When Molly-Mae Hague and ex-fiancé Tommy Fury split , millions of people mourned. When Jennifer Lopez filed for divorce from Ben Affleck just over a week later, millions cheered. Women and girls cried in emotional TikTok videos about Hague's split from Fury five years after they met and fell in love on Love Island , while X (formerly Twitter) was flooded with memes about the second Bennifer split in 20 years.

Watch the video above. READ MORE: Everything you need to know about the next royal wedding Despite the hugely different public reactions to these two celebrity splits, one fact remains; people are more obsessed with failed celebrity romances than ever before. "It's been going on for decades, but it has increased with social media," Australian Psychological Society President Dr Catriona Davis-McCabe tells 9honey.

"Because we can now access anything related to celebrities immediately, straight away, and I think that that fosters this deep sense of connection, this feeling like we know them, we can relate to them." That sense of connection to celebrities - and in turn, their romantic relationships - is what makes so many Australians so invested in famous couples and their sometimes inevitable splits. We care deeply when our friends get their hearts broken, so it makes sense that we'd care when celebrities we relate to go through the same kind of heartbreak.

It's especially true of more relatable stars like reality TV contestants, who seem more accessible and "normal" t.