
Australia: 'Why Masculinity Trend Pieces Must Also Die'
Article here. Excerpt:
'According to the Sydney Morning Herald there is a new breed of man. He is "chivalrous, but not patriarchal. He is well-groomed without being pretentious or dandy. He'll open the door for someone - not because they're female - but because it's a nice thing to do. He doesn't mind meeting his mates at the pub, but he has no qualms inquiring about the riesling." He is the Modern Day Gentleman or MDG for short. A composite of traditional male ruggedness and new age intellectualism that's epitomized, apparently, by comedian Charlie Pickering. And he is completely fabricated for the purposes of this article.
Here's the thing. The problem with trend pieces on masculinity, much like trend pieces on hipsters, is this notion that a large group of rational adults willingly subscribe to a singular and static code of conduct. They don't. And when it comes to trend pieces on masculinity, that margin for error extrapolates to half the fucking population and all we're left with is vague anecdotal evidence about how the modern man behaves and what it is he stands for. “It means being a little more considered and a little more responsible for who you are and what you do,” Pickering claims of the new Australian male. “It is reclaiming some of the classical idea of what it means to be a man.” What? What does that even mean? Were men less responsible a few years ago?
...
To be an Australian male in 2010 you have to fulfill two prerequisites. You have to be male and you have to be Australian. Nothing more, nothing less. The rest (dating, your job, how many friends you have, respect) will take care of itself and it will have nothing to do with how tight your suit is.'
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Comments
How wonderful for the wiminz
"He is chivalrous, but not patriarchal"
Just what the feminists want - a man who will die for them but won't ask them to cook dinner!
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Rise, Rebel, Resist.
Haw, haw, haw, haw...
Sorry man, but I'm gonna have to run that line. F-ing Brilliant!
Me too
That was a brilliant line.
An afterthought
With the recent concern about obesity, an obscure thought surfaced in my noggin.
At one time, moms/wives used to cook meals for their families. And they did their best to make them good, nutritious meals. I still remember some.
But now we have working mothers and wives, who have no time to cook a good meal, and probably couldn't if they tried. So we all eat out a lot more or order a pizza or make a quick trip to Mickey D's for some Big Macs. We've gone from home-cooked meals to fast food.
And our bellies show the difference.