DAVID Eason, the husband of Teen Mom Jenelle Evans, has thrown brutal shade at his former co-star, Tyler Baltierra.
The commotion started when Tyler, 31, shared his new track, Anybody, about two weeks ago.
In the lengthy Instagram post, the Teen Mom OG star said: "I have been writing poetry since I was a child. I have used it as a specifically fortified space to release my pain, my feelings, my thoughts & opinions."
He ended: "I wrote it one night sitting in my car as I sobbed uncontrollably from how low I was feeling at the time.
"Maybe someone out there can relate? Regardless, I just want to thank you for allowing me to be who I am."
The music video featured an image of Tyler's face with his eyes X-ed out."
'JUST FINISHED'
In a recent Facebook post, David Eason, 34, referred to the image as he wrote: "Just finished a rap song, I guess. I can get a face tattoo now. Definitely not X's on my eyes, that's for sure!"
In the next post, Jenelle's husband claimed he was not throwing shade at his former Teen Mom co-star.
He added: "No, I was not throwing shade when I said I just finished a rap song.
"And it's not shade when I say I made a song you can actually jam out to in the car or at a party, etc.!"
On September 14, the MTV star continued: "Y'all these songs are going to be..." and added fire emojis.
This is not the first time critics have had issues with Tyler's music.
'VER HARD TO LISTEN TO'
In August, Tyler's wife, Catelynn Lowell, 31, shared his rap debu online.
In the audio clip, Tyler, 31, mentioned his troubled father, Butch Baltierra, in the explicit lyrics.
He rapped: "F**k my sadistic granddad for beating up my dad so bad, which made him think that love is impossible to last, which made him weak and made him creep into houses, stealing any type of valuable thing, just to pawn it off."
Catelynn added: "Keep telling him to share his art with people because it’s impactful, and people could really relate to it!"
However, critics claimed their "ears were bleeding" after listening to Tyler's cringe-inducing track.
One critic raged: "This was very hard to listen to. I don't like it. I especially didn't like the 'huuh' thing he was doing. Very white rapper, but like he's not executing it well,"
Another person expressed: "This is awful, but good on Tyler for breaking the cycle of absentee, abusive, drug-addicted parents."