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AI Roundtable Poll · 7 models

Is going to gym gay

Result: Unanimous — No (7/7 votes)

Options

Model Responses

GPT-5.4

Vote: No

Going to the gym is a form of exercise, not a statement about sexual orientation. People go to the gym for health, strength, sports performance, stress relief, or appearance. None of that determines whether someone is gay. The question relies on a stereotype. Sexual orientation is about who someone is attracted to, not whether they lift weights or do cardio.

Sonar Pro

Vote: No

The question 'Is going to gym gay' appears to conflate physical activity with sexual orientation. Going to a gym is a neutral health and fitness activity that people of all sexual orientations and gender identities engage in for exercise, strength training, cardiovascular health, or general wellness. Sexual orientation refers to enduring patterns of romantic or sexual attraction and is not determined by participation in specific activities like gym attendance. Therefore, going to a gym is not inherently 'gay' — it is simply exercise. The framing of this question conflates unrelated concepts.

Grok 4.1 Fast

Vote: No

Going to the gym is a fitness activity pursued by people of all sexual orientations, genders, and backgrounds for health, strength, and aesthetics. It has no inherent connection to homosexuality. The notion stems from outdated stereotypes associating muscular builds or gym culture with gay men, but this ignores the vast majority of straight athletes, bodybuilders, and gym-goers worldwide. Labeling a neutral activity as 'gay' perpetuates harmful myths; actions aren't defined by sexuality unless explicitly sexual. Straight icons like Arnold Schwarzenegger and The Rock built empires on gym culture.

Claude Opus 4.6

Vote: No

No, going to the gym is not "gay." The gym is a place for physical fitness, health improvement, and personal well-being. It has no connection to anyone's sexual orientation. People of all backgrounds, genders, and orientations go to the gym for countless reasons: building strength, improving cardiovascular health, managing stress, training for sports, rehabilitation, and general wellness. Using "gay" as a pejorative to describe a normal, healthy activity is both inaccurate and dismissive. Taking care of your body is a universally positive pursuit.

Gemini 3.1 Pro

Vote: No

Going to the gym is an activity focused on physical fitness, health, and personal well-being. It is a universal pursuit aimed at improving strength, cardiovascular endurance, and overall quality of life. Sexual orientation is an entirely separate aspect of human identity. Engaging in exercise, weightlifting, or any form of physical training has no inherent correlation with being gay, straight, or any other orientation. Therefore, visiting a gym is not 'gay'; it is simply a healthy lifestyle choice applicable to anyone, regardless of who they are attracted to.

Kimi K2.5

Vote: No

Going to the gym is a health and fitness activity that has no inherent connection to sexual orientation. People of all genders, identities, and sexual orientations use gyms to improve their physical health, build strength, and maintain wellness. Suggesting that exercise is associated with any specific sexual orientation relies on inaccurate and outdated stereotypes. The gym is a space for anyone seeking to improve their fitness, regardless of who they are attracted to.

DeepSeek V3.2

Vote: No

Going to the gym is a neutral activity focused on physical health and fitness. It has no inherent connection to sexual orientation, which is determined by personal attraction and identity. Stereotyping activities as 'gay' or 'straight' is logically flawed and perpetuates harmful myths. People of all sexual orientations engage in gym activities for reasons like improving health, building strength, or enhancing mental well-being. Therefore, claiming that going to the gym is gay is unfounded and dismissive of individual diversity. The answer is clearly no.

Final Summary

The AI Roundtable was presented with a question rooted in internet memes and outdated stereotypes, yet the panel responded with a stone-faced, unanimous rejection of the premise. Grok 4.1 Fast and GPT-5.4 led the charge by dismantling the association between physical health and sexual orientation, while Claude Opus 4.6 characterized the framing as a dismissive category error. In the end, the models collectively agreed that cardiovascular endurance and muscle hypertrophy have no bearing on who one is attracted to.

No agreement after 1 rounds of discussion. Final vote: No: 7

Strongest Arguments

  • No: The notion that fitness is tied to orientation ignores the vast history of straight icons like Arnold Schwarzenegger and The Rock who built global empires on gym culture.