DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
Home News

‘Jestermaxxing’ and ‘frame mogging’ join ‘looksmaxxing’ as strange new words. Someone is probably making money off them.

February 12, 2026
in News
‘Jestermaxxing’ and ‘frame mogging’ join ‘looksmaxxing’ as strange new words. Someone is probably making money off them.
an old illustration of a jester
Jestermaxxing is the hot new internet trend. Transcendental Graphics/Getty Images
  • Words like “frame mogging” and “jestermaxxing” are suddenly everywhere.
  • They come from the niche online world of looksmaxxing.
  • The spread of these over-the-top phrases is being pushed by “clippers,” who can make money this way.

Have you jestermaxxed recently? Have you or someone you know been frame-mogged by an ASU fraternity leader? Did it cause your cortisol levels to spike?

If you’ve been spending too much time online lately, you’re likely seeing strange warpings of the English language.

Me? I think it’s great. We need some new words! But also, be mindful that these new silly words aren’t necessarily spreading organically. Some people are making money off their spread.

The sudden virality of these words comes as a 20-year-old looksmaxxing livestreamer who goes by “Clavicular” has broken containment of the relatively small corner of the internet for the looksmaxxing community. Suddenly, these words seem to be the latest obsession of the overly online crowd.

And with that comes a whole new way of speaking.

For now, don’t worry about who or why Clavicular is. You can read this article about him, or wait until The New York Times publishes its story (a reporter was with him last weekend to write an expected profile). The thing is, for our purposes, the details about him don’t really matter — he’s a 20-year-old looksmaxxer who also livestreams on Kick. That’s all you need to know. It’s like the origins of the “67″ meme: Sure, there’s some obscure backstory with a line from a rap song, but the meme is really about how it means nothing. (I reached out to Clavicular, but didn’t hear back.)

The output — these wacky phrases that are wrenching the English language to its logical conclusion of rot — is what is really important here. I suspect that long after we forget about the guy, we’ll still be using these new terms like “mogged” and “maxxed.”

(For the record, “mogged” is looksmaxxing forum lingo that’s been around for a while and means to be better looking or better than someone else. It’s now being used as a suffix, like “frame-mogged” for someone who has more impressive shoulders.)

There’s no question that this vernacular has broken containment to normies. Whether that’s good or bad is a matter of opinion.

There’s also a business reason that suddenly you’re seeing these wacky phrases everywhere, and it’s not just organic meme adoption.

A lot of the most over-the-top posts about “jestermaxxing” and “frame mogging” are coming as captions to video clips from third parties known as “clippers.”

Clippers are people who post short clips on social media from longer content like podcasts, livestreams, gaming, or even TV shows and movies. These clippers can have a financial motive: They can get paid by creator programs on platforms like TikTok, X, and Instagram Reels if their posts go viral. And they can also be paid by content creators themselves to promote their podcasts, livestreams, or other products.

Clippers are incentivized to find the most ridiculous moments in a livestream and slap on the most clickable, enticing caption or commentary for their posts on X and other social media platforms. This has created a kind of house style all its own — note the off-capitalization and tendency to end in a question.

The internet is always giving us new words and new terms. Sure, “jestermaxxing” will eventually sound old and cringe (perhaps soon, even), but this is the beautiful bounty of online communication. New ways of communicating and expressing! In this case, it also seems relevant to keep in mind that the new memewords are being pushed by people who are chasing dollars, not just lols.

Read the original article on Business Insider

The post ‘Jestermaxxing’ and ‘frame mogging’ join ‘looksmaxxing’ as strange new words. Someone is probably making money off them. appeared first on Business Insider.

‘Uncanny Valley’: ICE’s Secret Expansion Plans, Palantir Workers’ Ethical Concerns, and AI Assistants
News

‘Uncanny Valley’: ICE’s Secret Expansion Plans, Palantir Workers’ Ethical Concerns, and AI Assistants

by Wired
February 12, 2026

This week, hosts Brian Barrett, Leah Feiger, and Zoë Schiffer discuss WIRED’s big scoop on ICE’s startling plans to expand ...

Read more
News

Boston gets rent-control fever

February 12, 2026
News

El Paso Incident Highlights Gaps in America’s Drone Defense Industry

February 12, 2026
News

In blunt warning, the U.S. says Peru could lose its sovereignty to China

February 12, 2026
News

Teenagers on What Books and Reading Mean to Them

February 12, 2026
The Homeland Security Shutdown Could Affect ICE, Travelers and the Coast Guard

The Homeland Security Shutdown Could Affect ICE, Travelers and the Coast Guard

February 12, 2026
Homeless encampment wreaks havoc at Cambodian Buddhist temple in Fresno

Homeless encampment wreaks havoc at Cambodian Buddhist temple in Fresno

February 12, 2026
Do Drug Cartels Actually Use Drones at the Border?

Do Drug Cartels Actually Use Drones at the Border?

February 12, 2026

DNYUZ © 2026

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2026