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Get Details on the Kindle Fire and NOOK Color™. Subscribe to the tablet editions here.
For members of the press looking for more information regarding Details, please contact Jaime Marsanico, 212-286-4935.
Channing Tatum possesses the gentlemanly glamour of a classic Hollywood matinee idol—and the fun-loving demeanor of an Alabama good-old guy who once made rent as a stripper. He can carry a romance (The Vow), a comedy (21 Jump Street), or any number of action flicks. He's a guy who can, in a day, shoot 400 bullets from three guns, down nine shots of bourbon, help fix a smoking car for a stranger in trouble—and teach his dog, Lulu, moves from Dirty Dancing. Is he a bundle of contradictions or just a guy having the time of his life?
Everywhere you turn, the male form is being idealized. On TV screens, in Hollywood, on billboards, laptops and smartphones—even our own mirrors. We've all become more body-conscious: working out more, eating better, dressing in slimmer clothes, getting the hedges trimmed, and maybe even a nip or tuck. Have we entered a grand age of self-improvement? Or is it narcissism? Or homoeroticism? It's all those things and more—41 in all. These are the moments that changed the way we see the male body.