What did @ozlemozdilofficial actually say?
Straightforwardly: not much, medically speaking. The transcript captured here is a repeated lyric fragment, "It's not your fault, it's your fault, it's your fault," which appears to be from a Turkish folk song (türkü) performed with a saz, a traditional stringed instrument. This is a music performance video, not a health claim video.
The hashtags confirm it: #türkü (folk song), #saz (the instrument), #tezgel (likely a song title or phrase), and #trt, which in Turkish media contexts almost certainly refers to TRT, the Turkish national public broadcaster, not testosterone replacement therapy. The creator is tagged under the TRT category on this platform, but the content itself does not appear to address testosterone, hormones, or any medical topic whatsoever.
Flagging this video as TRT health content is a categorization error, not a creator error.
Does the science back this up?
There is no health claim here to evaluate against science. The lyric fragment does not assert anything about testosterone levels, hypogonadism, hormone therapy, or any physiological process. Applying clinical scrutiny to a folk song performance is a category mistake.
That said, since this video landed in a testosterone replacement therapy content feed, it is worth briefly noting what the actual science says about TRT and personal responsibility narratives, since "it's not your fault" and "it's your fault" are phrases that do appear in wellness marketing around low testosterone. Some TRT clinics use messaging suggesting that fatigue, low libido, or mood changes are entirely attributable to low testosterone and therefore "not your fault." That framing has real problems. A 2020 review by Bhasin et al. in the New England Journal of Medicine noted that testosterone deficiency diagnosis requires both symptom presence and confirmed low serum levels on two separate morning measurements. Symptoms alone are not sufficient, and many men seeking TRT based on vague symptoms do not meet clinical criteria.
What did they get wrong (or right)?
The creator did not get anything medically wrong because they did not make a medical claim. They performed a song. Crediting or blaming them for health misinformation here would be unfair and inaccurate.
However, the platform categorization raises a legitimate concern. When music videos are algorithmically or manually sorted into health categories like TRT, it creates noise in a space where misinformation can cause real harm. Men researching testosterone therapy deserve content that is clearly labeled and clinically grounded. A folk song appearing in that feed is not dangerous on its own, but it signals a content moderation gap worth flagging.
If anything, the "it's your fault, it's not your fault" lyric structure accidentally mirrors a real tension in men's health marketing. The wellness industry routinely oscillates between telling men their suffering is a medical condition beyond their control and then pivoting to sell them a fix. That tension is worth watching, even if this particular video has nothing to do with it.
What should you actually know?
If you arrived here looking for information about testosterone replacement therapy, here is what the evidence actually supports. Hypogonadism is a real clinical condition. According to the American Urological Association guidelines updated in 2022, diagnosis requires a total testosterone level below 300 ng/dL confirmed on two separate morning blood draws, combined with symptoms such as reduced libido, fatigue, or erectile dysfunction.
TRT is not a lifestyle upgrade for men with normal testosterone levels. A 2023 trial published by Lincoff et al. in the New England Journal of Medicine, the TRAVERSE trial, found that testosterone therapy in middle-aged men with hypogonadism did not increase major cardiovascular events compared to placebo, which was reassuring. But it also confirmed that TRT is not without risks, including erythrocytosis, or elevated red blood cell counts, which requires monitoring.
"It's not your fault" messaging in TRT marketing can be genuinely harmful when it pushes men toward treatment they do not clinically need. Symptoms overlap with depression, sleep apnea, obesity, and thyroid disorders. A thorough workup matters before any hormone intervention.
Bottom line
This video is a Turkish folk music performance that was miscategorized as TRT health content. The creator made no medical claims. The fact-check here is essentially a verdict on a labeling error, not on health misinformation from the creator. If you are researching TRT for clinical reasons, skip this video entirely and speak with a licensed clinician who can order the appropriate labs.