# DeuxMoi's "Healthy Fangirl" Advice Sparks Backlash

The anonymous gossip account DeuxMoi waded into fan culture territory this week with advice on being a "healthy" fangirl, and the internet responded with confusion and criticism.

The post, shared across DeuxMoi's platform, offered guidance on managing celebrity obsession in what the account framed as a balanced way. The specifics of the recommendations apparently missed the mark with followers, who quickly called out the advice as tone-deaf or disconnected from how parasocial relationships actually work.

DeuxMoi built its empire on celebrity gossip, leaked information, and insider scoops. The account's shift into lifestyle advice territory felt incongruous to many. Critics pointed out the irony of a gossip-focused platform lecturing fans about healthy boundaries when the account's entire business model thrives on feeding celebrity obsession and speculation.

The backlash revealed a broader conversation about parasocial relationships in the age of social media. Fans questioned whether DeuxMoi, which profits from celebrity fixation, holds any credibility dispensing wellness guidance.

The discourse (if you can call it that, per Cosmopolitan's assessment) devolved quickly. Some users defended DeuxMoi's attempt to address a real issue in fan communities. Others dismissed the advice as hypocritical given the account's content strategy. A third camp found the whole situation absurd.

The incident underscores how influencers and media personalities often blur lines between their core brand and adjacent advice-giving. DeuxMoi's strength lies in entertainment news and celebrity intel, not behavioral guidance.

The takeaway for followers: expect backlash when sources that thrive on one thing attempt to position themselves as authorities on the opposite. Credibility matters. When a gossip account suddenly pivots