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Brad Pitt's GQ cover is masculine, alpha and (hopefully) the end of Hollywood's ‘hot rodent' era

Brad Pitt's GQ cover is masculine, alpha and (hopefully) the end of Hollywood's ‘hot rodent' era

'A hot rodent man is … a way of describing a skinny, lanky, unconventionally attractive dude who does not embody stereotypical macho-like attributes,' said Men's Health magazine last June. Think Barry Keoghan, Timothée Chalamet and Josh O'Connor. The hot rodent man 'has more of a pointed, angular facial structure that is almost rat- or mouse-like, he rocks messy hair, sports vintage clothing, and, to borrow the internet's phrasing, is so wan as to appear one cigarette away from death'. While the internet's obsession with unconventional men will doubtlessly continue – and online, there's room for everyone – in celebrity circles and in Hollywood it feels as if the sinewy hot rodent boyfriend has smoked his last.
Brad Pitt is not the only man in the public eye sporting a bulkier look. As The Guardian reported in 2023, these days the size of your biceps has become as much of a status symbol as the size of your bank balance, particularly among men of a certain age.
Much has been made of 41-year-old Meta founder tech bro nerd Mark Zuckerberg's beefcake transformation – we're talking martial arts-honed muscles (he took up jiu jitsu in the pandemic), a foil-boarding hobby, a cringy gold medallion and an expressed desire for a return to more 'masculine energy' in the corporate world. 'A culture that celebrates aggression a bit more has its own merits,' he told a fellow muscle man, the right-wing podcaster Joe Rogan, in January.
Then we have rocket-launching, Amazon-owning tech bro Jeff Bezos, who – also at 61, and as the world's second-richest man – has been on a mission to optimise his physique for the past few years, reportedly enlisting Tom Cruise's personal trainer and, of course, eating a high-end, high-protein diet. The ripped results speak for themselves.
In a far cry from the Christopher Reeve as Superman days of old, today's Hollywood superheroes have real-life bodies per their characters – think Jason Momoa, Hugh Jackman, Dwayne Johnson, all above 45 years of age.
Fifty-four-year-old Matt Damon has turned hardbody for the upcoming Christopher Nolan movie The Odyssey, in which he plays Odysseus. Avengers star Chris Hemsworth, 41, is not only known for his hyper-muscular physique and home training videos, but also his Limitless TV series for Disney, in which he 'pushes himself to new limits to try and stop the diseases of old age before they take hold … [and] discovers how we all can unlock our potential to stay fitter, healthier and happier throughout our lives'.
At 50, David Beckham's fitness goals are to remain 'lean, strong and pain-free', according to his personal trainer, Bobby Rich, who revealed he goes through rounds of push-ups and pull-ups to give himself something he says he never had as a football player, a defined chest. 'I never had pecs until I met Bob,' Beckham told Men's Health in February, joking, 'You could say I've gone up a few cup sizes as a result.'
Even UK housewives' favourite daytime TV presenter Ben Shephard is at it, appearing on a recent cover of the same magazine with a six-pack, detailing his comprehensive workout plan and his diet consisting of six lean protein meals a day.
Muscles have always been associated with manliness, but the past few years of social media saturation have seen a shift in male beauty ideals, with the masculine beauty standard becoming a lot bulkier and more difficult to achieve, spawning a rise in body image issues among boys and young men. As building and retaining muscle becomes more challenging as we age – for men and for women – it makes the physiques of Brad, Bezos et al even more of a flex.
Their looks exemplify the West's growing obsession with biohacking our bodies for wellness and treating the body like a machine that can be optimised, a large part of which appears to involve (in the eyes of the consumer, at least) eating more lean protein to build muscle. In the UK alone, a national survey for Ocado carried out this year found that in 2024, nearly half of UK adults increased their protein intake, rising to two-thirds of all people aged between 16 and 34.
'It's hard to argue that muscles haven't always been some form of cultural ideal,' says Andrew Tracey, Men's Health UK's fitness director. 'You've only got to look at ancient Greek and Roman statues that accentuated muscular male physiques – and then fast-forward to the larger than life action stars of the '80s. However, I'd actually posit that 'smaller', less muscled, more achievable physiques have come to the forefront in the last few decades. One of the biggest shifts has been in the level of education and awareness of the general population on health and fitness.
'Men are more enlightened and empowered than ever on issues surrounding their health. Strength and brawn have always been cultural ideals, to some degree, but now, a growing number of men are able to pursue that ideal with education and discernment – and many are choosing a more holistic approach that benefits and improves their health across the board, not just in the mirror. More and more research is emerging, highlighting the health and longevity benefits of carrying a bit of extra muscle mass. So as long as it's done in a healthy and informed manner, there are worse things for men to do with their time.'
Of course, the body is almost always political and, in today's hyper-masculine political climate, perhaps it is easy to see why some men are eager to enhance anything about their appearance that could be construed as overtly masculine.
'The more conservative, regressive or perhaps the more 'traditional' a society makes itself, the more it will really endeavour – in its cultural work or product – to try to create two genders who look very different to each other,' says Meredith Jones, honorary professor of gender studies at Brunel University of London. 'Fashions spring out of the times we are living in … These movements are always cyclical.'
In other words, folks, get your fill of Brad, Ben and Bezos (if you so desire) while you can before these bods – and accompanying thigh-high boots – wade off into the sunset forever.

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Alanis Morissette 'would not be alive' without therapy
Alanis Morissette 'would not be alive' without therapy

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Alanis Morissette 'would not be alive' without therapy

Alanis Morissette "would not be alive" without therapy. The Ironic hitmaker admits she still struggles with thoughts of ending her life and believes much of her depressive nature comes from being highly sensitive. After making her admission about being saved by therapy, she was asked if she was suicidal and told The Guardian newspaper: "All the time. I still struggle with it. I have an anxious, depressive tendency. Those who are sensitive are much more susceptible to their environmental information. "If you put a highly sensitive person in an environment where they're brow-beaten or reduced, they'll basically want to kill themselves. It's the worst. If you put a highly sensitive person in an environment where they're supported, championed and listened to, they thrive." The 51-year-old star - who has Ever, 14, Onyx, nine, and five-year-old Winter with husband Souleye - believes couples therapy is hugely important in her marriage. "I'm a huge couples therapist person. I have been for ever," she said. But Morissette insists any therapist she and Souleye work with must be trauma-informed and addiction-informed. "I can't be supported by someone who doesn't look through those lenses," she said. The Thank U singer has struggled with addictions to work, love, sex and shopping, to which she takes a "Whac-a-Mole" approach of tackling whenever one issue or another pops up. "I call addiction 'relief-seeking measures that kill you eventually'," Morissette said. "There are some people who would get very mad at me for implying at all that (sobriety) is nuanced. Because for those of us who were drinking at seven in the morning, well there's nothing nuanced about that. "So, I guess it depends. For me, it's whichever addiction is bringing you to death very fast. Which one is it? Which one's ruining your relationships? And then there's the Whac-a-Mole approach, which is, 'OK, I've stopped not eating. And now I'm working my ass off. 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After making her admission about being saved by therapy, she was asked if she was suicidal and told The Guardian newspaper: "All the time. I still struggle with it. I have an anxious, depressive tendency. Those who are sensitive are much more susceptible to their environmental information. "If you put a highly sensitive person in an environment where they're brow-beaten or reduced, they'll basically want to kill themselves. It's the worst. If you put a highly sensitive person in an environment where they're supported, championed and listened to, they thrive." The 51-year-old star - who has Ever, 14, Onyx, nine, and five-year-old Winter with husband Souleye - believes couples therapy is hugely important in her marriage. "I'm a huge couples therapist person. I have been for ever," she said. But Morissette insists any therapist she and Souleye work with must be trauma-informed and addiction-informed. "I can't be supported by someone who doesn't look through those lenses," she said. The Thank U singer has struggled with addictions to work, love, sex and shopping, to which she takes a "Whac-a-Mole" approach of tackling whenever one issue or another pops up. "I call addiction 'relief-seeking measures that kill you eventually'," Morissette said. "There are some people who would get very mad at me for implying at all that (sobriety) is nuanced. Because for those of us who were drinking at seven in the morning, well there's nothing nuanced about that. "So, I guess it depends. For me, it's whichever addiction is bringing you to death very fast. Which one is it? Which one's ruining your relationships? And then there's the Whac-a-Mole approach, which is, 'OK, I've stopped not eating. And now I'm working my ass off. Oh, yeah, and I took a few too many pills.' The Whac-a-Mole, that's what we have to keep an eye on." The singer finds being a workaholic particularly tough because it is a quality often celebrated. "If I said, 'Oh, I did heroin till four in the morning and totally blacked out', people would be like, 'Oh s***. B**** needs some help.' "But if I said, 'I've been working my f****** a** off for this deadline and I finished at 4.15am,' people would be patting my back and be, like, 'Good work, girl.' It's equally corrosive. Because any addiction, if we keep going with it, we're dead. It is great for 20 minutes, then you're dead." Lifeline 13 11 14 beyondblue 1300 22 4636 Alanis Morissette "would not be alive" without therapy. The Ironic hitmaker admits she still struggles with thoughts of ending her life and believes much of her depressive nature comes from being highly sensitive. After making her admission about being saved by therapy, she was asked if she was suicidal and told The Guardian newspaper: "All the time. I still struggle with it. I have an anxious, depressive tendency. Those who are sensitive are much more susceptible to their environmental information. "If you put a highly sensitive person in an environment where they're brow-beaten or reduced, they'll basically want to kill themselves. It's the worst. If you put a highly sensitive person in an environment where they're supported, championed and listened to, they thrive." The 51-year-old star - who has Ever, 14, Onyx, nine, and five-year-old Winter with husband Souleye - believes couples therapy is hugely important in her marriage. "I'm a huge couples therapist person. I have been for ever," she said. But Morissette insists any therapist she and Souleye work with must be trauma-informed and addiction-informed. "I can't be supported by someone who doesn't look through those lenses," she said. The Thank U singer has struggled with addictions to work, love, sex and shopping, to which she takes a "Whac-a-Mole" approach of tackling whenever one issue or another pops up. "I call addiction 'relief-seeking measures that kill you eventually'," Morissette said. "There are some people who would get very mad at me for implying at all that (sobriety) is nuanced. Because for those of us who were drinking at seven in the morning, well there's nothing nuanced about that. "So, I guess it depends. For me, it's whichever addiction is bringing you to death very fast. Which one is it? Which one's ruining your relationships? And then there's the Whac-a-Mole approach, which is, 'OK, I've stopped not eating. And now I'm working my ass off. Oh, yeah, and I took a few too many pills.' The Whac-a-Mole, that's what we have to keep an eye on." The singer finds being a workaholic particularly tough because it is a quality often celebrated. "If I said, 'Oh, I did heroin till four in the morning and totally blacked out', people would be like, 'Oh s***. B**** needs some help.' "But if I said, 'I've been working my f****** a** off for this deadline and I finished at 4.15am,' people would be patting my back and be, like, 'Good work, girl.' It's equally corrosive. Because any addiction, if we keep going with it, we're dead. It is great for 20 minutes, then you're dead." Lifeline 13 11 14 beyondblue 1300 22 4636 Alanis Morissette "would not be alive" without therapy. The Ironic hitmaker admits she still struggles with thoughts of ending her life and believes much of her depressive nature comes from being highly sensitive. After making her admission about being saved by therapy, she was asked if she was suicidal and told The Guardian newspaper: "All the time. I still struggle with it. I have an anxious, depressive tendency. Those who are sensitive are much more susceptible to their environmental information. "If you put a highly sensitive person in an environment where they're brow-beaten or reduced, they'll basically want to kill themselves. It's the worst. If you put a highly sensitive person in an environment where they're supported, championed and listened to, they thrive." The 51-year-old star - who has Ever, 14, Onyx, nine, and five-year-old Winter with husband Souleye - believes couples therapy is hugely important in her marriage. "I'm a huge couples therapist person. I have been for ever," she said. But Morissette insists any therapist she and Souleye work with must be trauma-informed and addiction-informed. "I can't be supported by someone who doesn't look through those lenses," she said. The Thank U singer has struggled with addictions to work, love, sex and shopping, to which she takes a "Whac-a-Mole" approach of tackling whenever one issue or another pops up. "I call addiction 'relief-seeking measures that kill you eventually'," Morissette said. "There are some people who would get very mad at me for implying at all that (sobriety) is nuanced. Because for those of us who were drinking at seven in the morning, well there's nothing nuanced about that. "So, I guess it depends. For me, it's whichever addiction is bringing you to death very fast. Which one is it? Which one's ruining your relationships? And then there's the Whac-a-Mole approach, which is, 'OK, I've stopped not eating. And now I'm working my ass off. Oh, yeah, and I took a few too many pills.' The Whac-a-Mole, that's what we have to keep an eye on." The singer finds being a workaholic particularly tough because it is a quality often celebrated. "If I said, 'Oh, I did heroin till four in the morning and totally blacked out', people would be like, 'Oh s***. B**** needs some help.' "But if I said, 'I've been working my f****** a** off for this deadline and I finished at 4.15am,' people would be patting my back and be, like, 'Good work, girl.' It's equally corrosive. Because any addiction, if we keep going with it, we're dead. It is great for 20 minutes, then you're dead." Lifeline 13 11 14 beyondblue 1300 22 4636

Jeff Bezos is getting married in Venice. Here's why people are protesting the wedding
Jeff Bezos is getting married in Venice. Here's why people are protesting the wedding

ABC News

timean hour ago

  • ABC News

Jeff Bezos is getting married in Venice. Here's why people are protesting the wedding

Billionaire and tech tycoon Jeff Bezos and Laura Sanchez are set to hold an opulent three-day wedding in Venice this week. And some locals are not happy about it. One group has plastered banners on the Italian city's famous Rialto bridge reading "No space for Bezos!" Many details of the wedding are still under wraps, including the precise day it will happen. But a lot of big names from film, fashion and business are expected arrive in the Italian city to see Bezos tie the knot — provided they can get past the protesters. Here's what we know about the lavish event and why some locals are angry. Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, 61, and his fiance, journalist 55-year-old Laura Sanchez got engaged in 2023. Sanchez is also known for being part of the all-female trip to space with Bezos's Blue Origin space exploration venture. The couple were set to arrive in Venice from Sunday by sea on Bezos's 417ft mega yacht called the Koru, as well as an accompanying ship with a helipad. They've reportedly spared no expense on the celebrations. The Koru is believed to be the largest sailing yacht in the world and cost about $US500 million ($776 million) to build. Once in Venice, 35 to 50 water taxis have reportedly been hired to ferry guests about through the city's iconic canals. According to Italian media, the entire island of San Giorgio is also reportedly booked out. The local government has denied claims that every luxury hotel in Venice has been booked out, but the extravagance of the wedding is likely to be extreme, with The Hollywood Reporter reporting a spend of "more than $US10 million". Katy Perry, Orlando Bloom, Mick Jagger, Kim Kardashian, Oprah Winfrey and Leonardo DiCaprio are among the names reportedly on the guest list. Lady Gaga and Elton John are rumoured to be performing and Bezos's fellow tech billionaires Elon Musk, Mark Zuckerberg and Bill Gates are expected to attend. The couple have kept the exact venue and day under wraps but it is estimated to take place between June 24 and 28. Protesters say the hosting of the wedding highlights how Venice has prioritised its tourism trade over the locals who face housing shortages, a high cost of living and the closure of basic services. This week, in addition to banners over the Rialto bridge, protesters threatened peaceful blockades of Venice's canals. Organiser Tommaso Cacciari said he believed the city was being exploited by outsiders. "Bezos arrogantly believes he can take over the city and turn it into his own private party venue," he said. "Venice is a living city, not a place to rent to the highest bidder," the collective wrote on social media. Protesters also hung a huge banner with an X over Bezos's name on a bell tower overlooking the Venice lagoon before the sign was removed on Thursday. But not every Venetian is against the wedding. Mayor Luigi Brugnaro and regional governor Luca Zaia argue the wedding will bring an economic windfall to local businesses, including the motor boats and gondolas that operate its myriad canals. Rosa Salva, the city's oldest pastry shop, has been commissioned to make biscuits for the nuptials. Antonio Rosa Salva, the sixth generation in his family to run the business, said the wedding order was important recognition of his family's long tradition of baking Venetian specialties. "Events like this bring quality tourism to Venice,'' he said. "I don't see how an event with 200 people can create disruptions. "It's responsible tourism. "It's prestigious that a couple like this, who can go anywhere in the world, are getting married in the city." A couple of months ago, in the face of early protests from residents who feared the arrival of thousands of celebrities and hangers-on, the local government issued a statement clarifying that it would not disrupt Venetians' everyday life. The local government said only 200 guests were coming, a number that could be easily accommodated without any disruption. The statement also pointed out that Venice had extensive experience in hosting international events "much larger than this". It also denied reports wedding organisers reserved large numbers of gondolas and water taxis, saying it was their "utmost priority to make sure the city functions as normal, for all, with no abnormal disruption to anyone". With images of protests being shared by news outlets of the weekend, the event planning firm organising the wedding published a statement defending the event. The company, called Lanza & Baucina Limited, doesn't use social media, instead making a statement published by Page Six, which is the New York Post's entertainment website. "From the outset, instructions from our client and our own guiding principles were abundantly clear: the minimising of any disruption to the city, the respect for its residents and institutions and the overwhelming employment of locals in the crafting of the events," the company's statement said. "Rumours of 'taking over' the city are entirely false and diametrically opposed to our goals and to reality. "No exaggerated quantity of water taxis or gondolas have ever been booked, the number of taxis reserved being proportionate for the number of guests." ABC with Wires

Alanis Morissette 'would not be alive' without therapy
Alanis Morissette 'would not be alive' without therapy

Perth Now

time9 hours ago

  • Perth Now

Alanis Morissette 'would not be alive' without therapy

Alanis Morissette "would not be alive" without therapy. The Ironic hitmaker admitted she still "struggles" with suicidal thoughts and believes much of her depressive nature comes from being "highly sensitive". After making her admission about being saved by therapy, she was asked if she was suicidal and told The Guardian newspaper: 'All the time. I still struggle with it. I have an anxious, depressive tendency. Those who are sensitive are much more susceptible to their environmental information. "If you put a highly sensitive person in an environment where they're brow-beaten or reduced, they'll basically want to kill themselves. It's the worst. If you put a highly sensitive person in an environment where they're supported, championed and listened to, they thrive.' The 51-year-old star - who has Ever, 14, Onyx, nine, and five-year-old Winter with husband Souleye - believes couples therapy is hugely important in her marriage. She said: 'I'm a huge couples therapist person. I have been for ever.' But Alanis insists any therapist she and Souleye work with must be "trauma-informed" and "addiction-informed". She said: 'I can't be supported by someone who doesn't look through those lenses.' The Thank U singer has struggled with addictions to work, love, sex and shopping, to which she takes a "Whac-a-Mole" approach of tackling whenever one issue or another pops up. She said: 'I call addiction 'relief-seeking measures that kill you eventually'... 'There are some people who would get very mad at me for implying at all that [sobriety] is nuanced. Because for those of us who were drinking at seven in the morning, well there's nothing nuanced about that. So, I guess it depends. For me, it's whichever addiction is bringing you to death very fast. Which one is it? Which one's ruining your relationships? And then there's the Whac-a-Mole approach, which is, 'OK, I've stopped not eating. And now I'm working my ass off. Oh, yeah, and I took a few too many pills.' The Whac-a-Mole, that's what we have to keep an eye on.' Alanis finds being a workaholic particularly tough because it is a quality often celebrated. She said: 'Because the number one priority is being clicked into some seed of productivity. There's no worth in just being. And it's a higher power thing, so work addiction is also called the praise addiction. 'If I said, 'Oh, I did heroin till four in the morning and totally blacked out,' people would be like, 'Oh s***. B**** needs some help.' But if I said, 'I've been working my f****** a** off for this deadline and I finished at 4.15am,' people would be patting my back and be, like, 'Good work, girl.' It's equally corrosive. Because any addiction, if we keep going with it, we're dead. It is great for 20 minutes, then you're dead.'

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