Clavicular is Stable Following Hospitalization for A Seizure, Parents Have Flown In from New Jersey

Brandon “Clavicular” Peters, a 20-year-old content creator known for his “looksmaxxing” broadcasts on Kick, was rushed to a hospital in Miami, Florida, on April 14 after suffering an apparent OD and a seizure during a live broadcast.

As of the latest reports, Peters is listed in stable condition, though his parents have since traveled from New Jersey to be by his side.

The incident unfolded before a live online audience as Peters sat alongside two friends. Those watching noticed something was wrong as the broadcast progressed. Peters himself gave an early indication that he was struggling.

“Dude, I’m so… oh my god, bro,”

he said at one point after being handed a cup of water.

“Destroyed,”

he added, describing how he felt, and said he was trying his

“best”

to stay responsive.

Shortly after, the camera was turned away from him, his head briefly dipped into frame, the audio cut out, and the broadcast faded to black entirely.

Videos circulating on social media showed Peters being carried toward an ambulance outside the location where he had been broadcasting. TMZ, among the first to report on the situation, obtained audio from a 911 call in which a dispatcher referenced a

“20-year-old male OD”

at the address from which Peters had been live.

Reporter Taylor Lorenz provided updates in real time on X, writing:

“He is in stable condition but still in and out of consciousness. The hospital will likely keep him for 72 hours. He ODd and had a seizure. Will share more updates as I receive.”

Lorenz later added that Peters’ family was now on the way, posting:

“His parents are apparently flying in from NJ to see him. Hopefully they can get him into some sort of treatment program.”

Fellow creator Androgenic, who was present during the broadcast, spoke publicly for the first time shortly afterward, describing how rapidly Peters’ condition changed.

“I hadn’t seen him in this state before and he went from speaking to being fairly unresponsive in mere seconds,”

he said.

“Within a minute we all realized the situation, turned the stream off, picked him up and rushed him to the hospital.”

While the word “stable” has provided some reassurance to Peters’ followers, those with a closer eye on the medical side of the situation have pointed out that such an episode carries risks that go well beyond the immediate emergency, including the potential for lasting neurological consequences.