who said your body my choice tiktok
The phrase "your body, my choice" surged on TikTok as a provocative, ironic twist on the feminist slogan "my body, my choice," often used in misogynistic comments targeting women's videos post-2024 U.S. election.
Origin Story
No single individual "said" it first on TikTok in a definitive viral clip, but it traces back to online right-wing and incel-adjacent circles. Nick Fuentes, a controversial political commentator, popularized similar rhetoric in videos and streams, where clips of him mocking women's autonomy (like claims men control women's bodies) got remixed into TikTok audios. These spread rapidly among teen boys repeating it as edgy humor from 4chan-style memes, amplified after Trump's reelection.
TikTok Spread
- Post-election (Nov 2024), the phrase exploded: Institute for Strategic Dialogue reported exponential use on TikTok, X, Reddit, and Facebook, with mass-commenting bots and trolls hitting women's posts.
- Teen/pre-teen boys adopted it from TikTok sounds, turning it into schoolyard chants—Reddit threads from r/redscarepod and r/offmychest describe kids parroting it to provoke.
- Women responded with viral clapbacks like "your balls, my knee," fueling duets and stitches that hit millions of views.
Cultural Backlash
Forum discussions highlight divided views:
"Teenage boys will find something you find offensive and get angry about, and target that button and press it as much as possible. This is nothing new."
- Pro-harmless meme side : Some see it as teenage edgelording, akin to 90s hip-hop bravado or old 4chan influence on Trump memes—kids testing boundaries online.
- Concerned parent/activist side : Reports of real-world harassment at schools/colleges, linking it to broader misogyny spikes (e.g., CNN noted surges in "get back to the kitchen" attacks).
- Multi-platform trend: By mid-Nov 2024, it trended offline too, with Vox calling it a "MAGA attack line" and New Yorker dubbing it irony-poisoned right-wing rallying cry.
Timeline Highlights
Date| Event
---|---
Pre-2024| Roots in incel forums, Fuentes clips.8
Nov 6-8, 2024| TikTok comments go viral; Reddit threads erupt.14
Nov 11+| Media coverage (CNN, Vox); campus incidents reported.35
Ongoing (2026)| Faded but resurfaces in gender debates.3
TL;DR : Emerged from Nick Fuentes-inspired TikTok audios, memed by teen boys post-election—no one "creator," but a collective troll wave.
Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.