She took off her shirt and set off a firestorm. One video, one rant about “40-degree heat” and “boys on-site with no shirts,” and suddenly a Sydney tradie in a bikini top became the lightning rod for a much uglier debate. Is this equality, or is it disrespect? Is she brave—or just maki… Continues…
Shianne Fox didn’t just complain about the heat; she challenged the unwritten rules that say male bodies are normal and female bodies are a “distraction.” To her, going topless is a stand for equality and comfort on a blistering worksite. But the reaction exposed a painful fracture: many women in trades feel she’s reinforcing every stereotype they’ve fought to escape.
Some female tradies say Fox’s viral persona makes it harder for them to be taken seriously in a male-dominated industry where they already battle doubt, jokes, and exclusion. Behind the outrage is a larger question: is equality about doing the same things men do, or about reshaping what respect and professionalism look like for everyone? With a 12:1 male-to-female ratio still defining the trades, it’s clear the real fight isn’t just about shirts—it’s about who gets to belong.