Miley Cyrus' sister Brandi Cyrus quitely dating Aussie Matt Southcombe for past year
Another Australian has infiltrated the famous Cyrus clan with news Miley Cyrus' older sister, Brandi, is dating a Queenslander.
Tall, dark and rugged, Aussie Matt Southcombe has reportedly been quitely dating the 37-year-old in the past year, with the new couple low-key sharing cosy photos of themselves on Instagram every now and then.
It was back in January that 37-year-old Brandi first hinted she was dating 'an Aussie', but it was only today the Daily Telegraph's Scoop confirmed her new man is Matt Southcombe from Mount Tamborine in Queensland, who runs his own Harley Davidson bike restoration business called Mountain Choppers.
According to the masthead, the relationship is going so well that Southcombe has relocated to the US state of Tennessee, where the Cyrus clan have an estate.
Although their Instagram debut went unnoticed, they pair have been sharing photos of their time together, from weekend trips to Wyoming to bike rides on Christmas.
'Full stocking this Christmas. Hope everyone had a great day with the people they love,' Southcombe captioned a carousel of happy snaps during the festive season, to which Brandi commented, 'Best Christmas'.
For the New Year, it was the DJ and actress' turn to gush about how well life has been treating her lately.
'2024… you sure were good to me!!!' she began as she posted some unseen photos from the last 12 months, three of which featured her new boyfriend.
'These are just a few moments that really stood out this year. Put out my very first original remix, finished my very first Vegas residency, made some new friends, played some epic shows & festivals, and loved every single minute of all of it!!
'The crazy part is, next year is somehow gonna top it and I can't thank everyone enough for their love & support this year. 2025 LET'S RIDE!!!'
Southcombe showed his support by commenting with some hearts and flames emojis.
The Queenslander is not the first Aussie to be welcomed into the Cyrus family.
Miley dated Aussie actor Liam Hemsworth for eight years before they married in 2018, only to divorce one year later.
The singer went on to have a brief, year-long romance with pop star Cody Simpson, who hails from the Gold Coast.
Meanwhile, family patriarch Billy Ray Cyrus also had a short marriage to Aussie singer Firerose. The pair were married in 2023, only for the country music star to file for divorce seven months later.
As for the matriarch of the family, Tish Cyrus, she married Aussie actor of Prison Break fame Dominic Purcell in August 2023, just four months after getting engaged.
Back in January, Brandi and Tish touched upon the family's Aussie connections on their mother-daughter podcast, Sorry We're Cyrus.
It was during this candid discussion that Brandi revealed she was dating an Aussie man.
'Men are trash. The majority of them are absolute garbage,' she said at the time. 'But there's a couple of good ones out there, I guess. I think I found one, so I love that for me.'
Tish said that she was happy for her daughter because, 'You know what, he's Australian. I'm not gonna rag on American men, but Australian men are just different.'
'Well, not all of them,' Brandi replied before they both looked at each other and laughed.
Brandi is Tish's daughter from her first marriage to drummer Baxter Neal Helson, who she was married to from 1986 to 1989. The couple also welcomed son Trace Cyrus, 36.
When Tish married Billy Ray in 1993, he adopted both Trace and Brandi before the pair welcomed their own children together, Miley, son Braison, 31, and daughter Noah, 25.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


SBS Australia
an hour ago
- SBS Australia
Filipina talent sparkles in Legally Blonde: The Musical
Isabelle Pascua is a 2021 Performing Arts graduate with over a decade of dance training and classical background in violin and piano. She was born and raised in Australia, with roots tracing back to Bacolod and Manila through her parents. As the only Filipino in the cast, Isabelle values representation. Growing up without seeing Filipinos on stage, she sees this role as a chance to bring pride and visibility to her community. SBS Filipino 21/06/2025 35:08 📢 Where to Catch SBS Filipino

News.com.au
2 hours ago
- News.com.au
Spencer Leniu and Ezra Mam embrace says it all after State of Origin Game 2
The long-running feud between Ezra Mam and Spencer Leniu dating back to a Vegas racism row is all but over after the pair were seen clearing the air before sharing a warm embrace after State of Origin Game 2 on Wednesday night. Vision, which you can watch above, showed Leniu approach Queensland's 18th man after full-time, with the pair engaging in a brief conversation that ended in an embrace. FOX LEAGUE, available on Kayo Sports, is the only place to watch every game of every round in the 2025 NRL Telstra Premiership, LIVE with no ad-breaks during play. New to Kayo? Get your first month for just $1. Limited-time offer. The touching moment showed they have seemingly finally buried the hatched some 16 months after the Blues enforcer labelled Mam a 'monkey' in the Las Vegas season opener between the Roosters and Broncos in 2024. Leniu copped an eight-match ban for the slur which he insisted was unintentional and was nothing more than 'one brown man saying something to another brown man'. The fallout continued even after he served his suspension with Leniu aggrieved at some of the commentary around the situation from people in the media, namely from Queensland legend Johnathan Thurston, who said the punishment should have been far harsher. Leniu clearly held a grudge against the Maroons great for his remarks and accused Thurston of being 'two-faced' and 'fake' following a sideline spat back in April. Thurston claimed the following day he was 'shocked' by Leniu's hostility, 'which was not of a racial nature, but overly aggressive in tone and unwarranted'. Leniu then posted on his Instagram: 'I never wanted to talk to JT. He kept trying to come to speak to me. 'I said, 'Lad idc (I don't care) if that you hate me for what I did. But don't come up to me asking me questions like we're Algood (sic). 'Don't be two face. Hate me lad I'm eetswa (sweet) with that. But don't be fake. I hate fake people.' Since then Leniu has been on a self-imposed media ban and stayed out of the limelight. In a great show of character, after full-time, he sought out Mam to bury the hatchet and clear the air with the Broncos star. And speaking after the exchange, Mam said it had all been settled. 'It's great that me and Spencer got the chance to see each other face-to-face last night,' Mam told The Sydney Morning Herald.


SBS Australia
2 hours ago
- SBS Australia
How Fiston beat the odds to crack an $8bn Aussie industry and go global
Fiston Baraka in a recording studio in Melbourne working on his new single. Source: SBS / Scott Cardwell At the mic in a small recording studio in Melbourne's north, Fiston Baraka is putting the finishing touches on his new single. "It's called Kumbuka, which means remember," said Baraka, 25. "It is about me looking back at times people told me to stop my music, that I was wasting my time. One line says, 'remember when they said I wouldn't make it'." "Making it" is something the artist is incredibly proud of. The rising hip-hop star from Geelong is among Victoria's hottest music acts. He even performed at the Australian Open tennis tournament earlier this year. "The Australian Open, yeah that was crazy, no way to describe it," he said. "It made me feel seen and at the same time accept that the work I am doing is not going to waste." The recording studio is a world away from the refugee camp where Baraka grew up, but the memories remain vivid and live on in his songs. Known to fans as Baraka the Kid, he sings in English and Swahili, and his rap music is finding an audience worldwide. "My biggest following is Nigeria, South Africa, and the United States," he said. "Australia sits at number four." Baraka is proud to contribute to the expanding Australian music industry, which grew in revenue by 6 per cent year-on-year in 2024, marking six consecutive annual gains, according to industry body ARIA. Overall, the Australian music industry generates revenues of $8.78 billion according to a recent report released by the federal government body Music Australia. It provides the first comprehensive measure of the economic contribution of Australia's music industry, and includes data from industry, government, and over 1,000 individuals and businesses working across the music industry. It found that streaming dominates the market, accounting for more than 70 per cent of all revenue. Industry growth provides opportunities for young artists, but music producer Ariel Blum said the playing field is far from level. "There are a lot of challenges for people that don't grow up with either the economic means or the social networks to access the decision makers," Blum said. "I have met many clients coming into the studio with a particular profile. They would typically come from privilege, economic privilege mainly, getting bills paid by mum and dad." It's one reason Blum co-founded a music mentoring project called GRID Series in 2013, to give artists from disadvantaged backgrounds a helping hand. "GRID is actually an acronym and stands for Grassroots in Development," he said. "Our main mission is to bring resources, access, and opportunities to artists from low socioeconomic backgrounds. "And in Australia, typically that means living in the outer suburbs or regional areas." Fiston Baraka is among the project's rising stars. Since being accepted into the project, he has received mentoring from Joel Ma, known as Joelistics, an Australian producer, multi-instrumentalist, and former member of the Melbourne-based Australian hip hop group TZU. "When Fiston and I first met, he was really open to exploring his refugee story," said Ma. "A lot of our conversation was about his family's story, coming from overseas and arriving in suburban Geelong, and how much of a cultural shock that was for Fiston and his family." Baraka arrived in Australia in 2010 and was born in 2000 in Lubumbashi, the second-largest city in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). He later grew up in a refugee camp in Zambia. Zambia is home to more than 100,000 refugees, asylum seekers, and other displaced people. Many are exiles from the DRC. While Baraka has happy childhood memories of making friends there, he faced many hardships too. Food was short and illness rife. His life changed dramatically when his parents bought a small parcel of land and started growing crops. "Myself and my older brother were taken out of school and we started working on the farm alongside our cousins," he said. "My parents decided the farm was more of a focus because that's what was actually bringing income," he said. It set back his education, and when the family was finally accepted into Australia on humanitarian visas, Baraka had received limited schooling and spoke little English. "The reading part was hard because I couldn't write and I couldn't read the words either," he said. "So, the way I learned English was by watching cartoons on television." Drawing on the resilience many refugees are respected for, Baraka went on to finish high school and tertiary qualifications, spent six years working in construction then started his own music business. He now explores his refugee journey through song. "It was not hard to kind of convince him to sing in Swahili," Ma said. "We talked about whether that would alienate an Australian listening public. Our conversation got to a point of: 'well, the world is bigger than Geelong, bigger than Melbourne, bigger than Australia'. "You can have an audience that extends to parts of Africa, America, Canada, and the UK because this story, although unique to you, is universal in so many ways." It was a strategy that's paid off for both artist and mentor. "I get a huge rush of pride when I see someone like Fiston making their way in the world and having an impact and finding his audience. It is amazing," Ma said. "I am very happy to be where I am and very proud to have [come] so far," said Baraka. "I didn't think of music as being anything more than a hobby when I first started, but now it is a passion and something I can actually make a career out of, as well." Baraka is among 70 participants to develop their style and their business acumen through the GRID Series. The free six-month GRID series is supported by Creative Victoria, includes studio time with a producer, live performances, and sessions on business basics. "Things like setting up an ABN, registering your business name, claiming all of your profiles on different platforms, and registering for APRA AMCOS. Often they will come and do an information session, too," said Blum. However, Blum said Baraka's motivation is also key to his success. "Fiston is like a meteorite, a fireball of incredible energy. He is incredibly personable, incredibly talented, and insanely charismatic. "And when you are around Fiston, you feel excited," he said. GRID Series currently runs in three states and aims to bring more diversity into Australia's music scene. "I come from a part of the Australian music industry that is about telling stories and representing an Australia, which is diverse," Ma said. "And GRID is a hotbed of stories about an Australia that I recognise. "In the past, the Australian music industry felt very white, very male-dominated, very rock-oriented. "Because GRID is open-minded, it supports diverse artists and genres. Their music tells stories of people coming from other countries, particularly from war-torn countries and places where life is a struggle," Ma said. For Baraka, who quit a full-time job in construction to chase his music dream, recent success is sweet, but his goal is to touch people through his songs. "Joel Ma told me that being Congolese and speaking Swahili makes my music unique," he said. "So, each song has a story. It is either something that I experienced or that someone close to me has experienced. "I put that into the music and people relate, they say 'oh wait, I've been through that too'. And so they connect. "They also send me messages which might be little in text, but they are big in heart. "And it makes me feel good that so many people are able to open up by hearing my words," he said. Watch now Follow Small Business Secrets Share this with family and friends