What did @therealtrtpro actually say?
Straightforwardly: nothing about testosterone, hormones, or health. The transcript attributed to this video is rap lyrics, not medical commentary. Lines like "hop out my big body form" and "still got the money in my hood" contain zero health claims to evaluate. There is no TRT content here to fact-check in the traditional sense.
This could mean several things: the audio was misattributed, the transcript was pulled from background music, or the video's actual health content was spoken over a track that got transcribed instead. Whatever the reason, the words themselves carry no medical information about testosterone replacement therapy, hypogonadism, or hormone optimization.
Does the science back this up?
There is no scientific claim in this transcript to evaluate. The lyrics reference cars, money, and neighborhood imagery. None of that intersects with the peer-reviewed literature on exogenous testosterone, endocrine function, or androgen deficiency.
That said, since this account is categorized under TRT content, it is worth noting what the actual science says about the space these creators operate in. A 2023 review by Mulhall et al. in the Journal of Urology found that online health content about testosterone is frequently inaccurate, overpromising benefits like fat loss and libido restoration while minimizing documented risks including polycythemia, cardiovascular strain, and suppression of the hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal axis. If future videos from this account do make clinical claims, those are the benchmarks they will be held to.
What did they get wrong (or right)?
Neither. This transcript does not support a meaningful accuracy assessment. Fact-checking rap lyrics for hormone therapy accuracy is not a useful exercise, and doing so would manufacture a controversy where none exists.
What is worth flagging is the structural problem: an account categorized as a TRT information source posted content that, at least in the captured transcript, contains no information. That is a different kind of problem than spreading misinformation. Audiences who follow accounts for health guidance and receive entertainment content instead may not notice the shift. Research on health misinformation by Sharma et al. (2019, Journal of Medical Internet Research) found that parasocial trust built through entertainment-style presentation significantly increases uncritical acceptance of later health claims from the same creator.
What should you actually know?
If you found this account looking for information about testosterone therapy, here is what the evidence actually supports. TRT is an FDA-approved treatment for clinically diagnosed hypogonadism, defined as total testosterone below roughly 300 ng/dL paired with symptoms confirmed across two separate morning measurements, per Endocrine Society guidelines (Bhasin et al., 2018, Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism).
Self-diagnosis and self-administration carry real risks. Testosterone is a Schedule III controlled substance. Exogenous testosterone suppresses natural production and can cause infertility, elevated hematocrit, and cardiovascular changes. None of those risks disappear because a creator presents casually. Before starting any hormone therapy, get your levels tested by a licensed clinician, not a TikTok account, regardless of how many followers they have.