Myron Gaines’ Ex-Girlfriend Says ‘Manosphere’ Netflix Documentary Interview Made Her “Question Everything”

For nearly two years, Angie was a fixture in the world of Fresh and Fit podcast co-host Myron Gaines, someone he spoke about openly and with evident affection. She was, by his own telling, devoted in ways he seemed to find remarkable.

“She packs my condoms when I travel,” he once told his audience, presenting the detail as proof of her commitment. She visited his parents in Connecticut. She appeared, to outside observers, to be genuinely important to him.

That relationship has since ended, and Angie has now offered a firsthand account of what the experience was actually like, particularly after Louis Theroux’s Netflix documentary on the manosphere brought her into the conversation.

In a post on her Instagram Story, Angie reflected candidly on the impact of Theroux’s questions during filming. “I really think in a weird way I have to thank Louis Theroux because somehow his questions kind of like made me question myself and the future of everything,” she said. “And that is something that I truly hadn’t done before, not like deeply like I did after that.”

The moment she describes took place during the production of Theroux’s documentary, in which Theroux reportedly asked her how she felt about Myron’s desire for what he described as “one-way monogamy.” It is an arrangement in which he would remain free to see other women while she would not.

Theroux also raised the subject of Myron’s stated interest in eventually marrying multiple women. The couple broke up shortly after filming wrapped.

Theroux’s documentary drew significant attention to the figures of the online manosphere, and his assessments were pointed. Speaking on the Modern Wisdom podcast with host Chris Williamson to promote the film, Theroux described Myron Gaines’ worldview plainly: “Myron Gaines wrote a book called Why Women Deserve Less. And his idea, his whole message is that women have been pampered and they are over-entitled.”

He also observed that much of Gaines’ perspective appeared shaped by a particular social circle, saying, “I think a lot of it seems to be based on his interactions with cam girls and OnlyF*ns models.”

Gaines responded publicly and with considerable frustration. He accused Theroux of selective editing and framing, and directed equal criticism at Williamson for giving the journalist a platform without, in his view, offering any meaningful pushback.

“For years I have ignored Chris Williamson platforming my critics, detractors, and outright ha ters on Modern Wisdom,” Gaines wrote in a post on X. “He has given them endless airtime to push their narratives, spin lies, and mischaracterize me completely unchecked, without any real pushback or balance.”

He also alleged that Williamson had previously recorded a lengthy interview with Andrew Tate and then chose not to release it. “You even recorded a full, multi-hour interview with Andrew Tate, then chose to shelve it entirely out of fear of backlash,” Gaines wrote.

On the documentary itself, Gaines was equally blunt. “He selectively edited and framed the footage to push a clear agenda, conveniently omitting key context and moments that would have told the full, unfiltered story.”

He added that he had recorded his own interactions with Theroux’s team and intended to release the footage publicly. “Fully expecting this, I recorded all my interactions with Louis Theroux and his team. Tonight, I am exposing exactly what he was too scared to include,” he stated.

Whatever the editorial decisions made on either side, Angie’s comments suggest the documentary’s production had a more personal effect than anyone anticipated. The questions Theroux asked were ones she had not previously sat with, and by her own account, that changed once filming was done.

The relationship between Angie and Myron had already been showing signs of strain in the months leading up to the breakup becoming public. Myron, by his own account, had grown increasingly withdrawn following his departure from the Fresh and Fit brand, rarely leaving his apartment.

“I’ve given up my social life to do so. I’ve been sitting inside. The only time I go outside, you guys want to know the truth? I literally only go outside to do the debates,” he told his audience on June 13th. He acknowledged that Angie had continued to show support, dropping off groceries at times, but admitted the distance between them had grown.

By late June, he was no longer projecting confidence about the relationship. “As of recently, man, it’s been tough. I’m not going to lie,” he admitted on the Anton Daniel show on June 24th.

A few days later, on June 30th, he referred to himself as single during a broadcast and then walked the comment back. From that point on, direct questions about Angie went unanswered.

Photos and videos circulating on social media through the summer were more direct. Footage from August 2025 showed Angie rollerblading and another man entering the frame and holding her hand, part of a series of images that had been surfacing since at least May, beginning with a rollerblading event in Orlando.

Commentator Oshay Duke Jackson weighed in on what he believed had gone wrong. “You’re not outgoing. You don’t spend time with her. The relationship can’t grow. You’re not in her community.” He also noted the irony in Myron spending considerable energy analyzing other people’s relationships while his own quietly came undone.