Male Model Comparisons

I prefer Shaun's more refined features. (I also don't really like Christian's overly muscled torso). Comparison wise, I think Erin Wasson has a different jawline though. :rolleyes:
 
Both also did something 'notoriously naive'/ 'notoriously sexy' or both.

Monzon dropped his pants for a place in a catwalk show way back 2 seasons ago at the NYC fashion week while Shaun is said to have 'run away from home' to become a 'man' while he was still 17.

On Monzon, it has been said that he can't get into the fab runway show, because he got too much muscle. Hah!
 
Originally posted by Acid@Jan 12th, 2004 - 2:39 pm
here u go

i couldnt find the photos i was looking for but you can see a resembalance here

male versions of the female supermods
Maybe just not a resemblance, maybe twins... :lol: at least for the hair... but it's Boyd this time..

Nemova
 

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Christian, in my opinion, is too sturdy. No offence, but his muscles scare me :flower: . As for Shaun, I used to like him but after reading his article in GQ, something about him turns me off.

I can see a slight resemblance between Boyd and Erin.. especially the hair part :lol:
 
Originally posted by Frostbite@Jan 17th, 2004 - 5:02 am
Christian, in my opinion, is too sturdy. No offence, but his muscles scare me :flower: . As for Shaun, I used to like him but after reading his article in GQ, something about him turns me off.

I can see a slight resemblance between Boyd and Erin.. especially the hair part :lol:
What turned you off about him. I like the fact that he has a goal in this career. :smile:

"Wicked...Peaches and cream"
 
Originally posted by ItaStyle+Jan 17th, 2004 - 6:43 am--><div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(ItaStyle @ Jan 17th, 2004 - 6:43 am)</div><div class='quotemain'><!--QuoteBegin-Frostbite@Jan 17th, 2004 - 5:02 am
Christian, in my opinion, is too sturdy. No offence, but his muscles scare me :flower: . As for Shaun, I used to like him but after reading his article in GQ, something about him turns me off.

I can see a slight resemblance between Boyd and Erin.. especially the hair part :lol:
What turned you off about him. I like the fact that he has a goal in this career. :smile:

"Wicked...Peaches and cream"[/b][/quote]
It doesn't bother me that he has a goal in his profession because that's a positive thing. He, after all, has a ravishing face and I do like him as a model.

You might want to differ with me here but, like I said, there's something about him that sorta turns me off a little as a person. There is an ambiguous air of conceitedness somewhere within his words. I'm not so keen on the "I'll-do-anything-to-get-highly-paid" thing as well as the time when he muttered his name irritatedly at the female organizer. And I just found out he's a smoker :cry:

I hope I sound diplomatic and prudent :flower:
 
Shaun all the wayyyyy...hes got the perfect face, and there's just something very clean and sleek about him. hes my favorite, but i can see why frostbite gets the impression of conceitedness. i didnt much like the whole ill do anything for the right pay either...but crap, hes just so gorgeous, ill overlook that!
 
I remember seeing this male model who looked almost exactly like Gemma Ward a while back. I completely forget his name though... :doh: Ah well.
Also, what do you guys think about the male modeling industry moving towards "alien models?" I find that it tends to develop slower than the female counterpart.
:flower:
 
Originally posted by ShaunD_is_Fine@Aug 14 2004, 08:57 PM
what are "alien models"??
[snapback]332350[/snapback]​
The new generation; Jessica Stam, Heather Marks, Gemma Ward, etc.
 
As for Shaun, I used to like him but after reading his article in GQ, something about him turns me off.

Which article is this? Could somebody give me a link or something to it, please?
 
I want to know more about Shaun. :innocent:

How about Tiiu and this Miu Miu model..I think he's Boris..they really look alike.
 

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:wink: actually most of them are adorable.......they have sexy bodies and sweet faces what make me want to bite their ears and lips :blush: :heart:



naughty :doh:
 
That male models even come close to making what female models make............
Is just not true. Even the TOP male models... They might get paid ALOT for a particular campaign but OVERALL they do not come close to making what their counter-parts do. And thats a FACT.
 
actually male mod squad,
ive been talking to a lot of new faces and agents recently about this very matter and in fact the new guys are getting VERY lucrative deals.

some cases have been where the guys have gotten more than the girls.

obviously there isnt the same kind of 'victorias secret' type deal that a guy can get except CK. and even then, its still not as big because its only 1 model......and also guys dont buy as much undewear as women

so of corse there will always be a big difference between top guys and top girls.
but looking into the future, guys are going to get a fairer deal it seems
 
Originally posted by tinker_bell1988@Aug 14 2004, 09:24 PM
Which article is this? Could somebody give me a link or something to it, please?
[snapback]332372[/snapback]​

here ya go! =D

From GQ USA 1/04

Title: *Pretty Boy.

Soon you'll be seeing male model Shaun DeWet everywhere - in
magazines, on billboards, on television and on runways. >> He'll
travel the world, become rich and land any woman he wants, all
before his twenty-second birthday. >> Nice work, if you can get it

by: Michael Paterniti

He walks through strobe and electric air, wearing silk suits and
1950s tennis outfits, chain-mail vests and, once, unbelievably, a
cashmere diaper. His is not to question why. His is not to ponder
too deeply the cashmere diaper, let alone the ugly, frozen planets
at the edge of existence or the huddled, tattered-shoed masses. He
sometimes walks wearing $1,000 loafers of the finest calfskin and
then, the next moment, walks barefoot.

He's neither waif nor muscled lunker. He never works out, does very
little except occasionally relinquish himself to the hands of a
masseuse or manicurist to keep up appearances. But he walks a lot,
through purple-lit alleys walled with people who want him - or, more
precisely, who want what he wears. He walks the runways in Paris,
Berlin, New York, Milan - wherever the money's best. In front of
hundreds, sometimes thousands of admirers, he has walked to a
soundtrack of women groaning in erotic ecstasy, and he has walked to
street-thug boasts about the thrill of capping cops. He's the bullet
and the G-spot.

No matter what the venue, the walk is virtually the same. It's
nothing he learned deliberately and it's nothing he's had to
practice. He bends slightly forward, head leading, mouth fastened,
serious-looking to the point of menace, but a kind of empty menace,
an unmenacing menace defined at its center by a blankness onto which
others project their own ideas about sex, power, money and culture.
He is merely a movie screen. A bauble. Pez. When he appears before
the crowd, his blue eyes gaze straight ahead, receiving and
reflecting nothing. His face is its own landscape, one of planed
surfaces that change with the light, the mood, the dress. He has
small ears, full lips, a strong, straight nose. He has high
cheekbones and a forehead that has a kind of Cro-Magnon power. And
yet he seems delicate somehow. He's better looking than Keanu
Reeves, the person people have said he vaguely resembles. He thinks
he looks like his dad.

Mostly, people don't care what he thinks - or even what his name is.
Despite being one of the world's top models, despite having had
contracts with Hugo Boss and Calvin Klein, he's only a face, a
shell. Even as he looms on posters in store windows or appears in
magazine spreads, even as he walks the runways of the world, few
people pause to wonder whether he believes in God or wants kids
someday or even if he had a heroin problem years ago. He decorates
our culture, is being used up by it, and he knows this. He was born
beautiful, be he wasn't born dumb. If people condescend, that's
their problem. He's 21 years old and owns a car and a house in South
Africa, rents a swank apartment on Gramercy Park in New York with
his model girlfriend and travels the world, partying with other
beautiful people and drinking Cristal. Nice work, if you can get it.

By the way, his name is Shaun De Wet. You've already met him thirty,
forty, fifty times without knowing it. He was the wordless one,
lurking there in your closet. He was the one who wore your coat,
your suit, your checked shirt, your striped socks, even your
cashmere diaper.

And that's why you bought it.

*****

"This place is crisp," says Shaun, lounging in the lobby bar at the
Four Seasons Hotel in Milan. He arrived from Paris last night for
the most important biannual event in men's fashion, the five-day run
of shows known as Fashion Week. Fashion Week is the official rollout
of the spring line for many of the world's most famous fashion
houses, including Gucci, Armani, Prada, Versace and Calvin Klein, as
well as smaller houses like Neil Barrett, John Varvatos and Romeo
Gigli - each fighting for it's slice of a $52 billion industry.
During this time - and another five days in winter - the fashion
world freezes in one place to admire, pillory, gossip, condemn,
imbibe, inhale and celebrate the newest sartorial confections.

Shaun first came to Milan in January 2000, which makes this his
eighth season walking the runway. In both dog and fashion years,
he's a middle-aged man, even though, sitting here between casting
calls and a fitting, he has the lithe, man-boy appearance that is de
rigueur at the moment. He is six feet one, 160 pounds with a thirty-
one-inch waist, and he seems mostly devoid of body hair except for
the coppery mane on his head. He wears several gold rings and
slouches a bit as he slurps San Pellegrino and takes a few bites
from a chicken club sandwich. Though he's staying at another hotel -
one favored by models that is decidedly more hip and reasonably
priced - he admits he could get comfy here, glancing around the
lobby, a spectacle of industry power brokers and stars like Michael
Douglas and Catherine Zeta-Jones who are in town for the shows and
the Versace party. "These are good f*cking potato chips," he says.

Though the shows begin tomorrow, Shaun has received only a few
confirmations. This is not unusual, even for the top male models.
And so the week begins with a rush of casting calls and pent-up
anxiety. Once a model is picked - usually between fifteen and thirty
are chosen per show - there's a fitting the day before and then a
call time, two to three hours before the show itself, during which
the models are prepped and dressed. Because of his elite status,
Shaun doesn't have to suffer the indignity of waiting with 100 other
models for hours on a baking sidewalk, but even in prearranged
auditions, he's subjected to the same scrutiny of those who choose -
often a designer and his or her lieutenants. Each meeting becomes a
kind of quorum, contest and validation of something that Shaun
doesn't entirely control: his "look." In his case, that look is ever
pliable and easily manipulated, and it's exactly what designers have
counted on to sell millions of dollars of clothes.

"I'm happy to be what other people want me to be, as long as I'm
being paid for it," Shaun says. "I'll do pretty much anything for
the right pay - wear fur, pose nude. I haven't posed nude yet, but
if it was tastefully done, I would."

Because everything unfolds so quickly here, Shaun is a slave to his
cell phone, jumping to attention each time it rings. "This is
Shaun," he says, answering. It's his agent Natalie, telling him he's
on for the Laura Biagiotti show.

"Wicked," says Shaun. "Peaches and cream. Got it... Okay. Ciao."

Shaun has a smoky voice with the slightest Afrikaner inflection,
nearly passing for British. Every once in a while, he runs into a
word that seems to cause a synaptic misfire, a half-second stammer.
In that most fleeting of moments, he appears not so much a model-god
at the center of some charmed, white-hot hipness, but a sweet
nervous kid who hopes people will continue to like him.

For Shaun, despite the frisson of the Four Seasons lobby and the
glamour he adds to it, Milan is yet another moment of reckoning for
him. With the clock ticking, he's not yet been picked for Gucci,
Prada or Calvin Klein, all important "gets," both for the money and
for the prestige, and because they may then lead to an exclusive
contract. Contracts are what separates the made from the unmade
models. With his contract for Hugo Boss, Shaun earned roughly
$200,000 for five days of actual work.

"We're waiting to hear on a lot of stuff," says Shaun, his legs
bouncing nervously beneath the table. And what if everyone says no?
Is this the beginning of the end? And how weird would it be to have
this celebrity life and then, suddenly, be washed-up at the age of
21?

*****

Truths about male models:

1. In a business where the designers and stylists are predominantly
gay - and where many assume that male models are, too - the majority
of male models seem not to be gay at all. "I know everyone," says
Shaun, "and only models that I know of are gay."

2. Summing up male-model attitudes towards their female
counterparts, one male model named Damien says, "Most girl models
are social-climbing b*tches who won't talk to you unless you're
loaded. You see 18-year-old girls with 50-year-old wankers all the
time." Gisele ranks high on the list of those they dislike. Another
model says, "She travels around with this little f*cking white
terrier named Vida, and sits there either talking about herself or
her dog. One time, I did a job with her, and we were there for hours
sweating it out in suits, waiting for her to show up. When the limo
pulled up, she got out with Vida and said, 'What are you standing
around for?' and another guy turned to one of the stylists and said
very loudly, so Gisele could hear, 'Will someone tell Gisele to shut
the f*ck up?'"

3. On the other hand, most male models love Christy Turlington.

*****

On the second afternoon of fashion week, Shaun is trying on outfits
at a fitting for the designer Romeo Gigli, a smaller fashion house
run by Romeo Gigli himself. The confirmations have begun to roll in,
and Shaun is here with another male model named Jeremy Hassol, a guy
who, like Shaun, has had past good luck in Milan, especially with
Gucci, the biggest payday of the week. If picked again, Jeremy
stands to make $15,000 for one walk down the runway. "Gucci is
basically what I'm here for," says Jeremy.

Though seeming opposites, Shaun and Jeremy are best friends. They
have both lived at the highest echelons of the male-model world for
four years now, which means they gross somewhere up to half a
million dollars a year - before doling out 20 percent to their
agents and then covering expenses. When not specifically travelling
on contract work - and for nearly every model, runway work isn't
contract work - models pay their own way, or take a loan from their
agency on a gamble that this season's runway work will prove
lucrative. So Shaun and Jeremy split a room. Besides that, there are
the bar tabs and room service and their ever cheerful driver named
Stefano. After Milan, there's the trip to Paris for more shows, the
hotel in Paris, the clubs in Paris - and finally, the flight home to
New York.

Whereas Shaun projects a kind of assumed, if not actual, fair-haired
refinement, Jeremy is all id and swagger, with a scar on his neck
and a king's crown tattooed on his shoulder. He's leaner and taller
than Shaun, with dark hair, thick brows, startling hazel eyes and a
mouth that doesn't stop moving. Sometimes, when he passes Shaun in
the strobes of the runway, he'll mutter something under his breath
just to see if he can goad Shaun into laughter.

Shaun and Jeremy dress in a downstairs room before wall-length
mirrors, attended by three young women who pick clothes from a rack
and dress the models. Romeo Gigli's clothes are carnivalesque:
jarring combinations of stripes and bright colors. Trying on a pair
of oversize shoes, Jeremy says, "I feel like a f*cking clown." As
one of the women kneels before Shaun to pick up a pair of shoes from
which he's just stepped, he simultaneously strips to his white
Skivvies. In another context, it might be the prelude to sex, but
both the woman and Shaun wear impassive expressions. "I got used to
the naked stuff a long time ago," says Shaun. "It's hard to be a
model if you don't."

When the outfits seem right, Shaun and Jeremy are sent down a
hallway and up a flight of stairs to where Gigli sits wearing white
beach floods and a sheer pink tank top. He smiles at the models but
then turns deadly serious as he evaluates their various ensembles.
Standing before Shaun, Gigli pouts in consideration, adjusts a
lapel, twists a tie liminally to the right, then sends Shaun up and
back, and then Jeremy, in wild-striped suits. When he is pleased, he
has them photographed with a Polaroid, and then the photos are
pinned beside pictures of other models in their outfits on a
bulletin board that will serve as a blueprint for the show. The two
models head back for another outfit.

On the way, Jeremy notices a young blond woman in a white shift who
sits with her tan legs crossed at a downstairs table for visitors.
She is the very pretty girlfriend of a male model who has just
arrived, and Jeremy can't keep his eyes off her.

"Man, do you see her checking us out?" Jeremy says to Shaun. "She
doesn't mind looking, does she?" He keeps leaning, looking through
the door at the woman.

"She's a little too big to be a model," says Shaun, meaning she's
not stick thin.

"But she's hot," says Jeremy. And then, as if to explain why he's
looking back, he says with a touch of both utter bewilderment and
longing, "Dude, I haven't gotten laid in a month."

Later, out on the street, Shaun and Jeremy linger in the orange glow
of a slow-setting sun, waiting for Stefano to come around. A light
wind, the temperature of hot tea, luffs the leaves of a nearby
almond tree. Shaun's cell phone rings: Natalie again. He listens
intently, looking serious, then grins. "Wicked," he says into the
phone. "I'll be there. Ciao."

After hanging up, he doesn't say what the call was about. He has two
fittings and another casting call to get to, while Jeremy, whose
phone isn't ringing and who's still waiting to hear on a number of
shows, is heading back to the hotel. This must be model etiquette,
or one friend protecting the other for a moment. But later the truth
outs: Shaun got Gucci, and Jeremy didn't.

*****

More truths about male models:

1. They hate Milan as much as Milan hates them. In bars here, there
are signs that read NO MALE MODELS. If female models are desirable,
appetizing nightclub garnish, male models are dangerous because they
attract other men's girlfriends and because they're not quick to
back down from a fight. One year a model showed up with a broken
nose after a bar-room brawl, and an influential stylist, seeing his
purpled eyes and bent proboscis, said, "It's perfect. Don't change a
thing."

2. Models like Shaun will pocket about $15,000 for five days in
Milan, but laws prohibit traveling with excessive amounts of
currency. Thus, models have multiple foreign bank accounts and
somtimes buy gold jewelry to transport their earnings home.

3. The grail for most runway models is the Gucci show, because the
money's great and, backstage, there's a cornucopia of M&M's and
candy bars, Big Macs and free smokes. Finally, there's the unusually
vivid pep talk, delivered each year by one of the show's
organizers: "You're the fifteen hottest guys in Milan," it
begins, "and every woman out in that room wants to f*ck you. I want
to f*ck you. You're all badasses, and when you walk out there every
eye will be on you and they'll want to f*ck you..." And so it
goes. "He definitely makes you feel pretty special," says one
model, "but he could just say, 'You're the man,' and leave it at
that."

*****

Nine a.m. on Tuesday, the third day of Fashion week, and Shaun is
backstage at the Missoni show, where quarters are cramped and
windowless. There's been a building momentum to his week as he's
been confirmed for show after show and, with Stefano at the wheel,
he's crisscrossed Milan at all hours of the day and night to arrive
on the next designer's doorstep. Now he and a model from Kentucky
named Boyd, who has spent the past year as the face of Christian
Dior, sit before mirrors that run the length of the wall, worried
over by stylists who juggle makeup brushes, curlers, blow-dryers and
cans of L'Oreal Elnett. One dabs foundation under Shaun's eyes;
another mousses Boyd's hair. Both models slouch in their chairs, in
T-shirts and low-slung jeans, staring blankly ahead, smoking,
accepting as a matter of course all this fuss. In the bounce of
opposite mirrors, their images reflect to infinity, yawning.

Thirty male models are scheduled for the show today, wearing thirty
outfits in all. As yet, though, only twenty-nine have shown up. It's
Jeremy who's MIA. "Where is he?" Shaun says out loud to no one in
particular. Last night, Shaun returned after midnight to the hotel
to find Jeremy loaded and dervishing on champagne in the lobby
bar. "There was no stopping him," Shaun says, adding that he's left
Jeremy sometime after 2 a.m. lying faceup on the bar, swigging vodka
straight from a bottle. "He never made it back to the room."

Nearby, a collection of already styled models play Hacky Sack.
Another model, a solidly built, long-haired American named Chris (as
in Chris Grossarth; this missoni show was spring 2004:
http://www.firstview.com/MENspring2004/MISSONI/index.html -
elmodeloargentino), goes from one model to another, looking grave
and telling each he has a very important question. He pauses
solemnly before asking.

"Would you rather have breasts or a vagina?" he says.

"You mean, if I were a woman?" says a bare-chested model tapped to
wear a tight bathing suit for the show.

"No," says Chris, "you're a man, and you're either going to be given
breasts or a vagina. Which one?"

"Neither. Besides, I don't have room for a vagina."

"No. That's not the point. You have to choose."

"Jesus," says the model. "I have to choose?"

"That's what I said," says Chris. "There's no easy out."

Meanwhile, the stylists have released Shaun. Whereas at the
Valentino show the theme was, according to one stylist, "big,
luxurious hair" - and Shaun sported a hair salad right out of
Munchkinland - the Missoni look this season is blessedly neat and
natural. Shaun lights another cigarette and drifts over to fill a
cup of coffee. Then he pulls out his cell phone and stares at it a
moment, as if hoping for divination. During the time they've been
friends, he's never known Jeremy to miss a show. As much as there's
money at stake for Jeremy, there's his reputation. And without that,
he won't work again.

"Breasts or vagina?" Chris says, moving down a line of guys, each
standing before his own rack of clothing, waiting to be
dressed. "Breasts or vagina?"

Shaun dials a number, asks to speak with someone, and a moment later
he's on the phone with Jeremy, who's in bed with a fortysomething
female agent from Los Angeles, one who'd extended an open invitation
for sex their first night in Milan. Shaun hangs his head so others
can't overhear and implores Jeremy to come down to Missoni right
away. He listens a minute, shakes his head and hangs up. "He
said, 'f*ck it. Tell 'em my father died,'" says Shaun.

Approaching showtime, a woman calls out in English: "We're going to
need cigarettes out soon. First costume in fifteen minutes." Chris
then makes an announcement of his own - "Guys, I have eleven vaginas
and no breasts!" - which is received with scattered golf applause.
Shaun glances at his watch, pulls out his cell phone, and begins to
dial, but there's no signal now.

"He's going to wake up in a few hours and realize he made a huge
mistake," he says. "We're a dime a dozen around here, and they'll
have someone in two seconds to replace him."

Moments later, the models are dressed and then lined up, fussed over
again by a legion of stylists. Sure enough, Jeremy's place has been
filled by a guy who looks like Jeremy. Outside, in the theater, the
crowd quiets and the music begins - the usual loud-thumping, sexed-
up soundtrack of this dreamworld. And the man-boys, no longer joking
and smiling but turned rather stern and in character, begin their
march down the runway. Shaun is somewhere in the middle of the line
but no longer looks like himself, among all the others who no longer
look like themselves. They are nameless faces, shells, bound in the
world's finest threads.

When Shaun walks out, there's a white flash of camera lights - and
the collective, electric gaze of a packed house assembled to worship
or ridicule. He's the bullet and the G-spot. On him, the clothes
liquefy and shimmer. And for those who doubt it, imagine this world
without Shaun: You couldn't pay people enough money to come to Milan
at the swampy end of June to see these clothes rolled out on a
hanger. It just would never, ever work.

*****

Final truths about male models:

1. Women speak to them in threes.

2. Men pretend to ignore them while often studying them more closely
than women do.

3. The cost of beauty - the poking, the prodding, the pin sticking,
having to wear G-strings or heavy wool sweaters in the sweltering
sauna of Milan in June - is balanced by the fine sum that beauty
gets paid. "It's a pretty easy job," says one model. "We walk up and
back. We sit around and get photographed with beautiful women. And
then there's the afterparty."

4. Male models excel at the afterparty.

*****

On the last full day in Milan, just before everyone jumps on flights
to Paris for three more days of shows, a famous fashion house throws
a private bash for a few hundred of its closest friends. This is
something Shaun has been looking forward to all week - the chance to
chill and party. And there's plenty to celebrate: In the end, he
bagged the biggies - Gucci, Prada and Calvin Klein - and had fun
with the littler houses like Verri and Nicole Farhi.

In all, he did twelve shows. And throughout the fourteen-hour days,
he was polite and earnest, punctual and perfectly moldable. He got
mad only once, when a woman, one of the organizers who gypsies from
production to production, asked for his name when he arrived at
another show. "Shaun," he'd said. And then, under his breath: "You
should know that by now."

The only black mark was Jeremy, who after missing Missoni never
showed up or Romeo Gigli. While Shaun was having his hair shampooed,
moussed and dried for the second time that day, his cell phone rang.
It was Jeremy.

"I'm gone, bro. I'm quitting," he said. "Yeah, I'm on my way to the
airport right now." And just like that, he was on a plane back to
New York.

"Maybe if he'd come around and apologized or kissed some ***...,"
says Shaun, "but it's his choice. He says he wants to go back to
college at Columbia. He gets, like, straight A's there."

The bash is thrown in a huge open room, and the DJ spins a mix of
techno, Ibiza dance and old-school disco. The crowd is a sweaty mash
of everyone from young male and female models in torn jeans to older
fashionistas who, three decades ago, might have worn fuschia Nehru-
collared shirts irony-free to an event like this. At either end of
the room are bars manned by shirtless male models wearing short
shorts. Several press through the tight crowd, as if scripted to do
so, retrieving bottles of champagne, dancing closely with the most
enthusiastic taker. And there are many enthusiastic takers.

On the dance floor, Jake Boyle, a New York model, wearing a T-shirt
that is safety-pinned and scrawled with punk band names in ink, is
talking to two sisters, twins who both model, swaying with a drink
in each hand. Boyd stands near one corner, talking to several women.
It turns out that Dior has picked another model for their new
campaign. "They told me to lose weight," Boyd says. "But I'm blowing
over as it is. I mean, I'm becoming a man. I can't be a boy
forever." Meanwhile, Shaun moves through the crowd, downing glasses
of champagne, greeting his righteous male-model posse with big hand
slaps and soulful chest bumps while gently double-bussing those
women he knows.

When the music goes tribal, Shaun makes his way up to the DJ booth
and positions himself above the crowd, pointing to his friends and
rocking to the music. With him is a nonmodel brunet, who's spent the
evening moving closer and closer. Then all at once, with some surge
in the music, she pushes up against his body and kisses him. Perhaps
it's that Shaun is very serious about his new girlfriend - "I just
moved in with her, man, and I'm not going to blow it" - but he
politely accepts her kiss, only as if he were taking her coat, then
does nothing to encourage her. Instead, he goes right back to
rocking with the crowd.

Out on the street afterward, at what is now about 4 a.m., a group of
male models loiter. A former Guess? Jeans model, a Brazilian with
anything but little-boy pees, guzzles from a vodka bottle while
sitting on a motorbike. Shaun begins looking for a taxi while Jake,
the punker from New York, decides he's going to run back to his
hotel. Just takes off running, his long gazelle legs driving him
sideways for about four or five steps until he leans like Pisa, then
smacks down on the pavement. Again and again - each time with a
sickening thud. As he makes his jagged way down the street, several
people in taxis pull up to ask if he needs a ride, only to be met
with a string of obscenities and another face-plant. When he reaches
a second traffic light down the street, he simply disappears.

Fashion is meant to be fantasy, the magic thread sewn into the
lattice of our occasionally humdrum lives, an expression of our own
creativity and fetishes and aspirations. But the difference between
us and Shaun is that, on the runway, he wears the clothes he does
for few of these reasons. He wears them primarily for survival and
profit. He's a mercenary who dreams of one day being the first male
supermodel identifiable, finally, by the thing that eludes most
people now: his name.

Tomorrow the shows move to Paris, Berlin, New York. Another season
will arrive, and with it a new parade of faces and bodies and
perhaps even a new Shaun De Wet. You may notice these faces, you may
not. But on the empty streets of Milan at 4 a.m., the real Shaun De
Wet waves down a cab and heads back to his hotel room, which is now
minus a roommate. For the moment, he has survived another season in
Milan. His call for tomorrow morning's show is 8 a.m., and he plans
to be there on time.
 
I don't have a problem with anything except the "you should know my name" part..sounds pretty conceited.
 
Originally posted by Acid@Aug 15 2004, 07:55 AM
so of corse there will always be a big difference between top guys and top girls.
but looking into the future, guys are going to get a fairer deal it seems
[snapback]332870[/snapback]​
I was just going to say that; despite the wage differences, male models tend to stay in the business much longer than females. I remember being shown a site, and good chunk of the male models there were certainly over fourty- and still going strong. I can think of a much smaller group of female models who continue getting work as they age.
 

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