
Riley Green Teases Witty Single ‘POS Like Me’ — A Potential Clapback to Megan Moroney’s ‘Who Hurt You?’
3 hours ago
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The rumor mill is spinning fast after country music champion Riley Green teased a witty, self-deprecating song about a past relationship on Instagram. The singer posted a video of himself performing an acoustic rendition of the song, titled “POS Like Me,” the very same day that country music princess Megan Moroney dropped her highly anticipated Cloud 9 album, which happens to feature a song that many speculate is about Green.

Moroney’s new song “Who Hurt You?” seemingly chronicles the end of a charming-turned-cold relationship. The breakup anthem alludes to the fact that, though Moroney emerged with a broken heart, she ultimately dodged a bullet.
“I remember coming up with that song and trying to include every possible detail that rhymes, so that I could put it out into the world and never have to talk about that situation again,” Moroney shared. “Bar for bar, didn’t lie, said everything so that I don’t have to answer interview questions about the situation."
Though the pair never publicly confirmed or denied that they were ever linked romantically, some lyrics in Moroney’s new song point to Green. One lyric describes Moroney’s disgust at her past partner dating a 21-year-old, which many fans speculate is about Green bringing 21-year-old Bryana Ferringer as his date to the 2025 CMA Awards.
“You said you needed less flashy, more fun/Oh, of course she’s twenty-one/On your arm through the bar/God, I hate how gross you are.”

On the same day that Moroney released the tell-all track, Green took to Instagram, delivering his followers a video of him and his guitar singing the unreleased tune “POS Like Me.” The humorous, self-deprecating song spotlights a past partner speaking ill and spreading rumors.
“You can drag every letter of my name/On a chain through the Mississippi mud/Tell all your friends, your mama and them/That I’m a lying, cheating, stealing son of a gun.”
Green describes many of his personality traits that his partner found as flaws, even stating that said partner “hated his dog.” The line is most likely a reference to his corgi, Carl, whom Green takes on the road with him often and sometimes brings out on stage.
“You can call me every name, you can blame it all on me/You can say I’m an SOB, hell, I might be.”
In the end, Green admits that, while he may be guilty of acting like the SOB he’s been accused of, you’ll never find another “low down, no good, rusted truck driving,
Waffle House eating, overall wearing, piece of s*** like me.”
3 hours ago
2 min read
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