What did @i.m_moin actually say?
Nothing about testosterone, health, or fitness. The transcript is song lyrics: "She can get a taste, say / It's all the same like Mary Kate." That is the entirety of the spoken content in this video. Despite being categorized under TRT and tagged with hashtags like #workout, #mass, and #energy, the creator made zero health claims of any kind.
This happens more often than you'd think on short-form video platforms. A video gets filed under a health category based on hashtags alone, while the actual content is music, lip-syncing, or ambient footage. The hashtags here, #boys, #mass, #energy, #workout, are doing the classification work, not anything the creator said out loud.
Does the science back this up?
There is nothing to evaluate scientifically. No claim was made. No supplement was named. No protocol was suggested. No dosage was implied. The video, as transcribed, is a fragment of song lyrics with no physiological or medical content whatsoever.
If the video's visual content, which we do not have access to, showed a product, a syringe, a body transformation, or on-screen text making health claims, that would be a different matter entirely. But based solely on what was said, there is no science to confirm or refute. Running a fact-check against "She can get a taste" is not a meaningful exercise in evidence review.
What we can say is that the category this video was placed in, TRT and hormone optimization, involves genuinely complex clinical territory. Testosterone replacement therapy requires a formal diagnosis of hypogonadism, baseline bloodwork, and ongoing monitoring. It is not a fitness optimization tool for healthy young men, a distinction that gets blurred constantly in the #mass and #workout corners of TikTok.
What did they get wrong (or right)?
The creator did not get anything wrong or right, because they did not say anything health-related. Credit where it is due: by staying silent on TRT, testosterone, or supplementation, this video avoided the kind of misinformation that fills this category on social media.
The more useful question is what the surrounding context implies. A TikTok account tagged with #mrlazy99 and #mass, sitting inside a TRT content category, is operating in an ecosystem where young men are routinely exposed to unsupported claims about testosterone boosters, "natural" hormone optimization, and aggressive supplementation. Whether this specific video contributed to that ecosystem beyond its hashtag choices is unclear.
The hashtag #mass alone, in the TRT category, signals an audience that may be seeking muscle gain through hormonal means. That is worth naming even when a single video contains no explicit advice.
What should you actually know?
Since the video gave you nothing clinical, here is what actually matters if you landed here looking for information about testosterone, energy, or building muscle.
- TRT is a medical treatment for diagnosed hypogonadism, not a performance enhancement strategy. The Endocrine Society's clinical practice guidelines (Bhasin et al., 2018, Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism) are explicit on this point.
- Low energy and poor gym performance in young men has multiple causes, most of which are not low testosterone. Sleep quality, caloric intake, training programming, and iron status are far more commonly the culprits.
- Testosterone levels in healthy men fluctuate significantly across the day. A single morning blood test is the minimum required to even begin evaluating this, and even then, one low result does not constitute a diagnosis.
- Social media content tagged with #TRT frequently promotes products or protocols that have no clinical backing. If a creator is recommending a specific dose, stack, or compound, that is a red flag, not a tip.
- If you are genuinely concerned about low testosterone symptoms, the right move is a conversation with a licensed clinician and a full hormone panel, not a TikTok comment section.