By definition an antihero is a hero with a lack of heroic attributes. What we understand as heroic attributes keeps changing however. Sometimes it's a lack of virtues, sometimes it's generally a wrong motivation (like being the hero merely for profit). I've also seen antihero instances that described a tragic hero, who challenged the status quo and ultimately failed, where it could be understood that protecting the status quo and always winning is a heroic attribute.
All in all the term is as diluted as what we perceive as heroic. In the literal and dramaturgical sense.
Just don't make the mistake and describe villains as antiheroes.
A seasoned collector once advised us, if we try a new type of mushroom, start with a only a handful, maybe even less, and see if it upsets your stomach. If it doesn't, you can eat more.
Also obviously never force other people to participate in such experiments. You never know if they can tolerate the same mushrooms as you do.
He was still a minor when the video was published (against his will, it was a private commission). He was bullied a lot for it, because people didn't understand it was staged. He distanced himself from all of that for a while. Perhaps he started body building to compensate.
Woah! Garages!