zekko
Master Don Juan
- Joined
- Aug 6, 2009
- Messages
- 16,515
- Reaction score
- 9,610
I notice Adam Levine, singer of Maroon 5, won People Magazine's Sexiest Man Alive for this year. Now aside from the fact that things like this are bullsh!t for the most part (I almost never agree with "Sexiest Woman" choices), is there anything to be taken from this?
On the one hand, he does often wear the "five o'clock shadow" look that girls say that they like so well. That look doesn't work for me, unfortunately, since my facial hair comes out like steel wool lol.
On the other hand, the guy sings in a high falsetto, similar to a female's voice. PUA gurus often tell you to talk in a deep, booming voice, because that's what girls find sexy. This certainly does not match up in this case.
I listen to the pop radio station sometimes (I usually flip around to different channels and different genres). I notice that deep, masculine voices are conspicuously rare on the pop channels for the most part (there are a few exceptions). Most of the singers on the pop stations are female, in fact. Guy voices are as likely as not to be rapping. This is interesting to me because when I was growing up most voices (and bands) on the pop chart were male.
Is this current favoring of the female voice part of the demasculinization of the modern male? And I might ask the same question about Adam Levine, with his high pitched voice, being promoted as the height of male sexuality.
On the one hand, he does often wear the "five o'clock shadow" look that girls say that they like so well. That look doesn't work for me, unfortunately, since my facial hair comes out like steel wool lol.
On the other hand, the guy sings in a high falsetto, similar to a female's voice. PUA gurus often tell you to talk in a deep, booming voice, because that's what girls find sexy. This certainly does not match up in this case.
I listen to the pop radio station sometimes (I usually flip around to different channels and different genres). I notice that deep, masculine voices are conspicuously rare on the pop channels for the most part (there are a few exceptions). Most of the singers on the pop stations are female, in fact. Guy voices are as likely as not to be rapping. This is interesting to me because when I was growing up most voices (and bands) on the pop chart were male.
Is this current favoring of the female voice part of the demasculinization of the modern male? And I might ask the same question about Adam Levine, with his high pitched voice, being promoted as the height of male sexuality.
