13 quotes found
“The artistic disposition is little more than an extreme form of sulking.”
“Tattoos, after all, are a passionate, usually doomed assertion of mastery of your own destiny, or at least a defiant embrace of one that you cannot control.”
“Of course, fashions come and go but metrosexuality isnt a fashion its an epoch. It represents a fundamental shift in what men are allowed to be and to want. Men are now permitted to be passive in...”
“In the 21st century mens tits have not just rivalled but replaced womens as the touchstone of sexy in mainstream pop culture, even when the audience for them is other men.”
“Is there a support group for people who didnt like Brokeback Mountain? We must, if the rave reviews and the newspaper reports are to be believed, be a very tiny not to mention vulnerable minority...”
“In a spornographic age its no longer enough for the male body to be presented to us by consumerism as merely attractive, or desiring to be desired, as it was in the early days of nakedly narcissist...”
“At the dawn of the second decade of the Twenty First Century, masculinity has been rendered so self-conscious in our mediated, mirrored world that even regular guys are apparently just a fashion fa...”
“Contrary to what you have been told, metrosexuality is not about flip-flops and facials, man-bags or manscara. Or about men becoming girlie or gay. Its about men becoming everything. To themselves....”
“Of course, fashions come and go but metrosexuality isn’t a fashion – it’s an epoch. It represents a fundamental shift in what men are allowed to be and to want. Men are now permitted to be ‘passive...”
“In the 21st century men’s tits have not just rivalled but replaced women’s as the touchstone of ‘sexy’ in mainstream pop culture, even when the audience for them is other men.”
“Is there a support group for people who didn’t like ‘Brokeback Mountain’? We must, if the rave reviews and the newspaper reports are to be believed, be a very tiny — not to mention vulnerable — min...”
“In a spornographic age it’s no longer enough for the male body to be presented to us by consumerism as merely attractive, or desiring to be desired, as it was in the early days of nakedly narcissis...”
“At the dawn of the second decade of the Twenty First Century, masculinity has been rendered so self-conscious in our mediated, mirrored world that even ‘regular guys’ are apparently just a fashion ...”