Meet the men calling out 'masculinity' trends
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.
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.
Here is how they are trying.
"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.
His real name is Braden Peters and he's aged 20.
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. "
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.
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.
"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.
"They were focused on male endocrine health, not sexuality or identity. "
"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 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.
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