On May 20, 2026 a parody account on X posted a manipulated image claiming Khloe Kardashian and Michael B. Jordan had been seen leaving a dinner together, and the picture quickly spread across social media.
The post — shared under the handle celebsnapz — read: "OMGGGGG KHLOE KARDASHIAN AND MICHAEL B. JORDAN WERE BOTH SPOTTED HAVING DINNER TOGETHER LAST NIGHT IT’S STILL NOT CONFIRMED IF THEY’RE IN A RELATIONSHIP ?????????????????????????????????!!!!" Fans reposted the image and a Geo News write-up amplified the circulation by publishing fan-posted pictures and saying the pair were seen walking out of a dinner date and holding hands.
Within hours users flooded comment threads noting the image’s flaws. "This looks very… ummm AI-like. Lol," wrote one user; another posted, "There’s absolutely no way this is real… someone tell me they’re just friends because my jaw is on the floor right now." One post captured how the rumor spread: "this is how i found out michael b jordan is dating khloe." Across articles covering the viral post, outlets reported there was no evidence the two stars actually dined together and that internet users had concluded the image appeared digitally manipulated.
The detail that gave the story its weight was not a new sighting but the speed of the debunking: many social accounts flagged the photo as AI-generated the same day it surfaced, and both articles that circulated the claims noted that neither Kardashian nor Jordan publicly commented on the speculation on May 20.
Context matters here. Jordan has largely kept his dating life private in recent years, and Kardashian continues to attract intense attention around her personal life because of her profile on The Kardashians. That combination makes almost any suggestion of a new partnership prone to instant amplification, especially when a striking image is offered as proof.
The tension in the story is straightforward: a widely shared item of apparent evidence versus the absence of corroboration. Geo News reported fan-posted pictures that appeared to show them holding hands, yet the same coverage and others warned users quickly noticed signs of AI generation. The two threads — dramatic eyewitness-style posts and rapid online skepticism — did not line up, and crucially there was no independent confirmation that the dinner ever took place.
What happens next is simple and decisive: the available reporting points to a fabricated image and an unverified rumor, not a documented meeting. Neither Khloe Kardashian nor Michael B. Jordan made public statements about the speculation, and the post in question originated from a parody account on X. Given those facts, the responsible conclusion is that the viral dinner claim is not supported by evidence and should be treated as an instance of digital misinformation rather than a new celebrity relationship.
The episode is a reminder that striking photos and excitable captions can create convincing but false narratives almost instantly: when a post looks AI-like and no direct confirmation follows, the safer read is skepticism. For now, there is no verified reason to believe Kardashian and Jordan actually dined together on May 20, 2026.



