During the stream, Clavicular was dining with friend and collaborator Andrew Morales when Morales noticed three women nearby and pointed them out to the camera, commenting on their appearance and encouraging engagement. The women then approached the table, setting up an interaction that would quickly move from flirtatious banter into a broader conversation about who truly originated the aesthetics-focused “looksmaxxing” culture.
In the widely shared clip, the first transgender woman opens with the line “Why am I mogging you right now?” using “mogging,” a term in looksmaxxing spaces that means significantly outshining someone else in attractiveness. She then adds, “I’m dragqueenmaxxing right now, no shade,” linking her presentation to both drag culture and the looksmaxxing vocabulary that Clavicular’s audience knows well.
According to reporting and the footage, the woman asks whether Clavicular and Morales can tell she is transgender, and when they respond that they cannot, she emphasizes how effectively she is “mogging” him. Morales appears particularly focused on her body, admitting on stream that he was looking at her “ass,” while the group continues playful but pointed teasing about who looks better.
As the conversation unfolds, the three women reveal that they are all transgender, prompting visible surprise from both men and leading to questions about tucking, surgeries, and hormone use. One woman mentions doing “peptides” and being “on reta,” shorthand for the acne medication isotretinoin , aligning her regimen with some of the pharmaceutical tactics discussed in looksmaxxing communities.
The central moment of the exchange comes when one of the transgender women tells Clavicular, “You know that trans women are the OG looksmaxxers?” asserting a kind of historical and cultural primacy in extreme appearance modification. A second woman reinforces the point, saying, “We originated the program,” while another jokes that he is “copying” them, albeit with the caveat “no shade.”
In the clip, Clavicular responds that he has seen posts about transgender women using looksmaxxing language online before his rise, referring specifically to Reddit discussions in the early 2020s. However, he appears hesitant to fully concede that he is directly “copying” their approach, keeping the tone light while the women lean into their claim as originators.
Coverage of the incident notes that while looksmaxxing as a term and concept has strong links to incel and male‑dominated self‑improvement forums, transgender women have long relied on a combination of hormones, surgeries, dermatological care, styling, and fitness to align appearance with gender identity and social safety. This history underpins their assertion that transgender communities were “maxxing” their looks out of necessity, community knowledge‑sharing, and survival long before the practice was branded as a male aesthetics trend online.
Clavicular, whose legal name is reported as Braden Eric Peters, is a U.S.‑based streamer who gained rapid prominence in 2025 for content centered on “looksmaxxing” on platforms such as Kick and TikTok. Commentators and reporters have described his brand as controversial because it showcases and normalizes extreme tactics for altering appearance, including unconventional or risky practices.
Looksmaxxing, a term emerging from online forums in the 2010s and 2020s, refers to aggressively optimizing one’s physical appearance through a mix of grooming, fitness, medical interventions, and sometimes unsafe experimentation. Reporting on Clavicular’s content notes that some looksmaxxing communities discuss anabolic steroids, so‑called “bone smashing” to change facial structure, cosmetic surgery, and even alleged use of substances like methamphetamines for weight control, drawing criticism from health experts and online observers.
In this context, the three transgender women’s claim to being “OG looksmaxxers” functions as both a joke and a critique—suggesting that what is framed as a new male‑centric trend borrows heavily from longstanding trans and queer strategies around beauty, passing, and presentation. Their comments also implicitly highlight how trans communities often develop knowledge about hormones, skincare, body composition, and surgery years before mainstream influencers popularize similar regimes.
The clip has attracted more than 3 million views on X, where users are reposting and captioning the video, sometimes praising the women for “mogging” the streamer and other times debating whether the interaction was playful, confrontational, or both. One article notes that users “roasted” Clavicular for being outshone by the women on his own stream, framing the moment as a reversal of the usual hierarchy in looksmaxxing content, which often positions the streamer as an aspirational figure.
Comment sections and quote‑tweets include a mix of admiration for the women’s confidence, critical takes on looksmaxxing culture, and ongoing transphobic commentary that typically appears when trans visibility intersects with viral content. Some posts frame the women’s “OG looksmaxxers” line as a succinct summary of how trans women have historically navigated and reshaped beauty norms, while others focus primarily on the entertainment value of the exchange.
Media coverage has largely emphasized the humorous tone of the interaction while pointing to the deeper issues it surfaces about the commodification of beauty work pioneered in transgender and queer communities. Articles also note that, unlike some other controversies surrounding Clavicular’s streams—including prior incidents involving public confrontations and platform moderation decisions—the restaurant encounter itself remained non‑violent and appeared consensually playful among those at the table.
Analyses of the clip situate it within a broader debate over who “owns” certain beauty practices and terminologies and how marginalized communities often see their innovations rebranded without credit when they enter mainstream or male‑dominated spaces. In the case of looksmaxxing, journalists note that while incel forums and male self‑improvement spaces popularized the term, many of the underlying techniques—hormonal regimens, facial feminization or masculinization surgeries, strategic use of cosmetics, and body contouring—have long been refined in trans and drag communities.
The fact that the three women directly addressed this dynamic on camera, during a stream watched by many young men immersed in looksmaxxing culture, gives the moment a particular significance for advocates of trans visibility and recognition. For some viewers, their confident presence and technical fluency in similar routines to those promoted by Clavicular challenge assumptions that extreme aesthetic optimization is inherently a cisgender male pursuit.
At the same time, health professionals and commentators who have criticized looksmaxxing more broadly continue to raise concerns about how normalization of extreme regimens—whether in trans, cis, or mixed communities—can encourage unsafe practices, disordered eating, and distorted self‑image. Current coverage of the incident does not indicate that any of the parties in the restaurant promoted specific harmful techniques in this interaction, but it situates the playful dispute over who is “OG” within a subculture already under scrutiny for its most dangerous edges.
As of early April 2026, there is no indication that the three transgender women involved have chosen to publicly identify themselves or turn the moment into a formal campaign or ongoing content series, and they have not been widely named in major outlets. Coverage instead refers to them collectively as three attractive trans women who approached the table, highlighting their impact on the discourse despite their relative anonymity.
For Clavicular, the viral moment adds another layer to an already complex public image shaped by previous streaming controversies and debates over the ethics of monetizing extreme body modification content. While this particular clip centers more on banter than conflict, it arrives in the wake of earlier viral incidents on his streams, including altercations involving guests and criticism of his handling of heated situations, reinforcing scrutiny of how his content influences audiences.
Observers note that the “OG looksmaxxers” exchange may prove to be a reference point in future discussions about the intersections of trans identity, internet masculinity culture, and the commercialization of beauty labor that has historically been borne disproportionately by transgender women. Whether it remains a fleeting meme or evolves into a sustained conversation, the viral clip has already prompted many viewers to reconsider who has been doing the most intensive appearance work—and for how long—within and beyond the looksmaxxing world.