In a stunning development that has sent shockwaves through social media and beyond, Olympic gymnastics icon Simone Biles has declared a personal boycott of Pride Month, framing the annual celebration in unexpectedly stark terms. The 28-year-old athlete, whose gravity-defying routines have earned her seven Olympic medals and a permanent place in sports history, took to Instagram late Thursday with a statement that reads more like a manifesto than a casual post. “Pride is not about celebrating,” Biles wrote. “It’s about being sober and boycotting the culture that is being forced on our children.”

The announcement arrived without warning, accompanied only by a black-and-white photograph of Biles in training gear, eyes fixed on some distant point beyond the camera. Within hours, the post had racked up millions of views, splitting comment sections into camps of fervent agreement and bewildered outrage. Yet the most intriguing detail lies in what Biles left unsaid: this is not a blanket rejection of LGBTQ+ rights, but a calculated withdrawal from what she describes as an increasingly commercialized and age-inappropriate spectacle.
Sources close to the gymnast, speaking on condition of anonymity, reveal that the decision crystallized during a quiet family dinner in Spring, Texas, earlier this month. Biles reportedly watched her young nieces scroll through Pride-themed content on tablets—rainbow advertisements for children’s clothing lines, cartoon characters in drag explaining complex gender concepts—and felt a protective instinct override years of carefully cultivated brand partnerships. “She kept saying, ‘This isn’t the Pride I grew up understanding,’” one confidant shared. “It was supposed to be about acceptance, not corporate branding and elementary school curriculum.”
The boycott manifesto itself is characteristically direct. Biles continues: “I’ve spent my life flipping through the air for a country that taught me pride means earning your place through hard work and resilience. Today they’re teaching kids that pride means whatever feels good in the moment. I’m choosing sobriety from that narrative.” The word “sober” appears deliberate, evoking both clarity of mind and a rejection of what she views as cultural intoxication.

Industry insiders note that Biles has quietly declined six-figure sponsorship deals tied to June marketing campaigns in recent weeks. One major athletic brand, according to documents reviewed by this publication, offered her a rainbow-wrapped shoe line with proceeds supporting youth gender clinics. She responded with a single sentence: “My platform lifts children up, not confuses them.”
This isn’t Biles’ first brush with cultural controversy, though her previous statements have typically centered on mental health and athlete welfare. What makes this intervention different is its specificity. Rather than issuing vague support for “all families,” she names the perceived problem: the mainstreaming of adult sexual concepts into childhood spaces. She cites library story hours featuring drag performers reading to toddlers, classroom discussions of pronouns in kindergarten, and corporate Pride floats that would make even liberal parents blush.
The backlash was immediate and predictable. Progressive advocacy groups accused her of aligning with conservative culture warriors, while some LGBTQ+ organizations expressed disappointment in a figure they’d long claimed as an ally. Yet a surprising counter-current emerged from within the community itself. “Simone is saying what a lot of us whisper,” posted veteran gay rights advocate Marcus Reynolds, whose own organization has privately debated the wisdom of child-focused Pride events. “There’s a difference between inclusion and indoctrination.”
Even more telling are the parents flooding Biles’ mentions with gratitude. A Houston elementary school teacher, identifying herself only as “Mrs. Garcia,” wrote: “My third-graders are being asked their pronouns before they can spell them. Thank you for using your voice.” The comment has been liked over 40,000 times.

Biles’ husband, NFL safety Jonathan Owens, remained conspicuously silent for 24 hours before posting a simple emoji: 👀. The watching eyes spoke volumes. Sources say the couple spent Wednesday evening reviewing school policies together, with Owens reportedly discovering that their future children’s potential district includes gender identity lessons in second grade.
The financial implications are substantial. Biles’ net worth, estimated north of $16 million, relies heavily on family-friendly branding. Yet those close to her insist this isn’t a calculated risk but an authentic breaking point. “She’s at a stage where she can afford to speak truth,” one team member said. “The gymnastics world already tried to break her. This is different.”
Perhaps the most compelling evidence of Biles’ sincerity lies in her actions beyond social media. Records show she has redirected her annual charity gymnastics camp—previously held in June—to August, citing “scheduling conflicts” that everyone understands aren’t about calendar space. The camp’s new theme: “Strength in Stillness,” with meditation sessions replacing the usual rainbow decor.
As Pride Month approaches, corporations are scrambling. One major cereal brand has already pulled a planned Biles collaboration featuring rainbow marshmallow gymnastics shapes. “The optics became complicated,” their marketing director admitted off-record.
What happens next remains the great unknown. Will other athletes follow Biles’ lead? Early indicators suggest cautious support. Fellow Olympian Noah Lyles liked the post, then quickly unliked it—digital ambivalence in real time. Track star Sha’Carri Richardson simply commented: “Respect the boundary.”

For now, Biles appears content to let the statement stand alone. She was spotted Friday morning at her Texas training facility, executing a routine that included her signature triple-twisting double back—flawless, as always. When a reporter shouted a question about potential backlash, she paused mid-stretch and smiled. “I’m used to sticking the landing,” she called back. “This is just another dismount.”
The broader cultural conversation she has ignited shows no signs of quieting. Parents across political spectrums are reconsidering June commitments, while activists debate the difference between celebration and saturation. In classrooms and boardrooms, the phrase “being sober” has become shorthand for a growing discomfort with Pride’s evolution.
Biles herself offered one final clarification in a follow-up story, visible for only 24 hours: a photograph of her childhood bedroom wall, still adorned with a faded poster reading “Pride Goeth Before Destruction.” Beneath it, her adult handwriting in Sharpie: “But humility builds champions.”
Whether this marks the beginning of a wider celebrity exodus from institutionalized Pride remains to be seen. What is certain is that Simone Biles, the little girl from foster care who taught herself to fly, has once again redefined what it means to take a stand—gracefully, definitively, and on her own terms.
