birthday in October.
"The happiest of birthdays to the one that makes sure to crack me up every single day while simultaneously keeping me on my toes," he wrote at the time. "30 has never looked prettier."
Greg and Victoria's relationship may be over, but there are plenty of Bachelor Nation couples still going strong. Read on for a status report on all the duos.
Theresa Nist & Gerry Turner
Joey Graziadei & Kelsey Anderson
Kat Izzo & John Henry Spurlock
Eliza Isichei & Aaron Bryant
Aven Jones & Kylee Russell
Charity Lawson & Dotun Olubeko
Zach Shallcross & Kaity Biggar
Johnny DePhillipo & Victoria Fuller
Danielle Maltby & Michael Allio
Brandon Jones & Serene Russell
Rachel Recchia & Tino Franco
Susie Evans & Clayton Echard
Michelle Young & Nayte Olukoya
Maurissa Gunn & Riley Christian
Demi Burnett & Kristian Haggerty
Noah Erb & Abigail Heringer
Serena Pitt & Joe Amabile
Kenny Braasch & Mari Pepin
Becca Kufrin & Thomas Jacobs
Katie Thurston & Blake Moynes
Rachael Kirkconnell & Matt James
Tayshia Adams & Zac Clark
Clare Crawley & Dale Moss
Peter Weber & Kelley Flanagan
For the latest breaking news updates, click here to download the E! News App
This week, Greg and Byron talk Tesla layoffs, V12s from Aston Martin and Ferrari, the 2029 AEB mandate and some EV testing. Also, these guys still own CDs.
"I don't think we will have the floodgates open like I might have thought," Greg Martin, co-founder and managing director at Rainmaker Securities, told TechCrunch. Jeremy Glaser, a lawyer and co-chair of Mintz's venture capital and emerging companies practice, said that despite how the recent IPOs have performed thus far, people need more data than just a few weeks, or a month, of trading to feel confident. Klaviyo is currently trading at a $5.94 billion market cap, down from its $9.2 billion IPO price.
Instagram is adding a handful of new features for Stories to give users more creative ways to share content and engage with each other, the company announced on Friday. Most notably, the social network is introducing a new "Reveal" feature that lets you post a hidden Story for your followers to uncover by sending you a DM. Instagram is also launching other features that let you share your favorite songs and highlight memories via Stories.
Apple CEO Tim Cook didn't give much away about the company's AI plans on Thursday's Q2 earnings call with investors, but he did confirm a few tidbits about how the tech giant plans to move forward with artificial intelligence. Notably, his comments suggested that despite spending more than $100 billion on R&D over the last five years, Apple isn't planning to spin up too many new data centers to run or train AI models. While we've known this for some time — after all, Apple has been calling its M3 MacBook Airs the "best consumer laptop for AI" — the company shouted out how AI is being used across its products on its earnings call.
Henrik Fisker stood on a stage last August and proudly debuted two prototypes designed to catapult his eponymous EV startup Fisker into the mainstream. There was the Pear, a low-cost EV meant for the masses, and the Alaska, Fisker’s entry into the red-hot pickup truck market. In the weeks that followed, Fisker stopped paying the engineering firm that helped develop those vehicles, according to a previously-unreported lawsuit filed in federal court this week.
Microsoft may want to be more careful about leaving a trail of broken promises when games don’t go as planned. A year after Redfall landed with a thud, players are still waiting for the advertised post-launch DLC they already paid for.