Current:Home > ScamsMrBeast YouTuber Kris Tyson Comes Out as Transgender -MacroWatch
MrBeast YouTuber Kris Tyson Comes Out as Transgender
View
Date:2025-04-13 06:50:40
Kris Tyson is coming out as her truest self.
Just a few months after opening up about starting hormone replacement therapy (HRT) the YouTuber has shared that she is transgender.
"I am a woman! She/her!" Kris—who also updated the spelling of her name from Chris—happily told YouTuber Anthony Padilla in a video released July 21. "I've never said that publicly, but I've been fully confident in that decision for over a year now."
The 27-year-old also reflected on her gender identity journey, explaining what her headspace was like in April when she first shared that she'd begun HRT—which is a hormone therapy that can help gender non-conforming or transgender people achieve a more "traditional" masculine or feminine appearance—a few months prior.
"I wasn't quite sure exactly who I was yet," Kris, who wrote in her Twitter bio at the time that she responded to all pronouns, told Anthony, "but I knew I was not cisgender. So I needed the freedom to be able to express myself and be able to figure out who I was. So for a while, I was trying gender fluid. I was like, ‘What is making me feel like I'm bi-gender? What is tying me to this masculinity?'"
And she shared that after working with a therapist, Kris realized a lot of it was tied to her public identity as someone who frequently appeared in childhood friend Jimmy "MrBeast" Donaldson's YouTube videos.
"I realized it was really just this societal pressure of, ‘You're Chris from MrBeast,'" she explained. "'You're the guy that starts the fires. You're the guy that builds the stuff.' My whole life I've enjoyed doing those things, but I've never really felt like ‘the guy.' "
At one point, Anthony expressed that he'd noticed a "dramatic shift" in Kris' more recent photos compared to those from before she'd begun HRT. He noted how unhappy she looked in the older photos.
"It wasn't a real smile," Kris agreed, speaking to the older photos. "It was a performance smile. In the back of my head it was something I constantly felt like I wasn't being true to myself. I wasn't being true to the people who are fans of me because I was hiding my true self from them."
But now, Kris is proudly sharing her news.
On her Twitter account, she retweeted the link to her video with Anthony, writing, "New pronouns just dropped."
She also retweeted a screenshot from Twitter of MrBeast defending her against a YouTube video titled, "Why Chris will be a nightmare for MrBeast." In the screenshot, MrBeast can be seen replying that Kris is his friend, not his nightmare, adding, "All this transphobia is starting to piss me off."
In fact, Kris also noted to Anthony how much the support of her friends has meant to her, describing the moment she first told them she "didn't want to be a man anymore" three years ago.
"The support I got from them in that moment," she shared, "that's when I knew that I have my friends, f--k everybody else. They're really like my family."
As Kris later put it: "I'm just so excited to authentically be myself. The person you knew for a long time was a facade. This is the real me. I'm still the same person, I just look a little different."
For the latest breaking news updates, click here to download the E! News AppveryGood! (6967)
Related
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Marrakech hosts film festival in the shadow of war in the Middle East
- 28 Black Friday 2023 Home Deals That Are Too Good to Pass Up, From Dyson to Pottery Barn
- El Nino-worsened flooding has Somalia in a state of emergency. Residents of one town are desperate
- Small twin
- Simone Biles celebrates huge play by her Packers husband as Green Bay upsets Lions
- Kel Mitchell tells NPR what to expect from the 'Good Burger' sequel
- OxyContin maker’s settlement plan divides victims of opioid crisis. Now it’s up to the Supreme Court
- Tom Holland's New Venture Revealed
- Maui residents wonder if their burned town can be made safe. The answer? No one knows
Ranking
- Nearly 400 USAID contract employees laid off in wake of Trump's 'stop work' order
- Watch this darling toddler run for the first time, straight into her military dad's arms
- Dyson Airwrap Flash Deal: Save $180 On The Viral Beauty Tool Before It Sells Out, Again
- Rebels claim to capture more ground in Congo’s east, raising further concerns about election safety
- Bodycam footage shows high
- College football Week 13: Every Power Five conference race tiebreakers and scenarios
- Kel Mitchell tells NPR what to expect from the 'Good Burger' sequel
- Former St. Louis alderman in fraud case also charged with lying to police
Recommendation
Nearly half of US teens are online ‘constantly,’ Pew report finds
How OpenAI's origins explain the Sam Altman drama
Railyard explosion, inspections raise safety questions about Union Pacific’s hazmat shipping
West Africa responds to huge diphtheria outbreaks by targeting unvaccinated populations
New Mexico governor seeks funding to recycle fracking water, expand preschool, treat mental health
2 men arrested in brazen plot to steal more than 120 guns from Dunham's Sports in Michigan
South Africa, Colombia and others are fighting drugmakers over access to TB and HIV drugs
Hundreds of German police raid properties of Hamas supporters in Berlin and across the country