A viral clip circulating online shows a weighing scale placed prominently at the entrance of Clavicular’s mansion, seemingly serving as a checkpoint for female guests. It shows a young woman arriving at the house and calculating her body weight at the entrance.
The video also shows content creator N3on and boxer Ryan Garcia, both of whom react to what’s happening.
Visibly surprised, Garcia remarks, “They gotta weigh themselves. Do you see that?”
N3on confirms it without hesitation: “Yeah, they have to use the scale.”
Garcia, still taken aback, adds, “That’s insa ne. If they don’t pass the body index… they can’t even come.”
A prominent figure in the looksmaxxing space, Clavicular advocates for a systematized approach to physical optimization. For those unfamiliar, looksmaxxing refers to the deliberate effort to enhance one’s appearance through lifestyle changes, physical techniques, and, increasingly, medical or pharma interventions.
Clavicular’s standards, both for himself and for those around him, have drawn attention for being particularly rigid. It was also recently highlighted in a broadcast posted by his girlfriend, where she documented a two-month physical change.
Holding up an older photo beside her current appearance, she pointed to sharper facial definition, especially around the jawline and cheekbones.
She described her previous look as having a “straight neck to face” appearance and credited Clavicular’s regimen for the shift. That regimen reportedly includes techniques like bonesmashing, alongside other methods commonly discussed within looksmaxxing circles.
In a previous conversation, Clavicular spoke openly about the use of peptides, particularly retatrutide, a next-generation GLP-1 receptor agonist often compared to d**gs like Ozempic.
“Peptides are great,” he said. “The most popular one out there right now is called retatrutide. It’s a very similar d**g to Ozempic. They’re the same class.”
Clavicular frames weight loss as a foundational step in improving appearance, especially in the context of rising obesity rates.
“You look at the obesity stats in America,” he explained, “and the average person is just so egregiously overweight that you can’t even really start to analyze what’s wrong, what are the flaws in their looks until they lose a substantial amount of weight. So just for the average person, getting to like 10 to 12 percent body fat is going to put you so far ahead of the average person.”