The Body as Status: Muscularity, Engagement, and Body Image Risk on #GymTok

2026-06-29Computers and Society

Computers and Society
AI summary

The authors studied videos tagged #GymTok on TikTok, a fitness community focused on muscular bodies. They found that videos showing very muscular bodies and content about supplements or steroids were seen as most harmful to viewers' body image. These types of videos also got more views and interactions, meaning the platform's algorithm likely promotes them more. The authors suggest this could make boys and young men feel pressured to meet tough muscular ideals, which might hurt their body image and self-esteem.

body imagemuscularity idealsocial mediaTikTokcontent analysisalgorithmic amplificationbody objectificationsocial comparisonsupplementssteroids
Authors
Magdalayna Curry, Minh Duc Chu, Changhao Yan, Stuart B. Murray, Kristina Lerman, Lindsay E. Young
Abstract
Body image concerns among boys and young men are increasingly oriented toward muscularity, with social media serving as a central context for communicating and evaluating these ideals. While prior research has focused on the thin-ideal, less is known about how the muscular-ideal is represented and reinforced on visual social media platforms. This study examines (1) dominant content themes, (2) perceived harm to body image, and (3) engagement patterns across #GymTok, a muscularity-oriented fitness subculture on TikTok. We conducted a content analysis of 2,210 #GymTok videos annotated by clinical experts across themes like self-objectification, rigid dieting, excessive exercise, supplement and steroid use, and masculinity. Annotators also rated the perceived harm of videos to the viewers' body image, and depicted bodies were coded according to muscularity level. Perceived harm varied across content themes, with supplement- and steroid-related content rated as most harmful. Engagement was positively associated with both muscularity and perceived harm: videos depicting more muscular bodies and those rated as more harmful received greater views, likes, shares, and comments. Although less prevalent, masculinity-focused content generated the highest engagement. These findings suggest that TikTok may not only expose users to muscular ideals and potentially harmful behaviors, but also algorithmically amplify them. By increasing the visibility of highly muscular and harmful content, recommendation systems may intensify social comparison processes, while objectification elevates the muscular body into a marker of status, masculinity, and social worth. Together, these dynamics may contribute to body image risk among boys and young men.