Son Dakika
RUВенгерский парламент пригрозил импичментом президенту из-за отказа подписать поправку к конституцииITSam Neill, attore di Jurassic Park, è morto a 78 anniINTLUkraine War: EU discusses sanctions, 'Coalition of the Willing' meets in ParisRUВ России подготовят около 600 экспертов для наблюдения за выборамиTRSüleyman Soylu anlattı: 15 Temmuz gecesi neler yaşandı?RUБывшего гендиректора "Торпедо" Скородумова осудили за подкуп арбитровCN广东探索“产教评”技能生态链:三小时速成一线技工,助力稳就业TRİzmir'de Deprem Hazırlıkları: Karşıyaka'da Saha Çalışmaları TamamlandıRUУполномоченный по правам ребенка: 11-летний умерший в больнице Севастополя ребенок имел паллиативный диагноз с рожденияRUЖители Омской области привлечены к ответственности за съемку атаки дронов на НПЗRUВенгерский парламент пригрозил импичментом президенту из-за отказа подписать поправку к конституцииITSam Neill, attore di Jurassic Park, è morto a 78 anniINTLUkraine War: EU discusses sanctions, 'Coalition of the Willing' meets in ParisRUВ России подготовят около 600 экспертов для наблюдения за выборамиTRSüleyman Soylu anlattı: 15 Temmuz gecesi neler yaşandı?RUБывшего гендиректора "Торпедо" Скородумова осудили за подкуп арбитровCN广东探索“产教评”技能生态链:三小时速成一线技工,助力稳就业TRİzmir'de Deprem Hazırlıkları: Karşıyaka'da Saha Çalışmaları TamamlandıRUУполномоченный по правам ребенка: 11-летний умерший в больнице Севастополя ребенок имел паллиативный диагноз с рожденияRUЖители Омской области привлечены к ответственности за съемку атаки дронов на НПЗ
Newsgather
GeriThe unwinnable race: How the manosphere's logic is destroying Luka Dončić
The unwinnable race: How the manosphere's logic is destroying Luka Dončić
Gelişiyor
Guardian Sport29.04.2026Opinion4 dk okumaUnited Kingdom

The unwinnable race: How the manosphere's logic is destroying Luka Dončić

Andrew Tate's worldview has seeped into sports culture – where even Hall of Fame talents are reduced to body-shaming

Hızlı Bakış

  • This opinion piece examines how the toxic masculinity ideologies of the manosphere have infiltrated sports culture, using Luka Dončić as a primary example.
  • The article argues that NBA players, like Dončić, are now subjected to the same impossible body standards that have long plagued female athletes.
  • Despite Dončić's Hall of Fame-level talent and championship success, media and fans obsess over his conditioning and weight rather than his court performance.

Yapay zekâ özeti

Neden Önemli?

The article connects the manosphere's ideology—that male worth must be earned through visible achievement—with the scrutiny of NBA star Luka Dončić's body and conditioning. This reflects a broader cultural shift where athletes are judged on appearance rather than performance.

Yazı boyutu

In Louis Theroux's Netflix documentary Inside the Manosphere, he interviews podcasters, streamers and influencers from across the Red Pill ecosystem. But the most profound moments are when he speaks with their followers. Regular, everyday American men who struggle to make a living, find love, get laid and start a family. One of them is a Latino man in his 20s living in Miami. He explains that Andrew Tate's message helped pull him out of homelessness. What stuck with him wasn't Tate's aggressive bravado or rampant misogyny, but a simple idea: as a man, you start with no inherent value – you have to build it. On its face, it sounds like basic self-help. Beneath it is something harsher: a belief among those in the manosphere that worth is conditional, something that must be earned through performance, discipline and visible results. Under their logic, a "successful" man has a harem of women, luxury cars and a body bulging with muscles. That message doesn't just live online. You can see it in sports, especially in how we talk about athletes' bodies. This kind of scrutiny isn't new in sports. For decades, female athletes have lived under a similar microscope. Evaluated not just for what they do, but how they look while doing it. Now, men are being pulled into the same dynamic. The standards aren't identical, but the mechanism is. Luka Dončić has become one of the clearest subjects of the scrutiny. Ever since he entered the NBA in 2018, it's been clear that the Slovenian is a Hall of Fame talent. But for all his ability, conversation around him has drifted away from what he does on the court and toward what his body – Dončić has never had the ripped physique of the stereotypical athlete – supposedly says about him. In Dallas, he led – some would say carried – the Mavericks to the 2024 NBA finals. But long before then, the whispers had started about his "conditioning" and "durability". It began with chatter about his love of hookah and fluctuating weight while in Dallas, before being used as the raison d'être for the since-fired Mavericks general manager, Nico Harrison, trading him to the Los Angeles Lakers. Dončić is far from a perfect player. He argues with refs, confronts opponents, is suspect on defense and has a propensity for hero-ball and, yes, is prone to niggling injuries. But the extra weight he carried – for an athlete mind you, not for a guy off the street – was seen as a symbol of his flaws. Just like the manosphere influencers, the basketball world portrays his supposed physical imperfections as proof of some internal failing. But the Red Pill race is unwinnable: there's always one more bodybuilding supplement to buy, one more luxury car to show you've made it to the top of the pyramid. And this twisted logic is played out more widely in how Dončić is viewed. At the start of this season, there was a frenzy after he appeared on the cover of Men's Health displaying the kind of body we were told he should have had all along. He went on to play like a demon, leading the NBA in points per game. But even then, Dončić could not win. In February, on The Hoop Collective podcast, Tim MacMahon discussed the Lakers' problems this season, saying: "If there's a 'blame pie', [Dončić] can have a slice of it, but there's plenty to go around." His co-host, Brian Windhorst, joked: "Luka likes pie." There was still gossip about a custody battle with his former partner over their children. Then, when Dončić strained his hamstring as the playoffs approached, and reportedly scoured Europe for a cure, the narrative flipped from "he's lazy" to "he's too driven". The injury brings the vultures back to the carcass. If he rushes back and fails, they will blame his "conditioning". If he stays out to protect his future, they will blame his "heart". Which brings us back to the man in Miami. He is attracted to figures like Tate because he wants to be seen. He is told he can gain worth and value if he just works hard, gets ripped and keeps grinding. But even a millionaire athlete can't win that war in the modern landscape. In sports, out of sports, people are drifting apart. To make it worse, we don't even have a common language to talk about any more. Everything has become a political statement. Look at Dončić. He can weave through double teams and control the entire court, yet we get stuck arguing about his body fat. Yapping about his relationship troubles.

Açık Sorular

  • Will Dončić's hamstring injury heal in time for the playoffs?
  • How will the Lakers perform in the postseason with Dončić's status uncertain?
  • Will the media narrative shift based on his recovery approach?

İlgili Konular

Bu haber ilk olarak şurada yayınlandı: Guardian Sport.

İlgili Haberler

Britain's Falling Healthy Life Expectancy Is a National Scandal
Gelişiyor·03.05.2026

Britain's Falling Healthy Life Expectancy Is a National Scandal

Analysis from the Health Foundation reveals a devastating two-year decline in healthy life expectancy in Britain, with the UK now ranking 20th out of 21 high-income countries, just above the US. Worsening mental health among younger adults shows the sharpest deterioration, while the pandemic is not to blame. By 2028, when retirement age rises to 67, the average person will be in poor health over six years before stopping work. Huge geographical disparities exist, with London improving while Blackpool and Hartlepool see steepest declines.

Guardian Business
Why human minds will stay special even as AI advances
Opinion·03.05.2026

Why human minds will stay special even as AI advances

Princeton professor Tom Griffiths argues that human intelligence will remain special despite AI advances because our cognitive abilities evolved in response to specific biological constraints – finite lifespans, limited brain capacity, and communication through speech. While AI systems can process more data and scale their capabilities, they lack the breadth of human experience and struggle with tasks humans find simple. Griffiths contends that intelligence isn't a single scale like height, but rather encompasses many different ways of being smart, and AI will ultimately be better at some things and worse at others rather than universally superhuman.

Guardian Tech
The price of exposure: how Britain's dependence creates vulnerability
Gelişiyor·01.05.2026

The price of exposure: how Britain's dependence creates vulnerability

The Bank of England's warning that food inflation could reach 7% exposes Britain's systemic vulnerability to geopolitical shocks. An analysis argues that UK key sectors run on thin margins with no resilience reserves, while digital infrastructure and energy dependence on the Strait of Hormuz create critical exposure. Former Trump official Fiona Hill warned the UK homeland is 'back on the pitch' as Russia conducts sabotage and cyber-attacks, urging a political narrative linking security to everyday life that British politics currently lacks.

Guardian Business
The case for an AI slop tax
Gelişiyor·30.04.2026

The case for an AI slop tax

With 57% of voters believing AI risks outweigh benefits and 74% thinking government isn't doing enough to regulate it, the political moment for AI legislation is ripe. The author argues for a 1% "slop tax" on AI companies to combat the flood of low-quality AI-generated content that threatens human creativity and cultural institutions. The revenue would fund grants for artists, researchers, and cultural institutions—the very groups whose work trained these AI models.

Guardian Business
Bu konuda daha fazlaluka dončić