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Alex Cooper Says She Deleted TikTok Amid Growing Frustration With Online Misogyny

  • 4 days ago
  • 3 min read

13 May 2026

Alex Cooper is opening up about why she recently deleted TikTok from her phone, revealing that the constant negativity and pressure to pit women against each other online had become emotionally exhausting. During a recent episode of her massively popular podcast “Call Her Daddy,” Cooper spoke candidly with influencer Tana Mongeau about internet culture, misogyny, and the way social media often turns female creators into rivals for entertainment. The conversation quickly gained attention online because it arrived during an especially public period of internet drama surrounding Cooper herself.


Cooper explained that she became increasingly frustrated with the atmosphere on TikTok, particularly the endless cycle of comparison, criticism, and manufactured conflict involving women online. According to the podcast host, scrolling through the app began to feel mentally draining because so much content revolved around tearing women down, analyzing appearances, fueling feuds, or encouraging competition rather than support. Cooper admitted she eventually removed the app entirely because she no longer wanted to consume an environment that constantly rewarded negativity and public conflict.


The discussion became even more personal as Tana Mongeau reflected on her own experiences facing intense online criticism and public judgment throughout her career. Mongeau argued that society often feels more comfortable attacking outspoken women while excusing similar behavior from men. Both women discussed how female creators are frequently pressured into drama because controversy generates clicks, engagement, and viral attention. Cooper specifically pointed out that social media platforms can sometimes encourage audiences to treat women like competitors fighting for attention rather than individuals capable of supporting one another publicly and professionally.


The timing of Cooper’s comments is especially significant because she has recently found herself in the middle of a highly publicized feud involving influencer Alix Earle. Tensions between the two creators reportedly escalated after Earle’s podcast was dropped from Cooper’s Unwell Network in early 2025. Since then, both personalities have exchanged subtle online jabs, cryptic posts, and public comments that fueled widespread speculation about behind the scenes conflict. The feud intensified further in April when Cooper openly challenged Earle to stop making passive aggressive social media posts and directly address the situation publicly.


Although Cooper’s comments about deleting TikTok were framed around broader conversations about misogyny and online culture, many fans immediately connected them to the stress surrounding the Earle drama and the nonstop attention attached to internet feuds. Social media users have spent weeks analyzing every interaction, repost, and comment tied to the situation. Earle herself recently avoided discussing the feud during a “Today” show appearance, insisting she wanted to focus on “positive vibes” rather than online conflict. Even so, internet audiences continue closely monitoring the relationship between the two creators, turning what may have once been private business tension into a major public spectacle.


Cooper’s growing discomfort with internet culture also reflects a larger evolution in her public image. Since launching “Call Her Daddy” in 2018, she has transformed from a controversial comedy podcaster into one of the most powerful women in digital media. Her podcast became one of the most successful shows in the world, eventually leading to massive deals with Spotify and SiriusXM reportedly worth tens of millions of dollars. At the same time, however, her career has repeatedly unfolded alongside public feuds, viral controversies, and intense online scrutiny that often targeted both her professional and personal life.


For many listeners, Cooper’s decision to step away from TikTok reflects a growing frustration shared by countless social media users exhausted by constant outrage cycles and online hostility. While platforms like TikTok helped create enormous opportunities for creators, they have also intensified comparison culture, public shaming, and internet fueled drama in ways that can become emotionally overwhelming even for people who built careers online. Cooper’s comments therefore resonated beyond influencer gossip itself. They tapped into a wider conversation about how social media affects mental health, self image, and the increasingly toxic ways women are often positioned against each other for entertainment in the digital age.

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