Tom Brady might be retired, but the offseason content machine clearly didn’t get the memo.
The latest round of sports-adjacent celebrity buzz centers on Brady and social media star Alix Earle, with an Us Weekly report framing it as part of his current “bachelor era.” The vibe, according to multiple reports: not a red-carpet rollout, more like “two high-profile people crossing paths in very loud places.”
Here’s what’s out there: the Brady–Earle chatter picked up after they were spotted together around New Year’s in St. Barts, where party footage and eyewitness-style details did what they always do online — turn a moment into a narrative. Since then, they’ve reportedly been seen in the same orbit again during Super Bowl weekend in San Francisco, which is basically the Olympics of celebrity run-ins.
Sources quoted in coverage have described the situation as “fun” and casual — not “random,” but also not “lock it in, we’re building a roster” serious. That tracks with Brady’s public posture lately, which has leaned heavily into work, projects, and dad mode. In a recent interview, he flat-out said he doesn’t have much time for a personal life right now, pointing instead to staying busy and being present for his kids.
Earle, meanwhile, is a massive digital personality with a sports-world tie of her own: she previously dated NFL wide receiver Braxton Berrios, and reports note that the relationship ended in late 2025. So if this rumor mill feels like it’s happening at the intersection of football fame and influencer culture… yep, that’s the intersection.
And then there’s the other side of the Brady universe: Gisele Bündchen. Recent reporting says she’s moved on into a much quieter, more private life — including marrying jiu-jitsu instructor Joaquim Valente in December 2025, after welcoming a baby boy in early 2025.
As for Brady and Bündchen as co-parents, the read from insiders has been pretty consistent: civil, functional, and mostly focused on the kids — with enough time passed that the “dust has settled,” even if they’re no longer close socially.
Bottom line for sports fans: this isn’t scoreboard news, but it’s absolutely offseason news — the kind that fills the space between mock drafts and free-agency rumors. Just treat it like any other report without official confirmation: interesting, very clickable, and subject to change by the next party invite.