Clavicular Shared An Update After His Suspected Overdose: ‘That Was Brutal’
Clavicular shared an update for his followers after his suspected overdose.
The YouTuber and Kick livestreamer, whose real name is Braden Peters, shared an update on X on Wednesday, April 15, after allegedly overdosing the night before. “Just got home, that was brutal,” Clavicular wrote to his followers alongside a photo of his scratched-up face.
“All of the substances are just a cope trying to feel neurotypical while being in public, but obviously, that isn’t a real solution. The worst part of tonight was my face descending from the life support mask.” Clavicular identifies as being autistic, neuroatypical, despite never receiving a diagnosis, according to The New York Times.
The controversial “looksmaxxing” influencer, 20, was reportedly hospitalized in Miami, Florida after a suspected overdose, sources told People and The Hollywood Reporter. The Hollywood Reporter confirmed the streamer was in “stable condition” and remained in the hospital overnight on Tuesday, April 14.
Clavicular was filming with influencers in a Miami mall and restaurant and appeared to be exhibiting slurred speech on a Kick livestream before it was abruptly cut off. A video circulating online apparently shows the influencer being carried away by three men to a car with an ambulance parked behind it.
Miami police and fire confirmed to USA TODAY that they received calls on Tuesday “for a male suffering a medical emergency” near a Miami shopping district. However, the outlet reports that when first responders arrived, the man had already been taken away.
This is one of several recent incidents involving the controversial star. Clavicular is reportedly being investigated by the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission for a video appearing to show him shoot an alligator. In March, he was arrested in Florida on misdemeanor battery charges after authorities issued a warrant for his arrest, accusing him of provoking a fight between two women and exploiting them by posting it online, The New York Times reported.