Breaking
ARالاتحاد البلجيكي يستأنف ضد مشاركة بالوغون أمام المغربARوزير الدفاع الألماني يحذر من وصول حزب البديل إلى السلطة وتداعياته الأمنيةARقمة «ناتو» في أنقرة: رهانات الدفاع الأوروبي وتحديات العلاقة مع واشنطنARسرقة مجوهرات بقيمة ملايين اليورو من متحف لاليك في ألزاس بفرنساARروسيا تشن هجوماً صاروخياً واسعاً على كييف ومدن أوكرانية أخرىARسباق تسلح جديد: تقنيات ناشئة تتصدر المشهد العسكري العالميARسباق التسلّح الجديد: تقنيات ناشئة تحدد مستقبل الحروبARترامب: اتفاق إنهاء النزاع في أوكرانيا أقرب مما يتصوره الناس بعد محادثة مع بوتينARهجمات في السودان تدمر قرى وتهجر آلاف، والمعارضة الموريتانية تنتقد الحكومةARهيفاء وهبي تشوق لتعاون غنائي جديد مع سانت ليفانتARالاتحاد البلجيكي يستأنف ضد مشاركة بالوغون أمام المغربARوزير الدفاع الألماني يحذر من وصول حزب البديل إلى السلطة وتداعياته الأمنيةARقمة «ناتو» في أنقرة: رهانات الدفاع الأوروبي وتحديات العلاقة مع واشنطنARسرقة مجوهرات بقيمة ملايين اليورو من متحف لاليك في ألزاس بفرنساARروسيا تشن هجوماً صاروخياً واسعاً على كييف ومدن أوكرانية أخرىARسباق تسلح جديد: تقنيات ناشئة تتصدر المشهد العسكري العالميARسباق التسلّح الجديد: تقنيات ناشئة تحدد مستقبل الحروبARترامب: اتفاق إنهاء النزاع في أوكرانيا أقرب مما يتصوره الناس بعد محادثة مع بوتينARهجمات في السودان تدمر قرى وتهجر آلاف، والمعارضة الموريتانية تنتقد الحكومةARهيفاء وهبي تشوق لتعاون غنائي جديد مع سانت ليفانت
Newsgather
BackCounter-movement emerges to challenge 'extreme' masculinity influencer trends
Counter-movement emerges to challenge 'extreme' masculinity influencer trends
Developing
BBC News4/24/2026Health3 min read

Counter-movement emerges to challenge 'extreme' masculinity influencer trends

Health professionals with qualifications push back against looksmaxxing and bone-smashing trends targeting young men

Quick Look

  • A counter-movement of qualified health professionals is challenging masculinity influencers promoting extreme trends like looksmaxxing and bone-smashing.
  • Research shows nearly two-thirds of men aged 16-25 in the UK, US and Australia regularly consume such content.
  • Prominent counter-influencers including Dr Michael Mrozinski and nutritionist James Brash are using their platforms to debunk dangerous advice, while the most influential looksmaxxing figure, 20-year-old Braden Peters, has faced hospitalization after promoting bone-smashing and substance use.

AI-generated summary

Why It Matters

Research from Movember shows almost two-thirds of boys and men aged 16-25 in the UK, US, and Australia regularly watch and read masculinity influencer content. The most extreme trend, looksmaxxing, promotes bone-smashing to alter facial features and uses substances like steroids and methamphetamine to achieve desired physical appearance.

Font size

Meet the men calling out 'masculinity' trends

"Hammer your facial bones to chisel your jawlines." "The only real goal is to get better looking – no matter what it takes." "Your body is your billboard." These are suggestions shared online by so-called "masculinity influencers": men who promote what they say are ways to become more masculine. Some call themselves healthmaxxers – sharing tips on what to eat and working out, while others identify as looksmaxxers, a portmanteau for 'looks maximising', where the aim is to totally "optimise" one's physical appearance. Many of them share a common vocabulary. "Mogging", for example, means being better looking than another man, and "ascending" is becoming better looking. What counts as good looking is narrowly defined: chiselled facial features and visible muscles are non-negotiables. Though this may seem like something of an internet niche, young men are paying attention. Almost two-thirds of boys and men aged 16-25 in the UK, US, and Australia regularly watch and read masculinity influencer content, research from the men's mental health charity Movember shows. Some of the most popular UK-based masculinity influencers boast millions of followers online. But in recent months, a counter-movement has emerged on social media, with health-focused men with expertise and qualifications in nutrition or exercise using their platforms to critique what they describe as "extreme" masculinity trends, like looksmaxxing. Speaking to the BBC, these counter-influencers admit that fact-checked, evidence-based information can be difficult to make "sexy" on social media. Here is how they are trying. After spending 15 years as a sports physician and rural doctor, Dr Michael Mrozinski noticed the looksmaxxing phenomenon emerging in the masculinity influencer sphere. Mrozinski uses his platform to caution his 180,000 followers about the trend, comparing it to a "monster" that has grown "arms and legs". "It might have started as 'here's my gym routine, here's my skincare routine,'" Mrozinski says. "But now it's turned into 'Here's how I make my cheekbones bigger – by smashing them with a hammer.'" Bleeding, bruising and soft tissue damage can occur from intentionally causing blunt facial trauma, Mrozinski says, which he calls an "extreme" version of self-improvement. Looksmaxxing's most influential influencer, who calls himself Clavicular, has half a million followers on Instagram and almost 900,000 on TikTok. His real name is Braden Peters and he's aged 20. He's promoted bone-smashing as "legit", and claims to have used crystal methamphetamine to lose body fat and steroids to build muscle mass – likening these methods in an interview with Channel 5's Andrew Callaghan to "video game cheat codes" for boosting attractiveness. He made headlines this month after he appeared to collapse during a video live stream. He was taken to hospital in Miami and has since returned home, sharing in a post on X: "The worst part of tonight was my face descending from the life support mask." While the search term "bone smashing" is banned on TikTok, 18-24-year-old men are the most common demographic searching variant phrases. TikTok insight data shows they are also the most popular group searching looksmaxxing hacks on the platform, with more than 300,000 searches per day in February and rising to a peak of 1.9 million in late March. The content that masculinity influencers share can target boys as young as 13, he says, some of whom may not yet have gone through puberty, when their faces and bodies would naturally tend to become more like those of grown men. 'Influencer overreach' James Brash, a registered nutritionist and content creator, tells the BBC that fitness and diet advice are not innately bad – and he isn't discouraging people from trying to be healthier. "Physical activity is one of the best things that people can do to improve their health, if they are able to," Brash says. What he objects to is what he terms "influencer overreach", where those with mass followings share advice backed up by dodgy evidence - or no evidence at all. Brash does not consider himself an influencer, because he is guided by professional medical standards, rather than clicks, to call out "misinformation". "It's not sexy because it does not rely on fear or urgency," he says. Brash has spent the past year posting videos calling out nutrition misinformation largely promoted by wellness influencers. One influencer he calls out is a man who says "our grandads would be turning in their graves if they had seen what men were like today". He also claims that in the past, men had higher levels of testosterone and were more fertile. Brash says the video promotes "sexism and homophobia", pushing a very narrow version of "acceptable" masculinity. In response to the BBC's questions, the influencer says his "comments were not intended to be homophobic". "They were focused on male endocrine health, not sexuality or identity." 'Society is turning men weaker' Some masculinity influencers see themselves as helping young men who feel lost and are looking for practical guidance on how to feel better about themselves. Self-proclaimed "healthmaxxer" influencer Steven Abelman says masculinity, rather than looks alone, is the focus of his content, which promotes strict diet, sleep schedules and exercise regimes. Overstimulation from fast-paced technologies and online gaming is contributing to poor mental and physical health, Abelman believes. His content largely centres on reaction reels responding to other people's actions and diets – casting judgement over whether they are "optimal" or not. "Society is turning men weaker and weaker, but what I'm promoting can really strengthen men," the influencer says. "I want to promote more of the primal lifestyles." Community in health and fitness Ben Hurst from Beyond Equality, a UK-based organisation focused on "rethinking masculinities", speaks to young men in schools. He knows they live online, and says it is important he uses his platform to "flood" those spaces with content that could shake up perceptions of mainstream masculinity. He points to personalities such as Rory Bradshaw, who shares videos about teaching yoga in men's prisons as part of his broader mission to combat violence against women and girls. "These men are pushing the idea of community in health and fitness," says Hurst, "rather than just an individual pursuit of perfection." Information and support is available from these organisations for eating disorders and mental health issues.

What to Watch

AI outlook — possibilities, not facts

  • More health professionals will create counter-content to challenge dangerous masculinity influencer trends

    Very likely · Within months

  • Social media platforms will face increased pressure to regulate looksmaxxing and bone-smashing content

    Likely · Within months

Open Questions

  • What long-term health effects do bone-smashing and substance use have on young men following this advice?
  • How effective are counter-influencers at actually changing behavior?
  • What responsibility do social media platforms have in regulating this content?

Related Topics

This article was originally published by BBC News.

Related Stories

Эндокринолог предупредила о скрытых рисках чрезмерного употребления авокадо
Health·1h ago

Эндокринолог предупредила о скрытых рисках чрезмерного употребления авокадо

Эндокринолог Анастасия Алтунина из «СМ-Клиника» предупредила, что чрезмерное употребление авокадо, несмотря на его статус суперфуда, может привести к набору веса, вызвать желчную колику у людей с проблемами желчного пузыря и снизить эффективность антикоагулянтов.

Лента.ру
Хирург предупредил о симптомах алкогольной полинейропатии
Health·1h ago

Хирург предупредил о симптомах алкогольной полинейропатии

Хирург Александр Умнов сообщил, что онемение, жжение или ощущение "перчаток" могут указывать на алкогольную полинейропатию. Алкоголь разрушает нервы, нарушая передачу сигналов, что может привести к потере чувствительности, координации и даже инвалидности. Ключевое условие лечения — полный отказ от спиртного.

Лента.ру
新北查核中聯油脂問題油品 52家下游廠商受影響
Developing·1h ago

新北查核中聯油脂問題油品 52家下游廠商受影響

新北市政府啟動專案查核,針對食藥署公布的中聯大豆沙拉油下游廠商,已要求問題批號油品停止使用並下架回收。共52家廠商受影響,其中東穎公司沙拉醬及廣達香公司塔塔醬等產品,因使用受影響油品製成,已啟動預防性下架回收作業。新北40座公有市場將張貼「本市場合格食用油」公告,以確保民眾安心消費。

自由时报
More on this topicmasculinity influencers