惯性聚合 高效追踪和阅读你感兴趣的博客、新闻、科技资讯
阅读原文 在惯性聚合中打开

推荐订阅源

F
Full Disclosure
博客园 - 三生石上(FineUI控件)
MyScale Blog
MyScale Blog
Apple Machine Learning Research
Apple Machine Learning Research
L
LINUX DO - 最新话题
T
The Blog of Author Tim Ferriss
P
Proofpoint News Feed
宝玉的分享
宝玉的分享
小众软件
小众软件
Hugging Face - Blog
Hugging Face - Blog
GbyAI
GbyAI
Cyber Security Advisories - MS-ISAC
Cyber Security Advisories - MS-ISAC
V
Visual Studio Blog
爱范儿
爱范儿
freeCodeCamp Programming Tutorials: Python, JavaScript, Git & More
博客园_首页
CTFtime.org: upcoming CTF events
CTFtime.org: upcoming CTF events
月光博客
月光博客
博客园 - 叶小钗
D
Docker
H
Hackread – Cybersecurity News, Data Breaches, AI and More
T
Tailwind CSS Blog
D
DataBreaches.Net
酷 壳 – CoolShell
酷 壳 – CoolShell
B
Blog RSS Feed
量子位
美团技术团队
Vercel News
Vercel News
Y
Y Combinator Blog
IT之家
IT之家
Martin Fowler
Martin Fowler
OSCHINA 社区最新新闻
OSCHINA 社区最新新闻
S
SegmentFault 最新的问题
腾讯CDC
Recent Announcements
Recent Announcements
Google DeepMind News
Google DeepMind News
罗磊的独立博客
让小产品的独立变现更简单 - ezindie.com
让小产品的独立变现更简单 - ezindie.com
G
Google Developers Blog
Microsoft Azure Blog
Microsoft Azure Blog
The Register - Security
The Register - Security
博客园 - 司徒正美
N
Netflix TechBlog - Medium
S
Schneier on Security
博客园 - 聂微东
U
Unit 42
D
Darknet – Hacking Tools, Hacker News & Cyber Security
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
雷峰网
雷峰网
Latest news
Latest news

Variety

Beastie Boys’ G-Son Studios Launches Kickstarter to Reopen as Venue 'CBS Evening News' Back Over 4 Million Viewers for First Time in Weeks How to Stream Summer House Reunion Live Online Spotify Adds 650-Plus Narrated Articles to Audiobook Lineup, Including From Variety Keegan-Michael Key, Tom Brady to Guest on Tubi's 'The Other Football' House of the Dragon: Battle of Gullet Is 'Craziest TV Episode Ever' Vic Michaelis on Dropout’s 'Very Important People' and 'Ponies' 'Ninja Warrior' Obstacle Racing Joins 2028 Los Angeles Summer Olympics 'Off Campus' Ratings: No. 3 Biggest Amazon Prime Video Debut Ever 'Take Me Home’ Bought by Willa for Theatrical Release, Impact Campaign Universal Studio Group Salutes Artisans on Pole Banners Around LA ‘Half Man’ Cast on Shooting Intense HBO Series and Polarizing Ending India's Zee Sets Unite8 Sports Channels, Eyes Soccer World Cup Rights 'Dutton Ranch' Scores Biggest Paramount+ Series Launch Ever Albert Wolsky Dead: "Grease" Costume Designer Was 95 The Best Knicks Merch to Buy Online: NBA Finals 2026 Kehlani Announces 'The Kehlani World Tour: North America' Dates Bright Eyes Celebrates Anniversaries at Hollywood Bowl: Concert Review 'Spider-Noir' Soundtrack to Feature Music by Kris Bowers and Michael Dean Parsons Olivia Rodrigo Reveals 'You Seem Pretty Sad for a Girl' Tracklist Documentary Market CoPro 28 Returns to Israel With Diverse Film Slate Variety Hires Corbin Bolies as AI Reporter 'Ben'Imana' Review: An Impassioned Exploration of Genocide's Legacy Drake Beats Michael Jackson's Record for Most No. 1s by Male Artist 'Toy Story 5' Filmmakers on Aging Woody, and Why LilyPad Isn't the Film's Villain How To Watch ESPN Unlimited Online For Free, Streaming, Free Trial Terence Sheridan Joins JustWatch as Senior VP of Media Strategy 'Landman' Star Sam Elliott Is Still Pursuing Honesty in His Art Christopher Nolan Set For Complete Retro at TIFF Lightbox Julia Louis-Dreyfus to Make Broadway Debut in 'Other Desert Cities' Hollywood Films Sat Out Cannes This Year. Does the Festival Need Them? Asake Announces ‘In God We Trust' Tour Dates With Uncle Waffles Maisie Williams Thriller Ignition Sells to U.K. and Other Territories Jason Sudeikis, Stephen Graham Star in Burberry Campaign Cate Blanchett's Proof of Concept Announces Second Class of Filmmakers Goes to Cannes Winner Carolina Maria de Jesus Unpacked by Maria Gal Michelle Obama, Craig Robinson to Host Live Recording at SXSW London Rio2C to Host Meeting of Ibero-American Vice Ministers of Culture NewsNation Readies Podcast Push, Sees Chance to Expand Beyond Cable Tegna Names Fox Veteran Patrick Paolini CEO Amid Nexstar Merger Legal Battle Giuseppe Tornatore to Be Honored at Italy’s Taormina Film Festival Russell Crowe Warns Paris Fans: 'As Soon as Somebody's a D--k, I'm Going' Paddington 4 Movie Finds Writers and Director Naseeruddin Shah, Jim Sarbh Series 'Made in India' Sets June Premiere 'The Scourge' Unites Triple Green CineCapital, Chanh Phuong Films BTS, Katseye, Sombr, 'Golden' Win Top Honors at American Music Awards Katseye Performs 'Pinky Up' at American Music Awards Sonny Rollins, Jazz’s ‘Saxophone Colossus,’ Dies at 95 Singapore's RisingJoy Hits 50 Platform Deals, Plans Original Content Sombr Makes It Rain at the American Music Awards With ‘Homewrecker’ American Music Awards Photo Gallery: Katseye, Karol G, EJAE and More 'Forever Your Maternal Animal' Review: An Arthouse Hangout Movie 'Six Months in a Pink and Blue Building' Review: A Tender Memory Piece Nicolas Cage Says Nolan Won’t Work With Him After Turning Down 'Insomnia' More Films Star Man Named Chris or Talking Animal Than an Older Woman Wendell Pierce on 'Jack Ryan' Return, 'Elsbeth' Finale and 'Othello' Queen Latifah On Hosting the AMAs, New Music and Taylor Swift 'Mono 222,' 'Dreaming of Lions' Among Mammoth Lakes Film Fest Awards Marlon Wayans on Scary Movie, Dave Chappelle and Harvey Weinstein How to Watch the 2026 American Music Awards Live Online Mandalorian and Grogu Box Office: Star Wars Spinoff Tops Memorial Day Ira Sachs on'The Man I Love,' Queer Cinema in the Age of Trump Netflix Brazil Unveils 5 New Titles, Including ‘Med’ With Clara Moneke Lebanese Comic John Achkar’s Special Picked up by MBC Shahid ‘Triptych,’ ‘Dark Hope,’ ‘Naked’ Lead Conecta Magaluf Lineup James Gray Says Ad Astra Was Taken Away From Him by Studio Pope Leo Issues AI Encyclical Warning Against 'Opaque Algorithms' Boots Riley Says Cannes Didn't Pick His Latest Movie I Love Boosters Uday Shankar: Cricket Boards Are Pricing Out Their Biggest Market Cuba Gooding Jr., Luke Ford, Keith Duffy and Qymira Board 'Lotus' 'Red Rocks' Review: Bruno Dumont's Latest Experiment Centers Children ‘A Girl Unknown’ Review: Understated and Aching Chinese Period Drama Korea Box Office: Yeon Sang-ho's 'Colony' Rockets to No. 1 'De Gaulle: Résistance’ Review: A Conventional But Engaging Biopic China Box Office: ‘Dear You’ Enjoys Spectacular Surge Euphoria Episode 7 Recap: Nate Dies, Cassie Tries to Sleep Her Way to the Top Kate Mansi to Exit 'General Hospital' After Three Years How to Watch 'Rick and Morty' Online: Streaming, Pricing, New Episodes CBS Isn't Suppressing Stephen Colbert's 'Only in Monroe' Public Access 'Passenger' Review: A Stylish, Satisfying Thrill-Ride How 'Obsession' Became an Unprecedented Box Office Horror Hit Drake Sets Album Chart Record as First to Debut in Top Three Slots Beartooth Singer Caleb Shomo Comes Out as Gay Box Office: 'Michael' Nears $800 Million, 'Devil Wears Prada 2' Hits $600 Million Mandalorian: Pedro Pascal Double Brendan Wayne Is John Wayne Grandson Star Citizen Hits $1 Billion in Funding, Squadron 42 Release Update 'Gilded Age' First Look, 'Harry Potter' Footage in New HBO Max Trailer Zvyagintsev Addresses Putin at Cannes: 'Put an End to This Carnage' Mandalorian & Grogu Box Office: Star Wars Movie Opens to $100 Million ‘Euphoria’ Season 3 and Rue’s Missing Mom: Nika King on Her Absence 'Everytime' Review: Sandra Wollner's Poised, Haunting Third Feature Buy Monopoly FIFA World Cup Edition Panini Prizm Cards, Deal Game Crunchyroll Anime Awards 2026 Winners: 'My Hero Academia Final Season' How to Watch the 2026 French Open Live Online, Tennis Livestream Cannes Jury Chief Park Chan-wook Jokes About Coveting the Palme d'Or Live Nation Operates in 'Climate of Fear,' Finds U.K. Trade Committee Neon Claims Seventh Consecutive Palme d'Or at Cannes for 'Fjord' Alfred Molina on ‘The Boroughs’ Spoilers, ‘Spider-Man: Brand New Day’ Barbra Streisand Sends Video Message to Cannes Film Festival Ludwig Göransson on Scoring 'The Mandalorian and Grogu'
Inside Kyle University, the Manosphere-Baiting Parody That’s Amassed 30 Million Views (And Is Actually a Covert Movie Campaign)
Alex Ritman · 2026-06-24 · via Variety

Mononymously-named and bodybuilding-sculpted, Kyle — the tanned and chiseled face of Kyle University (tagline: “Teaching boys how to be men”) — looks and sounds like many of those populating the so-called manosphere. At least, he does on the first glance of his social media videos (and perhaps even the second or third).

Assuredly describing himself as a “high-value man” and boasting bulging pecs that appear in danger of not just escaping his ludicrously tight shirt but setting up their own nation-state across the room, Kyle serves up pearls of misogynistic wisdom similar to various other Andrew Tate-style gurus.

“London 7, Miami 5” he unflinchingly rates a girl across the table during a date. “How would you sell yourself to me?” he asks another. “If I’m sending an eggplant emoji and she’s not sending nipple pics, I’m out,” is one of the various rules of dating he offers to the camera, while on a podcast video he’s described by another as a “gigachad.” For those unaware of the lingo, a “gigachad” is considered the ultimate, idealized version of a highly masculine and attractive man.

Popular on Variety

And yet, for anyone whose algorithms have even accidentally scratched the surface of the online world where Patrick Bateman-idolising alpha male influencers peddle toxic hypermasculinity, preposterous goal-oriented lifestyle advice and the extreme appearance optimisation known as looksmaxxing, even this feels a little too absurd after a few views.

As Kyle claims in one clip: “I don’t talk to my mom. She’s a 4/10. She needs to bonemash.” In another, he offers a call to arms and declares himself to be “a lion in a world of dolphins, and you need to be the wolves that follow me.” Perhaps the tipping point is where Kyle declares his love for the “Barbie” movie, noting that he left the cinema after the “happy ending, when Ken took over Barbie’s world.”

It is, of course, all satirical. But given the state of what’s out there, skirts a very fine line.

Kyle University is the brainchild of 22-year-old Brit director Noah Caplan, who tells Variety there’s “a roughly 50-50 split” between those who think Kyle — actually played by U.S. bodybuilder and former American Gladiator Mike O’Hearn — is real and those who are in on the joke. But, given the figures involved, those who haven’t twigged — which he claims include “several famous red pill commentators,” many of whom leave comments “agreeing with Kyle” each time he shuts a woman down — are substantial.

In under two weeks since it launched across social media, Kyle University’s videos, which now number more than 40 with more being added each day, have racked up 30 million organic views. The vast majority of the audience has come from Instagram (early optimism that it would thrive on the manosphere-friendly TikTok were crushed when the platform banned it on Day One — Caplan suspects a video in which Kyle says “boner alert!” or another in which he asks a girl “how many shards of glass she would walk on to see his cock” may have violated its rules).

As it happens, the “Barbie” video, despite being Caplan’s favorite joke, was one of the worst performers. “Obviously, we alienated about 60% of our audience with that,” he says. Worryingly, the most popular clips are the most misogynistic.

But for all the manosphere poking and parodying, Kyle University isn’t solely there to gather laughs or generate comical confusion. The videos, shot several months ago over a few days in London, are a proof-of-concept for Caplan’s directorial feature debut and all part of an extremely elaborate and very carefully constructed campaign to raise awareness, support and financing.

Those who do make it from the social media platforms to the Kyle University website will immediately be greeted, not with detail about Kyle’s course on how to be a man, but the six-minute proof-of-concept for “Impressionable.” It’s a film Caplan — who has been trying to hustle his way into the industry for years and, at age 17, somehow convincing Brit TV legend Danny Dyer to star in his debut short — describes as a coming-of-age comedy.

The plot centers around a British teen and the impact toxic masculinity and red pill culture has on him, and is based the young filmmaker’s own experiences watching friends get pulled into that world. There’s a worthy goal, aimed at highlighting both the absurdity of the manosphere and what real role models should look like, but he claims all done with a light, un-lecturing touch.

The film will also star O’Hearn (who Caplan says he “spammed when he was on Instagram Live”) as not the same Kyle from the clips, but a fictitious, bandana-wearing movie star — an Arnie-style “Last Action Hero” beefcake — whose full name is “Kile (With an I).”

A still from the “Impressionable” proof of concept. Credit: Sara Shevlin Artist

“Impressionable” has been cooking in Caplan’s mind for some time and has taken several twists and turns with every new development from the manosphere (such as the recent popularizing of looksmaxxing and figures such as Clavicular). But towards the end of 2025 and with little progress, he decided to put it in the driving seat, concocting Kyle University.

“I basically wanted to make something that proves there is an audience and an appetite,” he says.

Thankfully for the youngster, he knows just how to generate that online audience. After various stints, including working in unscripted TV (“when I say work, I used to get the tea,” he says) and cleaning the pools at a gym, he founded Yoof, a social-first talent management agency that now reps various British content creators, several of whom appear in the Kyle University videos alongside O’Hearn. It is literally Caplan’s job to generate online audiences.

Ironically, he says that through his company he’s worked on marketing campaigns with the same major studios that were ignoring his cold calls years ago about the film.

But Kyle University and “Impressionable” couldn’t have made a noise at a better moment.

Thanks to “Adolescence” and Louis Theroux’s Netflix documentary, the manosphere has been dragged into mainstream conversations. What once lurked in the online shadows has become a major talking point and cause for global concern among parents and politicians alike. Coincidentally, the Kyle videos were shot around the same time Theroux’s “Inside the Manosphere” was released, with Caplan worried that he should have cut them up quicker to piggyback off the headlines.

Just when he thought he might be too late to capitalize, “Obsession” and “Backrooms” — both from young first-time directors who had already built an audience online — landed and turn the movie industry on its head.

“Suddenly, the idea of a 20-year-old director is quite interesting to everyone,” says Caplan, who started getting “really exciting emails” and a “lots of DMs with agents, sales, producers and production companies” within days of the first Kyle University video posting. Suddenly, doors that were firmly shut are now creaking open and enquiries are coming in from those who never replied to earlier emails.

“I just want to talk to anyone and everyone — and I think there’s no better time now,” he says. “We’ve managed to build an IP that has attracted 10s and 10s of millions of eyeballs. So I’m hoping this could be the next bit of original IP coming from social media.”

Before any deals are signed, however, there’s still the Kyle University campaign to complete, with many more videos yet to come (all posted by Caplan, who notes that “as it’s effectively a one-man operation, I’m often having to excuse myself from the pub to post the next one”).

But the story of Kyle is going to take a bit of turn, with our ripped gigachad become more reflective and showing what Caplan says are the “insecurities and layers behind the machoism.” It’s something he admits will likely lose him views, or at the least slow down the sharp trajectory they’ve been taking, but could “spark more conversation in the comments section.”

Because the point of Kyle University isn’t to simply make a joke at the expense of those drawn to the manosphere, but to use same toolkit as those who preach within and the absurdity of what they spout to create something entertaining that can pull people in a different, more positive, direction — and eventually towards “Impressionable.”

“By creating that ecosystem, you’re basically replicating the algorithm,” says Caplan. “And it’s now working, because instead of sending them to an online course, we’re sending them to kyleuniversity.com, where you can find out about the film.”

The campaign has another few weeks left to run, after which Caplan says he’ll “see if the hype turns into something real.” And if hasn’t gotten the sort of the attention he was hoping for — at least not from the industry — he’ll just turn up the hustle again.

“I had an idea of sending a bunch of bodybuilders — in the full ‘Kile (with an I)’ costume with the bandana — to near where the big studios are to hand out Kyle University enrollment packages,” he says. “Because I want to be really brash. I want to create a character that people dress up as for Halloween.”