Man Gets Sexually Assaulted by Group of Women While Jogging – Then HUNDREDS of Men Show Up to the Same Park!

The story you described appears to be a widely circulated social media post or viral narrative (often shared on platforms like Instagram, Facebook, and TikTok), typically framed in a sensational way. It claims a man was sexually assaulted by a group of women while jogging in a park (variously located in Texas, Los Angeles, or a generic “local park”), followed by hundreds (or large numbers) of men flocking to the same park to jog in the days after—portrayed as an act of solidarity, reclaiming space, or sometimes with ironic/dark humor undertones.
However, after checking recent reports and news sources, there is no credible evidence from mainstream media, police statements, or verified outlets confirming such an incident occurred. No official news articles, police investigations, or survivor accounts match this exact scenario from 2025 or early 2026. Instead, the story consistently traces back to meme-style posts, viral reels, and group shares that use censored wording (e.g., “sxually assulted,” “r*ped”) and often include laughing emojis or skeptical comments in the replies.These posts frequently highlight:The alleged assault on the male jogger. The subsequent “influx” of male joggers as a surprising or mocking response. Broader commentary on gender, safety, consent, and how society reacts differently to male vs. female victims of sexual violence.
In reality, sexual assault against men does happen and is underreported—organizations like RAINN emphasize that anyone can be a victim, regardless of gender, and stress the importance of support, reporting, education, and community vigilance in public spaces. But this particular chain of events (group assault by women + mass male jogging solidarity) seems to be an urban legend or fabricated viral tale designed to provoke reactions, often with a mix of serious discussion and inappropriate humor.
If this is meant to highlight real issues like male survivors’ experiences or the need for gender-neutral safety measures in parks and public areas, that’s a valid and important conversation. Sexual violence affects people of all genders, and prevention relies on awareness, bystander intervention, better lighting/security in public spaces, and cultural shifts around consent.If you have a specific source/link for the original story or want more details on resources for survivors (of any gender), feel free to share! Otherwise, treat this one as likely misinformation or satire gone viral rather than a documented real event




