Excuse me, where are your plus sizes?

Miller doesnt stop at telling brands they make their plus-sized customers feel humiliated.

Shes demanding that they do better.

TikTok star Samyra Miller

Kevin House*

It is infuriating to me because it is what [continues]peoples insecurities with their bodies.

She wants to change that.

I dont give a shit aboutBrandy Melville, she laughs.

They dont give a rats ratatouille about me.

I aint wasting my time.

Those people dont want me in their store.

If this is what you value, then why isnt that whats reflected when I go into the store?

Miller isnt only fighting haters.

She also has to contend with pre-existing ideas about what fat people should profess online.

Her biggest pet peeve: body positivity.

For Samyra, the movement isnt a moment.

Its a useless buzzword and one shes sick of.

I hate body positivity as it has been molded in todays climate, she says.

Current body-positive culture is just fatphobia repackaged as a more lighthearted thing.

I have rolls too.

And that is not helpful.

Fatphobia affects everyone, not just fat people.

We have a problem in America with the obsession with fitness and bodies in general.

I think that our ultimate goal should be body neutrality.

But she tellsRolling Stonethat she refuses to be both dissuaded or categorized as a one-trick pony.

Im a classically trained singer.

Ive been performing my whole life.

Music is a big part of me.

I am also an academic.

I love football, I love fashion, she says.

I think that there is no world that exists where I would only be posting about just one thing.

You never know what youre gonna get.

I might wake up tomorrow and be like, Yall, Im a tattoo artist.

In four years, yall might see me throwing shot put at the Olympics.

Tell me what I cant do, and Ill do it.