DNA Magazine

THE HOT BODY ISSUE

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WHY HAVE A HOT BODIES ISSUE OF DNA?

Aren’t they all hot body issues?

Yes, every issue of DNA contains hot guys with hot bodies but, recently, some comments I’ve seen online have annoyed me and I want to call them out and challenge the assumption­s they make.

DNA is sometimes criticised for the lack of so-called “real” men on our covers. I know what is implied by “real men” in this context: men without the physiques and looks that we choose to feature. What bugs me about this comment is the assumption that the men on our covers and in our pages are somehow fake, shallow, lacking in substance, less than “real”.

They aren’t. Our cover guys – and most are not models – are very real people. Most of them have “real” jobs in the real world, and many are not just blessed with good looks but brains, too. Our cover guys have included chemical engineers, investment bankers, fashion designers, business owners, teachers and servicemen.

They’re men who have been geneticall­y blessed and have worked damn hard with diligence and self-discipline in the gym and on their diet to achieve the bodies they have.

“Same old PhotoShopp­ing,” was a comment I saw recently online. Of course we use PhotoShop. Everyone who posts a selfie to Instagram is putting the shot through some sort of filter these days. But the post-production techniques we employ are not about creating exaggerate­d, unnatural body shapes in the way that women’s magazines, Instagram influencer­s and advertisin­g does. We clean up blemishes, rebalance colours, fix awkward shadows… things we all do all the time on social media. The bodies in our images are the product of hard work on the part of the model, not the result of PhotoShop reconstruc­tions!

To me, these criticisms often feel like an inverted homophobia. How dare we celebrate and adulate these beautiful men! Where is our gay shame? Shouldn’t we feel bad about idealising the masculine form?

No! That kind of thinking leads to censorship, and there’s already enough of that inflicted upon us.

The female nude is a staple of art and photograph­y, but try publishing an artful image of a flaccid penis, in print or online, and see how fast your social media account is closed, your sales channels are shut down or your holiday snaps are reported as inappropri­ate to the Facebook thought police.

It was the American beefcake and physique magazines of the post-war era that helped liberate gay men, giving them permission to sexually objectify other men, giving them a chance to express and experience their sexuality. Today, there are forces that still wish to shame us.

I’m not suggesting we’re living in a Handmaid’s Tale Gilead dystopia, but the gay male gaze is still a contempora­ry threat to the status quo. It’s a threat to the patriarcha­l hierarchy, which requires that women be objectifie­d, not men. And it’s a threat to some quarters of feminist thought, which sees all sexual objectific­ation as a form of pornograph­y.

It’s no surprise to me that Israel Folau’s “repent or burn in hell” message to homosexual­s comes from a man playing a game in which men throw their bodies at other men and attempt to physically dominate them. Homo-anxiety is highest in the most homo-erotic sports. Tennis players, golfers and cricketers don’t appear to have the same anxieties.

So, we salute all the real, hot-bodied men of this issue: ballet dancer Caue Frias (The Secret Of Flight, page 60), Simon Dunn (fitness column, page 44), cover model Stas Tikhonov (page 34), porn star Sean Zevran (page 80), triathlete Denis Suraev (Slippery When Wet, page 72) and Brazilian beach boys Gustavo Naspolini, Mauro Poggi, Sahar Hori, Max Figueiredo, Stepan Perevrzev, Vitor Castro, Bruno Krause, Joao Pedro Aires (Summer Feels, page 44).

And there are other men to appreciate in this issue, too, like Brit musician Davey Boi (page

26), Law And Order actor Raul Esparza (page

70) and soccer player Andy Brennan (Our First Out A-Leaguer, page 30). Let’s appreciate them all for all their achievemen­ts. Andrew Creagh Founding Editor

 ??  ?? Denis Suraev by Stas Vokman.
Denis Suraev by Stas Vokman.

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