The relationship between August Alsina, Jada Pinkett Smith, and Will Smith has been an ongoing saga over the past few weeks. But it looks like the public is now seeing the final words on this story as August Alsina dropped the song Entanglements after Jada Pinkett Smith admitted their relationship on Red Table Talk.

Variety reports that the 27-year-old singer released the song Entanglements over the weekend, as a reference to the way Jada Pinkett Smith described the relationship she had with him while she and Will were temporarily separated.

The song’s lyrics are certainly titillating, with Alsina saying that he defines entanglement is when they’re tangled in the sheets. He also sings about how while it may not be called a relationship, “she” is still f---in’ with him. While not directly named, the “she” in this scenario is likely Jada Pinkett Smith.

As recounted by CNN, Pinkett Smith labeled the relationship between her and Alsina an “entanglement” during the special July 10 episode of Red Table Talk. Both Jada and Will had earlier denied Alsina’s claim that he had been given permission by Will to be in a relationship with each other.

The whole brouhaha between the Smiths and Alsina began when the singer claimed in an interview that he and Jada had an affair and that Will gave his blessing for it to happen. A representative for Will denied this, while Jada tweeted that she would be discussing it on her talk show, Red Table Talk.

That Red Table Talk episode where Pinkett Smith finally admitted to and labeled her connection with Alsina actually garnered record views, making it the show’s most-viewed episode. It overtook the episode that featured Jordyn Woods talking about her alleged affair with Tristan Thompson, NBA star and father to Khloe Kardashian’s daughter.

Before the episode aired, Alsina had posted on Instagram that he understood why Pinkett Smith would not be forthcoming about their relationship and clarified that he did not make the revelation to attack her. According to him, the revelation was to protest the “invisible walls of silent societal construct.”

Alsina also insisted no apology was going to come from him since he was only being transparent and truthful, even if some people found it uncomfortable. He also refused to label himself or the Smiths as the right or the wrong side of the situation, but rather insisted that the situation “just IS.”