Bored Panda works better on our iPhone app
Continue in app Continue in browser

The Bored Panda iOS app is live! Fight boredom with iPhones and iPads here.

Gen Z Influencer Faces Backlash After Claiming Pilates “Supports The Patriarchy”
Gen Z influencer taking a selfie, flexing arm muscles in a bathroom, sparking backlash over Pilates and patriarchy claim.

Gen Z Influencer Faces Backlash After Claiming Pilates “Supports The Patriarchy”

17

ADVERTISEMENT

She’s a 24-year old barre instructor and fitness influencer living in Washington D.C. and her recent post about Pilates’ popularity being tied to conservatism is stirring up debate online.

MaryBeth Monaco-Vavrik posted a comment that generated two million views in two days, both negative and positive.

In interviews, Monaco-Vavrik said backlash from her post has been swift and stinging.

RELATED:

    “There is a direct correlation”: MaryBeth Monaco-Vavrik on why Pilates is connected to conservatism

    Image credits: mb.mv

    According to her Instagram account, in early April Monaco-Vavrik fired off a post about how Pilates is connected to “a rise in conservatism”

    “There is a DIRECT correlation between a rise in conservatism (think 1950s housewife) and smaller bodies, and liberal swings during the feminist waves in the 70s with more muscular frames (The Politics of the Body, Phipps 2014),” she wrote in her post.

    She continued: “We’ve swung from the BBL/Kardashian-curves era straight back to heroin-chic thinness. And in that swing, there’s been a rise in rhetoric that praises women for shrinking.”

    ADVERTISEMENT

    Image credits: Ahmet Kurt/Unsplash

    Monaco-Vavrik said that women are being taught to be “toned” but not “muscular,” and to avoid “anything that might make them look bulky.”

    She cites unnamed “overwhelming scientific evidence” that “strength training is one of the most effective ways to fight age-related disease, preserve independence, improve body composition, support fat loss, and promote overall health.”

    In an interview with the New York Times, she said she made the initial post while waiting for a flight. 

    She had no idea that her post would also take flight in such dramatic fashion.

    Some Pilates instructors agreed with Monaco-Vavrik’s post, calling the sport “overwhelmingly white”

    Image credits: Hans Isaacson/Unsplash

    ADVERTISEMENT

    Some people saw Monaco-Vavrik’s post and agreed. One, as interviewed in the NY Times, is Anita Chauhan, a Pilates instructor in Toronto who appears to be of Indian heritage. 

    Chauhan told the outlet that while Monaco-Vavrik’s post was “a bit tenuous” she agreed that “there is something to unpack about the aesthetics and accessibility of Pilates.”

    ADVERTISEMENT

    She continued: “Pilates does still feel like a predominantly white and wealthier space,” with clientele and instructors who are “overwhelmingly white, often thin and usually conforming to a very specific wellness aesthetic.”

    ADVERTISEMENT

    The opinion that Pilates is a ‘white space’ could be fueled by the popularity of so-called “Pilates princesses” or “Pilates girls” on social media, a lot of whom seem to be extra skinny and caucasian.

    The aesthetic of a Pilates girl seems to include things that are the color in white, off white and/or dusty pink. TikTok videos include serene music, clean lines, and fit looking practitioners.

    New York Post slams Monaco-Vavrik’s post calling it symptomatic of Gen Z

    Image credits: mb.mv

    But there are certainly those who disagree with Monaco-Vavrik’s post. 

    An op-ed in the New York Post by Kristin Fleming said politicizing Pilates was ridiculous. Fleming said Monaco-Vavrik’s shortsightedness was likely a result of her being only 24 years old.

    “This generation was raised as digital natives in a very indulgent world that not only normalized unsolicited online opinions but monetizes them,” Fleming wrote. “It’s produced a ridiculous obsession with overanalyzing everything from exercise, dating, sex and, yes, smoothies.”

    ADVERTISEMENT

    Image credits: mb.mv

    ADVERTISEMENT

    Fleming said as a middle aged woman, her fitness feeds on social media do not include waifish looking young ladies, but instead Pilates dominated “by chicks weight training, the activity Monaco-Vavrick ostensibly says the authoritarians don’t want women to see.”

    Fleming concluded that it was actually a good thing that Monaco-Vavrik’s post was also generating negative comments, saying the days of news organizations writing about how our “hobbies and individual physical pursuits (are) rife with bigotry” are over.

    “It’s extremely whitewashed”: Monaco-Vavrik on the state of Pilates

    In the New York Times article, Monaco-Vavrik explained that she actually likes Pilates and thinks it’s “great for your core strength, and for people who are suffering from connective-tissue weakness, etc.”

    “But,” she continued, “how do we separate that from the fact that its marketing is extremely exclusionary? It’s extremely whitewashed. It’s based on wealth. It’s based on thinness.”

    ADVERTISEMENT

    It’s interesting to note that Monaco-Vavrik’s profession, barre instructor, is based on ballet, which itself has been considered extremely racist over the years.

    “It deeply offended white women”: Monaco-Vavrik says even after trying to clarify her point, it seemed to fall on deaf ears

    Image credits: Getty Images/Unsplash

    Elsewhere in the article Monaco-Vavrik talked about the backlash her post created, including being called a misogynist in comments.

    Other people who commented on Monaco-Vavrik’s post seemed to be upset that they were being lumped together with people who might be Republican or conservative in general. 

    “I think it just deeply offended these wealthier white women who claim progressive alignment but just really couldn’t see what I was saying.”

    Her IG post even affected her professional life. She told the NY Times that a future employer mentioned her controversial post as the reason she was not hired for a marketing role at the fitness company. 

    ADVERTISEMENT

    Since first posting, Monaco-Vavrik has tried to clarify in a follow-up video, but unfortunately, “ “a lot of people just kind of misconstrue what I said.”

    She told the NY Times that she hasn’t looked at the comments in a while because it’s really upsetting.

    “Is that what you want us to argue about?”, netizens wonder in disbelief as they debate over Monaco-Vavrik arguments

    ADVERTISEMENT
    ADVERTISEMENT
    ADVERTISEMENT
    ADVERTISEMENT
    ADVERTISEMENT
    ADVERTISEMENT
    ADVERTISEMENT

    Poll Question

    Total votes ·

    Thanks! Check out the results:

    Total votes ·
    Share on Facebook
    Julie Christine Noce

    Julie Christine Noce

    Writer, Community member

    Read more »

    Hola! I’m a Julie, a giant panda currently living in the lush green bamboo groves of Barcelona. I spend my days lounging in the shade, munching on snacks, and trying to avoid becoming an Instagram influencer. Life’s good. BP is my absolute favorite place to find funny, weird, and heartwarming stories. I especially love the animal content (have you seen the dog wearing a panda costume? 🤣 You know he didn't put that on himself! Oh humans) I might be a panda, but even I get bored sometimes—so BP to the rescue! 🐼💻✨

    Read less »
    Julie Christine Noce

    Julie Christine Noce

    Writer, Community member

    Hola! I’m a Julie, a giant panda currently living in the lush green bamboo groves of Barcelona. I spend my days lounging in the shade, munching on snacks, and trying to avoid becoming an Instagram influencer. Life’s good. BP is my absolute favorite place to find funny, weird, and heartwarming stories. I especially love the animal content (have you seen the dog wearing a panda costume? 🤣 You know he didn't put that on himself! Oh humans) I might be a panda, but even I get bored sometimes—so BP to the rescue! 🐼💻✨

    What do you think ?
    Joe Bloe
    Community Member
    7 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    LOL The irony of someone calling this sexist, while being racist... The stupidity in this world seems boundless! Ragebait or sure.

    Auntriarch
    Community Member
    7 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I'd do a rant about barre coming from ballet aka the biggest anorexia farm known to the western world, but it's hot, and I've got a bottle of prosecco chilling

    Joe Bloe
    Community Member
    7 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    LOL The irony of someone calling this sexist, while being racist... The stupidity in this world seems boundless! Ragebait or sure.

    Auntriarch
    Community Member
    7 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I'd do a rant about barre coming from ballet aka the biggest anorexia farm known to the western world, but it's hot, and I've got a bottle of prosecco chilling

    Related on Bored Panda
    Popular on Bored Panda
    Trending on Bored Panda
    Also on Bored Panda
    ADVERTISEMENT