The Controversy Behind TikTok’s Ban of ‘SkinnyTok’: The Disturbing Truth Behind the Trend
- On June 7, 2025, TikTok blocked search results for the hashtag 'SkinnyTok' worldwide and redirected users to mental health support resources to limit harmful content exposure.
- This action followed rising concern from European policymakers and wellness experts linking 'SkinnyTok' to unhealthy weight loss and eating disorder content that violated TikTok's policies.
- 'SkinnyTok' videos often glorified extreme thinness, encouraged toxic dieting mantras, and targeted young women and teenage girls through algorithm-driven promotion of disordered eating behaviors.
- A 2024 study found young women can be harmed by such content within eight minutes, with individuals with eating disorders seeing 4343% more toxic videos, according to health experts and researchers.
- The ban aims to reduce harmful exposure and reflects calls for broader cultural shifts and improved regulation, though experts caution damaging content may persist beyond the banned hashtag.
15 Articles
15 Articles
People Are Calling Out Popular Internet Trends That Need To Stop ASAP, And Yikes
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TikTok Banned #Skinnytok — But the Pressure on Teen Girls Just Rebranded
TikTok just made a move aimed to help protect teen girls’ mental health — but it feels like too little, too late. The social media app announced that they banned the hashtag “SkinnyTok” from being searched worldwide after pressure from European policymakers. What Is SkinnyTok? According to Politico, the TikTok ban happened because of the popularity of “SkinnyTok,” with young women promoting extreme diets and weight loss tips. “[We] have bl…
Bank customer on the hook for fraudulent charges; TikTok blocks #SkinnyTok: CBC's Marketplace cheat sheet #Canada #CanadaLife #CanadaNews
Miss something this week? Don’t panic. CBC’s Marketplace rounds up the consumer and health news you need. Want this in your inbox? Get the Marketplace newsletter every Friday. The bank insists he’s responsible for fraudulent charges on his credit card, yet provides no evidence A Scotiabank visa cardholder was left on the hook for $20,000 in charges he didn’t make, even though an expert told CBC’s Go Public there wasn’t evidence to blame the cust…
‘Harmful’ TikTok trend fueling new wave of ‘dangerous’ diet culture
TikTok has long been a breeding ground for viral trends, but its latest subculture, “SkinnyTok,” is reigniting old diet culture in a digital age. Behind the trendy filters and catchy sounds lies an extremely problematic reality – a community where thinness is idolised, extreme calorie deficits are glamorised, and the pursuit of a shrinking body is celebrated, often at the expense of mental and physical health. The rise of SkinnyTok SkinnyTok ref…
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