The disturbing rise of Clavicular: how a looksmaxxer turned his ‘horror story’ into fame

A picture


His gonzo argot of ‘mogging’ and ‘jestermaxxing’ masks a malign chauvinist philosophy, and his audience keeps growingHow’s your “jestermaxxing” game? Have you been “brutally frame-mogged” lately? If you’ve been finding this kind of online discourse even more impenetrable than usual, a 20-year-old content creator calling himself Clavicular is probably to blame.Born Braden Peters, Clavicular is a manosphere-adjacent influencer who has recently broken containment for a string of high-profile controversies, including livestreaming himself apparently running over a pedestrian with his Tesla Cybertruck and being filmed chanting the lyrics to Kanye West’s Heil Hitler in a nightclub with the self-styled “misogynist influencer” Andrew Tate and the white nationalist commentator Nick Fuentes.Before taking up with what some feel are among the worst men alive, Clavicular was known only as a “looksmaxxer”, a young man intent on optimising his physical attractiveness by frequently extreme measures (such as steroids, surgery and, er, taking a hammer to his jaw).Yet Clavicular’s gonzo live streams and absurd lingo have seen him escape his subcultural silo, landing him a modelling gig at New York fashion week and a profile in the New York Times.So where has he come from? And what does his rise mean for humanity?Peters came to prominence last year on the streaming platform Kick (like Twitch, but more laissez-faire with content moderation), where he now has nearly 180,000 followers.

That’s dwarfed by his audience on TikTok which, at time of writing, is more than 760,000.Clavicular’s niche is looksmaxxing, a practice of physical self-optimisation increasingly popular among young men.(His screen name refers to the collarbone, which is prized within that online community.) Having achieved a disquieting transformation himself, Peters first gained a following for posting about the process behind his hard-won face and physique, and the rewards he has allegedly reaped with women.For a fee, Peters will also coach individuals on how to “ascend”, as he puts it, and become more handsome themselves, though lately his focus has shifted from looksmaxxing-specific content to streaming great stretches of his day-to-day life.

Peters earned more than $100,000 (£74,000) from Kick last month alone; his most recent upload to the platform is more than nine hours long.Peters is notorious for the extreme lengths by which he claims to have achieved his chiselled appearance.By his own account, he is infertile as a result of years of steroid abuse, and uses methamphetamine to suppress his appetite.“It’s really not as bad as people think,” he told another Kick streamer last October.According to the New York Times, Peters began looksmaxxing at 14, ordering testosterone and fat dissolvers on the internet and refining his vision by altering pictures of himself using Photoshop.

His parents gave up trying to intervene, he said, when they realised “there was nothing that they could do to stop my ascension”,He was subsequently expelled from college for possessing testosterone,These days, Peters’ goals extend to double jaw surgery,For greater facial harmony on a budget, he has endorsed smashing facial bones with a hammer – or, if you are really in “hardmaxxing” mode, your fist,“Bone smashing is legit,” Peters said in December, in conversation with the popular conservative podcaster Michael Knowles.

It should go without saying that medical experts strongly advise against this.Having begun with “incels”, self-described “involuntary celibates” who see conventional attractiveness as a claim on women, looksmaxxing is considered a subculture within the online manosphere, defined by its hostility to feminism and belief in male supremacy.In its pseudoscientific calculations and striving towards a physical ideal based in whiteness, looksmaxxing has also been criticised for reviving “eugenic beauty standards”.Peters has dismissed these accusations of racism as “dumb”, and defended his repeated use of the N-word as “not a racist thing”.A Rolling Stone writer who paid to access Clavicular’s online academy reported finding a “godly colouring” routine for non-white looksmaxxers who got the “short end of the phenotype stick”.

In the advice on translating physical attractiveness into sexual success, meanwhile, women are referred to as “targets”, “slayables” or “foids” (“female humanoids”), while followers (the “Clan”) are advised to “inch closer until your erection is her problem” or “guide her hand”,Asked to comment on whether these techniques constituted sexual coercion, Peters responded: “Who the fuck is rolling stone magazine LOL”,Peters claims to be apolitical, stating that he will endorse whichever party gives him “the fattest bag”,That’s not to say he doesn’t have opinions,On the political commentator Michael Knowles’s podcast, Clavicular said he would vote for Democrat Gavin Newsom over US vice-president JD Vance because the latter was ugly, or “subhuman”, with a “recessed side profile”.

(In the same interview, Peters described actor Sydney Sweeney as “malformed” with “eyes of doom.”)While some have described Peters’ worldview as standard incel nihilism, he doesn’t seem all that invested in the aims of the manosphere.Peters’ affiliation with Tate, the “misogynistic influencer” accused of sex trafficking (who denies wrongdoing), and Fuentes, an avowed white nationalist, seems motivated by a shared love of shock value and online infamy rather than a mutual or coherent ideology.On the viral video showing Peters with Fuentes, Andrew Tate and his brother Tristan Tate, chanting along to Heil Hitler in a Miami nightclub, Peters defended it as “just a song”.Clavicular’s ridiculousness can make it hard to take him seriously – with his malign influence masked by his idiosyncratic argot.

Working on your personality, for example, is derided by Peters and his followers as “jestermaxxing”,If you “mog” someone, you are better looking than they are,If you “frame-mog” someone, your shoulders are superior to theirs,If you are “slaymaxxing”, you are having sex,Like the ubiquitous 67 meme, the lingo is deliberately obscure to exclude “normies”, but it has increasingly been catching on, even in spheres that you’d really rather were more discerning.

Last month, the US government’s Department of War tweeted: “Low cortisol.Locked in.Lethalitymaxxing.”Clavicular’s profile has been boosted by a string of recent controversies, most originating from his own streams.In November, he broadcast himself seemingly injecting his then 17-year-old girlfriend with fat-dissolving peptides, calling himself “Dr Clav”.

The following month, he appeared to strike a pedestrian with his Tesla Cybertruck.“Is he dead? … Hopefully,” Peters said to his passenger.He later claimed that the man had been stalking him, and that he had been acting in self-defence.Peters has said he is a target for other content creators who want to piggyback off his profile by provoking him in public; others have suggested the incident was staged.It has proved difficult to verify independently.

Certainly, all attention is good attention, per the Clavicular worldview, and it has proved difficult to substantiate his controversies or even pin them on him.It bears emphasising that Clavicular is not yet a celebrity, or even straightforwardly aspirational.He has even expressed doubts about his path, describing his life as a “fucking horror story” and expressing regrets about being expelled from college.“I wish I had that experience … I will never get to live the normal life, of a normal kid – so I’m going to try to mog.”
technologySee all
A picture

Is it smarter to have a dumb home? ‘We’ve seen clients unable to flush toilets’

When the smart home devices Elly Bailey was expecting in the post never showed up at her Gold Coast home, she was frustrated. As a technology reviewer, these products were crucial for her work.When she eventually found the cause, she had to laugh. It wasn’t a sticky-fingered neighbour or a rogue delivery driver causing her to miss parcels but her smart doorbell – the very thing she’d hoped would prevent missed deliveries, and part of exactly the range of internet-connected devices she was meant to be reviewing.“It’s pretty funny,” says Bailey, 33, who goes by the handle @ellyawesome on TikTok, where she has more than 1

A picture

The bogus four-day workweek that AI supposedly ‘frees up’

The front-page headline in a recent Washington Post was breathless: “These companies say AI is key to their four-day workweeks.” The subhead was euphoric: “Some companies are giving workers back more time as artificial intelligence takes over more tasks.”As the Post explained: “more companies may move toward a shortened workweek, several executives and researchers predict, as workers, especially those in younger generations, continue to push for better work-life balance.”Hurray! There’s utopia at the end of the AI rainbow! A better work-life balance!You may have come across similar articles in Fortune magazine and the New York Times. The AI spin brigade is in full force

A picture

Hazardous substances found in all headphones tested by ToxFREE project

You wear them at work, you wear them at play, you wear them to relax. You may even get sweaty in them at the gym.But an investigation into headphones has found every single pair tested contained substances hazardous to human health, including chemicals that can cause cancer, neurodevelopmental problems and the feminisation of males.Even products by market-leading brands such as Bose, Panasonic, Samsung and Sennheiser were found to contain harmful chemicals in the formulation of the plastics from which they are made.Campaigners condemned “a market-wide failure” as they called for broad bans on whole classes of endocrine-disrupting chemicals in consumer goods and greater transparency from manufacturers about what is in their products

A picture

Tech billionaires fly in for Delhi AI expo as Modi jostles to lead in south

Silicon Valley tech billionaires will land in Delhi this week for an AI summit hosted by India’s prime minister, Narendra Modi, where leaders of the global south will wrestle for control over the fast-developing technology.During the week-long AI Impact Summit, attended by thousands of tech executives, government officials and AI safety experts, tech companies valued at trillions of dollars will rub along with leaders of countries such as Kenya and Indonesia, where average wages dip well below $1,000 a month.Amid a push to speed up AI adoption across the globe, Sundar Pichai, Sam Altman and Dario Amodei, the heads of Google, OpenAI and Anthropic, will all be there. Rishi Sunak and George Osborne, a former British prime minister and a former chancellor, will each be pushing for greater adoption of AI. Sunak has taken jobs for Microsoft and Anthropic and Osborne leads OpenAI’s push to deepen and widen the use of ChatGPT beyond its existing 800 million users

A picture

Palantir moves headquarters to Miami amid tech’s growing retreat to Florida

Palantir announced on Tuesday that it has moved its headquarters to Miami from Denver. The data analytics company, criticized for its role in the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown, joins a host of other businesses and billionaires that recently moved to Florida in search of a more business-friendly climate.Palantir’s move across state lines comes after its chair, Peter Thiel, announced on 31 December that he opened a Miami office for his private investment firm. Thiel already has a mansion in Miami Beach. The company, previously headquartered in Palo Alto, announced the move on X but did not provide further details or respond to a request for comment

A picture

AI’s workplace revolution is here – and anxiety is rising with it

Hello, and welcome to TechScape. I’m your host, Blake Montgomery, The Guardian’s US tech editor, writing to you while cheering on Team USA in the Winter Olympics.Throughout 2026, The Guardian will publish a series of stories about how artificial intelligence is affecting modern labor. We’re calling it Reworked: A series about what’s at stake as AI disrupts our jobs.Our first story published this morning