Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Travis Kelce Offers Perfect Response After Getting Absurdly Called Out For Having A 'Dad Bod'

Travis Kelce
Perry Knotts/Getty Images

The Kansas City Chiefs star seemed to give a nod to some weight-shaming comments on his 'New Heights' podcast after he was spotted in the Bahamas with girlfriend Taylor Swift.

Kansas City Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce defended his post-season weight gain when critics body-shamed him after seeing his vacation photos in the Bahamas with his music superstar "Lover" Taylor Swift.

Many comments online described Kelce as having a "dad bod," which describes a slim male physique that isn't toned but might have a prominent belly, a.k.a. the "beer gut."


Depending on one's taste in men, the description typically ascribed to middle-aged men can either be an insult or a compliment.

But given the context of trolls trying to take down the 34-year-old NFL star, "dad bod" was likely used to demean Kelce after photos of the pair on the beach sporting swimwear surfaced online.

Kelce brushed off the trolling in an episode from his New Heights podcast, which he co-hosts with his older brother Jason.

Jason, who had just announced his retirement from the NFL after playing center for the Philadelphia Eagles for 13 seasons, squabbled with Travis over who could drink more.

He told Jason, who said he weighs about 280 lbs, that he could no longer justify his weight as a deciding factor.

Travis, who admitted to gaining a few pounds since he and his teammates crushed the Super Bowl, took it all in stride and joked to his brother:

"We're in the same weight class now! It's March!"
"We're in the same weight class right now."

You can watch a clip from the podcast here.

Travis Kelce jokes about gaining weight during NFL offseason: ‘It’s March!’ youtu.be


Social media users had plenty of thoughts on the discussion.







Women are regularly subjected to negative comments regarding body image, but it doesn't mean men, even pro athletes and celebrities, aren't immune to similar shaming tactics either.

Dr. Joseph Thomas, Medical Director of Medlounges, expounded on the subject of male body shaming issues.

In an April 2022 discussion, the body-positive enthusiast told the Economic Times:

“We always believe that body-shaming is significantly associated with women and rarely with men."
"But for years, men have also been the silent victim of body shaming in society. From professional athletes to the commoner, body shaming can happen to anyone."
"Some celebrities were brutally fat-shamed while vacationing on a beach!"
"And teenage boys are being bullied for gynecomastia commonly known as man boobs leading to significant mental health issues."

According to a 2020 body image survey run by the U.K.'s Parliament, a clear majority—61%—of adults "feel negative or very negative about their body image most of the time.

The results have likely stemmed from the fact that we've become socialized to view what we consider the "normal" body type based on the almost impossible standards seen on social media.

In response to a question asking if people thought there was a specific "body type," one participant surveyed commented:

“I don’t think there IS an ideal body image but I think in society there is an ideal body image."
"I think commenting on appearance at all in any way fuels body image problems because a) you don’t know where the person is mentally and how they’ll take your comment even if it is meant positively b) it reinforces the idea that how you look matters.”

You never know how a person, male or female, feels about their appearance.

So, the kind thing to do is to keep your judgy comments to yourself.

More from Entertainment/celebrities

Two people scuba diving by coral surrounded by fish
man in black wet suit diving on water with school of fish
Photo by Aviv Perets on Unsplash

Things People Are Glad They Tried Once But Would Never Do Again

"Don't knock it till you've tried it", as the saying goes.

Indeed, one can never be too sure whether they like something or not until they've tried it themselves.

Keep Reading Show less
Abby Lee Miller (left) and Neil Patrick Harris (right)
Roy Rochlin/Getty Images; Bruce Glikas/Getty Images

Abby Lee Miller Just Posted A Bizarrely-Edited Selfie With Neil Patrick Harris—And His Reaction Is All Of Us

Holy Facetune, Batman.

Dance Moms alum Abby Lee Miller may have just earned herself a permanent spot at the top of the pyramid, and not for choreography. This time, it’s for posting what might be the most chaotic celebrity selfie of 2025: a heavily blurred, aggressively yassified Instagram photo of herself and Neil Patrick Harris.

Keep Reading Show less
raccoon; break-in at Ashland ABC Store in Virginia
Bernd Weißbrod/picture alliance/Getty Images; Hanover County Animal Protection and Shelter/Facebook

Photo Of Drunk Raccoon That Broke Into Liquor Store And Passed Out In Bathroom Goes Viral

This week in Virginia, someone broke into the Ashland ABC Store. The perpetrator targeted the liquor store's bottom shelf, knocking items to the floor and leaving behind a trail of broken glass and spilled alcohol.

The perpetrator also reportedly drank some of the liquor, and instead of fleeing the scene, ended up too intoxicated to leave and instead passed out in the store's restroom.

Keep Reading Show less
Joe Rogan
American Alchemy

Joe Rogan Just Shared His Bonkers Theory About The Second Coming Of Jesus—And It's Not Going Over Well With Fans

Okay Joe, put down the blunt.

Podcaster Joe Rogan has pretty much never met a ridiculous conspiracy theory he didn't immediately jump onto, but his latest idea is bonkers on a level that even his most devoted fans are not having.

Keep Reading Show less
Mark Kelly; Pete Hegseth
Bill Clark/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images; Carolyn Van Houten/The Washington Post via Getty Images

Mark Kelly Rips Pete Hegseth's Hypocrisy After Video Of Hegseth Saying U.S. Troops Can't Obey 'Unlawful Orders' Resurfaces

The United States Manual of Courts-Martial states all service members have a duty to disobey an order that "a [person] of ordinary sense and understanding would know to be illegal," thus negating a defense plea of superior orders.

Superior orders—a.k.a. the "just following orders"—defense had been used by United States military members in the past with varying success, but was changed irrevocably by the Nuremberg trials that followed World War II.

Keep Reading Show less