Inside the Mind of Andrew Tate: How He Built a Following of Isolated, Frustrated Men

The psychology behind Andrew Tateā€™s hyper-toxic Masculinity: why young men are falling for It

Ryan Trincieri šŸ–‹ļø
Ryan Trincieri Writes

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From TikTok to Real Life: The Implications of Andrew Tateā€™s Brand of Toxic Masculinity (image created with leanardo.ai)

Before the storm of concerned think-pieces, NGO revilements, and missions to have him eliminated from online entertainment, Iā€™d never known about Andrew Tate.

Or then again on the off chance that I did temporarily run over him, there wasnā€™t a lot to separate one terminally-online boaster from the endless others I look past consistently.

Yet, when the media group moves, it moves. Presently everybody from Marie Claire to the Day to day Mirror is hurrying to print hurriedly ordered profiles recording the fizzled Older sibling candidateā€™s ascent to distinction on TikTok as the organizer behind ā€˜Tricksterā€™s Collegeā€™ (a web-based brand implying to assist men with making easy money and not, vitally, a genuine college).

For the new, hereā€™s the tl;dr. Brought into the world in Chicago, Illinois yet brought up in Luton, Bedfordshire, Andrew Tate is a 35-year-old kickboxer who mysteriously talks and dresses like a man from Florida.

In 2017 Tate vowed to help Donald Trump, mocked #MeToo informers, and started springing up in extreme right media circles.

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Ryan Trincieri šŸ–‹ļø
Ryan Trincieri Writes

Freelance writer and coach, expert in self-improvement, finance , health & fitness. Get tips & inspiration Contact: ryantrincieri@gmail.com