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Matthew Koma, the husband of actress Hilary Duff, has chimed in on the recent drama surrounding the “Toxic Mom Group” with his signature wit.
On Tuesday, Koma took to Instagram to address the swirling rumors about a possible fallout between his wife Hilary and Ashley Tisdale, supposedly due to tensions within a mom group.
Displaying his comedic flair, Koma mocked Tisdale’s recent essay in The Cut by creating a parody headline: “When You’re the Most Self-Obsessed Tone-Deaf Person on Earth, Other Moms Tend to Shift Focus to Their Actual Toddlers.”
Adding to the humor, Koma edited his face onto Tisdale’s body, imitating the image from The Cut where she is seen sitting on a white couch dressed in black.
This playful jab follows Tisdale’s essay titled “Breaking Up With My Toxic Mom Group,” in which she expressed feeling isolated by friends during her postpartum phase.
The High School Musical alum had previously raved about her ‘village of moms,’ which included Duff, Mandy Moore and Meghan Trainor, after welcoming her first daughter Jupiter in 2021.
Hilary Duff’s husband Matthew Koma has weighed in on the recent ‘Toxic Mom Group’ drama with his trademark sense of humor
Koma took to Instagram on Tuesday amid speculation that Ashley Tisdale had fallen out with his wife Hilary over alleged mom-group tensions
Fans quickly speculated that the unnamed group included Duff and Moore, particularly after Tisdale unfollowed both women on Instagram.
Tisdale, who also shares a 16-month-old son Emerson with her composer husband Christopher French, joined the mom group created by longtime friend Duff, with the women sharing vacations, baby classes and playdates over the past four years.
However, Tisdale recently wrote about ‘breaking up with my toxic mom group,’ explaining she began to feel excluded during vulnerable postpartum months.
Expanding on a November 2025 post for her blog ByAshleyFrench, she later penned an article for The Cut, though she did not name any of the women involved.
She wrote that she started noticing she wasn’t invited to certain gatherings, which she later saw posted on Instagram.
‘It took me back to an unpleasant but familiar feeling I thought I’d left behind years ago,’ she wrote.
‘Here I was sitting alone one night after getting my daughter to bed thinking Maybe I’m not cool enough? All of a sudden I was in high school again, feeling totally lost as to what I was doing ‘wrong’ to be left out.’
And a member of Tisdale’s former mom group appeared to respond publicly following the star’s claims.
He poked fun of Tisdale’s recent essay in The Cut with a photoshopped image and a mock headline that read, ‘When You’re the Most Self Obsessed Tone Deaf Person on Earth, Other Moms Tend to Shift Focus to Their Actual Toddlers’
It comes after Tisdale’s essay, called ‘Breaking Up With My Toxic Mom Group,’ detailed her feelings of feeling frozen out by friends during her postpartum period
She said she ultimately texted the group after being excluded once again, writing: ‘This is too high school for me and I don’t want to take part in it anymore.’
‘To be clear I have never considered the moms to be bad people (maybe one),’ Tisdale added. ‘But I do think our group dynamic stopped being healthy and positive – for me anyway.’
While the actress has not publicly identified who she was referring to, fans noticed that the article arrived shortly after she unfollowed both Moore and Duff on Instagram.
Tisdale had once been a core member of the A-list circle.
In a now-deleted 2022 post from a girls’ trip with Duff and Trainor, she reflected on an enjoyable weekend away and how she loved ‘being surrounded by these ladies.’
‘What an amazing group of women to journey through this mom-hood together!’ she gushed, at the time.
As recently as January 2025, she publicly thanked the mom group for supporting her during the Los Angeles wildfires, writing: ‘The human connection is not lost. Shout out to the mom group that’s there in the highs and lows.’
Meanwhile, Moore and Duff appear to remain close.
The longtime friends have spoken openly about the support they’ve found in one another and even lived together during last year’s wildfires when Moore lost her family home.
They were also recently seen sharing photos from a festive trip with their children to see a Christmas lights display.
The Daily Mail has reached out to representatives for Tisdale, Ryan, Duff and Moore for comment.
Fans quickly speculated that the unnamed group included Duff and Mandy Moore, particularly after Tisdale unfollowed both women on Instagram
Meanwhile Samii Ryan, a clothing designer and one of the women linked to the once-close-knit circle, appeared to respond publicly to Tisdale’s claims and raised eyebrows after reposting a video of a man dramatically opening his front doors while mouthing the lyrics to Megan Thee Stallion’s anthem Her.
‘I don’t care if these b*****s don’t like me, ’cause, like, I’m pretty as f**k,’ the track begins. ‘Just the other day, I heard a ho say. Matter of fact, what could a h** say? With a face like this and a b**ch this paid, s**t, what could a h** say?’
Ryan captioned the clip with the words ‘2026 mood,’ prompting fans to speculate the post was a pointed response to Tisdale’s recent comments.
She also shared a photo of an open book, posting a page that read: ‘Nothing in this book is known to be true/ It’s a reflection on what I’ve noticed/ Not facts so much as thoughts.
The passage continued: ‘Some ideas may resonate, others may not/ A few may awaken an inner knowing you forgot you had/ Use what’s helpful/ Let go of the rest.’