The strange politics of Pilates

The strange politics of Pilates

From It's Been a Minute by NPR

April 20, 2026 · 25 min

About this episode

The episode explores the cultural implications and social media dynamics surrounding the rising popularity of Pilates, particularly its association with gender and body image.

Pilates is great. Why are people being weird about it? Pilates is an exercise that has been around for a long time – around a hundred years – but it’s just now coming into vogue in a big way. According to the Sports and Fitness Industry Association report from 2025, Pilates is the fastest growing form of individual exercise in the United States: participation jumped by nearly 40% since 2019. And it’s gotten pretty big on social media. But there's something interesting happening with that social media content – sometimes, it seems less about the actual exercise and way more about what doing Pilates says about who you are as a woman. And of course, anyone can do Pilates, but on social media, there is a strong emphasis on it being for "girls" (and being for specific kinds of girls). So why is some questionable baggage getting attached to Pilates? And why can't we be normal about exercise in general? Brittany is joined by Madeline Leung Coleman , features writer at New York Magazine , who wrote a piece about why Pilates keeps getting people up in arms. (00:00) How Pilates became popular (02:21) Pilates got a hot makeover (04:10) Does Pilates really reduce inflammation? (08:29) The…

People in this episode

Host: Brittany

Guest: Madeline Leung Coleman

Topics covered

  • Pilates
  • exercise
  • social media
  • gender
  • body image
  • cultural trends

Keywords

  • Pilates
  • exercise
  • social media
  • body image
  • gender
  • fitness trends
  • cultural commentary

Mentioned in this episode

Organizations: New York Magazine, Sports and Fitness Industry Association

More episodes of It's Been a Minute

Explore listener stats, chart rankings, contacts and more on the It's Been a Minute podcast page.