% IssueDate = "2/10/03" IssueCategory = "Reviews" %>
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Media Matters
The guy is heartthrob handsome. The guy is hairy in the way nature intended guys to be (whoever decided that hairless men are the ideal should be boiled in hot wax). And, yes, the guy has a great body-every inch of it. For those of us who pay attention to the media, the significance of the pioneering ad is that, after decades of women being stripped down to their birthday suits to sell products, here is a dramatic instance of a naked man being used for that purpose. Of course the driving force behind the ad has nothing to do with either being artistic or treating men and women equally. Instead, the real goal is to be shocking and controversial as a means of getting publicity and attention in order, ultimately, to sell more pricey cologne. The Associated Press, Reuters, Ad Age, the San Francisco Examiner and a whole legion of Internet publications have joined Time in filling their roles in the plan by writing articles about the ad. Most of the stories quote YSL artistic director Tom Ford defending the nudity. "Perfume is worn on the skin," according to Ford, "so why hide the body?" French Vogue and Artforum International are among the publications that agree with Ford and are now running the full-monty version of the ad.
A recent issue of Out, a magazine that is aimed specifically toward gay readers, contains a three-page article titled "How To Get Laid." The piece begins: "This is not about love. This is about putting on a really cute T-shirt, going to your favorite bar, and taking someone home for hot, sweaty man sex." And the longest article in this month's issue of GQ is a six-page celebration of the fact that some scientific studies have shown that women never tire of having sex with the same man year after year, while the biological makeup of men makes them resistant to repeated sex with the same woman-although they can quickly be re-aroused when presented with a new potential sex partner. In short, the two magazines glorify sexual abandon in their editorial content but remain downright prudish when it comes to male nudity in their ads. |
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