Gay Twitter users proudly show off their hairy chests to prove they aren’t ‘ick’
After a tweet that called hairy chests “ick” went viral, outraged queer men decided to respond by doing what they do best: Taking their shirts off.
On Monday (17 May), Twitter timelines quickly became rammed with Lourve-ready photos of men proudly showing off their gloriously hairy chests, all to squash body-shaming.
The relentlessly thirsty trend that is a modern-day act of Divine Providence took off after a Twitter user tweeted: “Hairy chests are a massive ick.”
We are once again reminding all 192 million daily active users that, sometimes, it’s perfectly fine not to tweet. Yes, really.
Soon enough, countless queer folk unbuttoned their striped Zara and H&M shirts – or took them off altogether – in defiance as they did their best Tom Selleck in Magnum PI impression.
Braving the body-shaming by bearing their beautifully hairy chests for the world (or at least, their followers) to see, users of all body types and looks sought to uplift one another and say it is perfectly OK to have body hair, or none at all.
And this even included RuPaul’s Drag Race UK‘s Crystal who said saying hairy chests are ick “is how to summon me”, which is very, very good to know.
https://twitter.com/crystalwillseeu/status/1394492019028922379
https://twitter.com/highluronicacid/status/1394437000577617928
https://twitter.com/TeachToAmerica/status/1394500990519320578
https://twitter.com/JGDavison94/status/1394534085482237957
Personally my hairy chest and I think body shaming is a massive ick pic.twitter.com/9HcbIwQOOa
— asstronom1cal (@asstronom1cal) May 17, 2021
If you want a hairy chest pic there's loads on my timeline 😘 love for all body types ✌🏽 https://t.co/6jMB3oLxSI— Mufseen (@mufseen) May 18, 2021
https://twitter.com/listentoquincy/status/1394481068212772864
As Grindr’s Twitter account, the poet of our generation, put it: “Hairy chests are hot.”
hairy chests are hot— Grindr (@Grindr) May 18, 2021
You heard it here first.
This certainly isn’t the first time that queer Twitter users have rallied against a take that they see as body-shaming.
In 2018, a user tweeted: “Dear gays with a waist larger than 32”, floral prints just aren’t for you, sis.
“Hust because Zara makes them in a XL doesn’t mean it’s for you.”
The backlash was swift. Hundreds of queer men dunked the user for their weird, gatekeeping opinion on, er, floral shirts.
“IGNORANT,” one user fumed. “I can wear floral, I can wear stripes, I can wear what I please because I love myself enough to not let people like you get me down.
“Don’t be mad that when I wear floral I end up looking like a whole beautiful tree & you don’t .”
To paraphrase the Spice Girls here: All you need is body positivity.