

But it was the best thing that could have happened.

"I had no version of the story that didn't end up with me being fine. "What you don’t understand is that I lived a certain life for 10 years and faced almost no real consequence at all," he says. According to the official, Miller and his two passengers fled the scene on foot. An official for the Los Angeles Police Department told ET at the time that Miller was the driver involved in a traffic collision with a power pole in the San Fernando Valley in California in the early hours of May 17. I am happy for her and moving forward with her life just as I'm sure she is with me."Īs for his arrest on a charge of DUI in May shortly after their breakup - which led Grande to clap back at a fan who blamed her for it - Miller calls the incident a blessing in disguise. "It's just a part of something that's going to continue to help make me who I am. Like, the whole thing is a little strange but it's not negative," he says. Miller says he is happy that he and Grande have both moved on. Like, what is that? Where does that come from? Why? Why do we have this need to use social media and the internet?" And also, like, I don't know, it just all seemed kind of unimportant, the need to show people I was OK. 'Are you OK? Is everything OK?'" he says. So, you know, people have assumed that I'm. Miller shares that people have been checking up on him after the breakup, but that he had stopped going on the web to prepare for the release of his upcoming album, Swimming, which drops next month. And then it came to an end and we both moved on. We worked through good times, bad times, stress, and everything else. You know, like, I was in love with somebody. "So, of course there were stressful times.
