June 17, 2022

2 images of male beauty — side by side this morning on the front page of the New York Times.

I found this juxtaposition entrancing:

  

We see the idealized domesticated males, together, with idealized dog, on a park bench, looking simply and virtuously for a modest home. And we see the ominous male, heterosexual, standing in the dark next to an empty space where there once was a woman. Somehow his very looks have brought on madness! He — standing alone — is proof of the causal connection between male beauty and madness.

 

I've read both articles, but let's take a closer at the one about Johnny Depp, which is titled, when you click in "Johnny Depp Through the Looking Glass/Examining the madness that male beauty elicits." This is an opinion piece by Rhonda Garelick, School of Art and Design History and Theory at Parsons/The New School:
Mr. Depp, like many Hollywood megastars, has long benefited from his striking good looks, which clearly played a role in the enormous social media support he garnered during the trial....

Garnered. They called my name.

Beauty remains a subject reserved largely for and about women.... Women, metaphorically, occupy the realm of faces and bodies. Men are presumed to live in the realm of ideas and action. So, according to conventional thinking, to focus on a man’s beauty (as opposed to, say, his virility), or use it to adjudge his character, risks emasculating him, depriving him of his inner value, his spirit, strength or accomplishments. 

And so we shy away from mentioning male beauty very much. Mr. Depp proves an exception to this rule. In his middle age, he still possesses an unusual, arresting facial beauty. A beauty that exceeds conventional handsomeness, and — especially in his youth — wandered into a kind of feline, even feminine territory....

Yes, the NYT displays 1989 photograph of Depp. He was the kind of man about whom people used to say — quite commonly and openly — He would have made a beautiful woman or Too bad such looks are wasted on a man.

And that specter of Mr. Depp’s striking earlier beauty hovered over him in that courtroom like a protective force field, impossible to dispel.... 

In the end, while Johnny Depp was declared the victim of defamation, and garnered sympathy by implying he had been physically abused, he has emerged more able than ever....

Whoa! We have sighted the rare second "garner." For Johnny Depp and Johnny Depp alone there is the madness that manifests itself in the form of a double "garner." We have surely lost our mind!

He's so beautiful he must have won the lawsuit because of his beauty. Well, the woman is beautiful too, but it was some sort of battle of the sexes... or rather, beauty contest of the sexes. Who was more mesmerizing? Who drove us more mad?

The alternative theory is that the jury followed the instructions and perceived her to be lying and him to be telling the truth. But wasn't comparative beauty part of that perception? Even if looks inevitably influence how we weigh credibility, it's not madness. It's the human mind, being human. When you look at a face and perceive beauty, isn't part of that an intuition about the soul within the face?

57 comments:

rhhardin said...

I haven't noticed Depp was beautiful. Just another actor. Nor for that matter, the females, who are generic in films. I can identify only about three of them by sight.

Leland said...

Is that Depp standing in front of the Capitol? Is he participating in an erection as Schumer may call it or insurrection?

There was the point in the trial when the played the audio tape, recorded the last time Depp and Heard where together, when he said he would never look at her again to deny her to see his eyes. This article seems like a "gotcha", we will take you picture, plaster all over the NYT, and Amber can look any time she wants. Anyway, the big news is that you by a sufficient dog house for $400,000 in Upper Manhattan.

ConradBibby said...

Seems kind of bold for the Times to accuse a guy of "madness" who just won a $10 million defamation suit.

gilbar said...

seems straightforward
Gay==GOOD!!!! WONDERFUL!!! AWESOME!!!!
Straight==BAD!! Twisted!! EVIL!!!!

no wonder you like the NYTs

Cappy said...

What?

Tripp Hall said...

Male beauty, madness, and 1989. Has Camille Paglia somehow taken over the Times? (Her article would have been much less heavy going.)

rrsafety said...

I'm always perplexed by the silliness urban liberal elites buy into. 99% of normal Americans would laugh aloud at that Depp headline and yet the NYTimes believes the idea is worthy of serious thought. Strange.

Amadeus 48 said...

More hysteria from the NYT.

Lurker21 said...

While you focus on "garner" the real problem is "theory."

"O Theory, what crimes are committed in thy name!"

Dear corrupt left, go F yourselves said...

Elicit madness = "not her fault" for lashing out with physical violence in a fit of rage.

*See Heard's history with many of her relationships.

rhhardin said...

Garner isn't as out of place as Althouse thinks. It means get with a certain amount of effort, and means to highlight ,the effort even if you have to identify it yourself. As in having to harvest the corn in the granary. It didn't just drop in there.

Xmas said...

"...by implying he had been physically abused..."

Showed pictures, put witnesses on the stand to give direct testimony of, played an audio recording of Amber Heard directly saying she hit him.

"implying"

traditionalguy said...

Come on man. The NYT can’t admit a straight white man from Kentucky is smarter than women….it’s his feminine appearance that won, not an intelligent straight white man’s ability.

He out worked them all. And his money made him a target for a trophy wife. His only mistake was loving and trusting her. And that lesson was so clear that the Feminists have to blow smoke and create a mirror to reverse what our eyes witnessed.

rcocean said...

I never found his looks "striking". I'd call Tom Cruise handsome. Or maybe Cary Grant or Tyrone power or James garner (there's that word).

Kate said...

But Johnny Depp isn't beautiful.

This is the NYT? Were they bought by Marie Claire?

Birches said...

Depp used to be quite attractive but he looks like Diane Keaton in that thumbnail picture.

Ann Althouse said...

"Male beauty, madness, and 1989. Has Camille Paglia somehow taken over the Times? (Her article would have been much less heavy going.)"

Ha ha. I was thinking the same thing: Where's Camille Paglia? This is her work.

Now is the winter of our discontent made glorious summer by this son of New York said...

Female hypergamy, it's the fact that he can be the center of attention, for instance as Jack Sparrow. Looks are secondary. I bet John Lovitz has no trouble getting laid, for that matter.

Narr said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Stephen St. Onge said...

        The real reason male beauty was seldom spoken of or written about was because the word “beauty” was almost exclusively used for women. Men were “handsome,” not “beautiful.” It’s increasing use is a result of feminism.

I’m surprised I have to point this out.

Narr said...

Ha ha ha! Rhonda has a crush on John-nee! Rhonda has a crush on John-nee!

Personally, I never thought John C. Depp, (Jr of Kentucky--thanks Wikitube?) was all that, either in the looks or talent department. Then again, I'm not really the audience.

Camille would have been interesting; this woman is just a crank.

Anthony said...

rrsafety said...
I'm always perplexed by the silliness urban liberal elites buy into. 99% of normal Americans would laugh aloud at that Depp headline and yet the NYTimes believes the idea is worthy of serious thought. Strange.


Althouse is the LibsofTikTok for the media.

Narayanan said...

what is the difference between /garner/ and \eke\

Lurker21 said...

Somebody, maybe Siskel, maybe Ebert, said that Rob Lowe wasn't handsome so much as he was beautiful. Maybe all this started way back then with him.

Johnny is more masculine-looking than young Rob was, but there's a sad, little boy lost aspect to him that appeals to some women.

John Holland said...

The person who wrote this article must be young, naive and kinda smart-stupid, the latter due to that special kind of articulate, cultivated ignorance that one can only garner from a modern American college education (hah! see what I did there?)

When she went on about male beauty being 'emasculating', it's as if she had never heard nor seen the last 60 years of rock star celebrity, a field packed with feline, feminine men who were widely admired, emulated and envied by other men.

For most of his adult life Johnny Depp has wanted, more than anything, to be a rock star. He even started multiple bands (including one with Alice Cooper and Joe Perry), and took up the same nasty habits of his rock heroes. He wanted to be Mick Jagger, and his Jack Sparrow character is an actor's riff on Keith Richards, the most famously drug-addled rock star of them all. In his choice of clothes, friends, cronies, parties and women, Depp deliberately presents himself as not just a star, but a Rock Star.

An intelligent observer might be able to put together a coherent "theory" about Depp's rock'n'roll fantasy, and how that might have played into social-media reaction. But evidently "The New School for Social Research" isn't aware of anything that has happened off-campus in American society since, oh, 1965. Or maybe 1925.

typingtalker said...

He's so beautiful he must have won the lawsuit because of his beauty.

Law and Facts and Reason are so Old School.

PM said...

Never underestimate a good voice, which is essential, which he has.

wendybar said...

He needs a bath.

Dear corrupt left, go F yourselves said...

I personally do not think Depp has aged well.

Wilbur said...

I wouldn't know Johnny Depp unless he walked up to me and introduced himself.

But I was watching a few minutes of Match Game'74 ('75?) yesterday on GSN and was struck by one of the panelists, maybe the best looking man I've ever seen. I did a little search and found out it was one Robert Urich.

Whoever the hell he was.

retail lawyer said...

Now do Clint Eastwood, the ultimate male beauty, IMHO.

Hubert the Infant said...

I am having a really difficult time thinking of the picture on the left of a gay couple as one of male beauty. I am perfectly fine with saying that some people are born homosexual, and that they should have the same rights and be treated the same as their heterosexual fellow Americans. However, that is not the same thing as saying that homosexuality is not only normal but should be celebrated. Yet, that is what the NYT and most other mainstream media, Hollywood, large corporations, and the federal government do. Why?

Anthony said...

For most of his adult life Johnny Depp has wanted, more than anything, to be a rock star.

Someone once said that all rock stars want to be actors, and all actors want to be rock stars.

Kate said...

Robert Urich was on Match Game? Wow, hahaha!

He dies beautifully by Robert Duvall's hand in "Lonesome Dove". And then, sadly, he died in real life at too young an age.

Narr said...

My wife and her coven have wide-ons for Sam Heughan, who is indeed a fine figure of a man.

Redford was the sine qua non of male comeliness for lots of women back in the day, and whatzisface -- Beatty.

Sic transit gloria.

Ralph L said...

The dog is the beautiful one, and she's a bitch, so she brings her own madness.

mikee said...

John Holland, how could you note that Depp fashioned his Sparrow character on Richards, without noting the role of Sparrow's father was played so excellently by the worn old rocker? Nobody knows who played the role of Sparrow's mom, as her shrunken head appeared only momentarily and garnered but a casual reference.

Jupiter said...

"We see the idealized domesticated males, together, with idealized dog, on a park bench, looking simply and virtuously for a modest home."

Idealized they may be, but domesticated they are not. The dog is domesticated. The humans are failed organisms, evolutionary dead ends.

Ralph L said...

Sam Heughan, who is indeed a fine figure of a man

I hate to burst her bubble, but according to the gossip sites, he'd be in the left photo. But they say that about nearly every gorgeous actor, including the married ones like Paul Newman. It would not surprise me if Rob Lowe, or more likely his agent, released his sex tape to stop rumors.

Howard said...

Johnny Depp would be better off if he was a Christian Scientologist.

Ann Althouse said...

"Garner isn't as out of place as Althouse thinks...."

Exactly how "out of place" does Althouse think it is?

(Straw man alert.)

n.n said...

they should have the same rights and be treated the same as their heterosexual fellow Americans. However, that is not the same thing as saying that homosexuality is not only normal but should be celebrated. Yet, that is what the NYT and most other mainstream media, Hollywood, large corporations, and the federal government do. Why?

Leverage. A lot of people are either politically congruent ("=") or subscribe to the Pro-Choice "ethical" religion.

JaimeRoberto said...

Next time my wife is angry at me I will tell her that she's been driven to madness by my male beauty. Though that might garner me a night on the couch.

effinayright said...

The word "Depp" is (or used to be) German slang for a fool.

For years I've wondered how Krauts react when they see Johnny's name in bold letters on movie marquees.

Narr said...

No bubble burst, Ralph!

I rag her now and then about his confirmed bachelorhood and longtime companions.


Narr said...

"Depp is German slang for a fool."

I resemble that remark.

To Germans, Laurel and Hardy were Dick und Doof--Fat/Thick and Stupid. Now I know where 'doofus' came from.

rcocean said...

I always thought James Donald in the Great Escape was a handsome fellow.

effinayright said...

It's worth reminding that the homosexual bonding the NYT celebrates is a Darwinian dead-end.

(Unless, of course, one of those guys has secret female genitalia and the hormones and eggs to go with it. I'm told by reliable "woke" sources this is indeed very common.)

Joe Smith said...

This is hilarious...in Depp's most famous roll ('Pirates') he plays his character like a slightly gay Keith Richards.

His 'male beauty' exited stage left at least a decade ago...

Joe Smith said...

'Johnny is more masculine-looking than young Rob was, but there's a sad, little boy lost aspect to him that appeals to some women.'

I've always felt sorry for any actress who played opposite from a young Ashton Kutcher.

He was prettier than all of them...

FullMoon said...

Whoa! We have sighted the rare second "garner." For Johnny Depp and Johnny Depp alone there is the madness that manifests itself in the form of a double "garner." We have surely lost our mind!

That right there is funny!

FullMoon said...

None mentioned so pretty as our Assistant Secretary of Health and Human Services, Dr. Rachel Levine.

Narr said...

"None mentioned so pretty as . . . Dr. Rachel Levine."

Hubba-hubba!

(Apologies for multi-posts. Blogger is being a dick today.)

Fred Drinkwater said...

Joe @5:02 gets it. "Pretty", not beautiful. A useful but oft neglected distinction.

Josephbleau said...

Now I want allaya to know, that in America, there is no male beauty, or male ugliness. But only a man that stands between the forces of the day. There are always such forces, that want to take from your father, and mother, your brother, and...your sister.

These demons are many. They lust for your property just as slavers of old lust for your labor. They are not racist or categorical. They want from all.

As a rattlesnake is best killed in its leathery egg, male beauty is best left to languish as a secondary instrument, useful only for influencing pre-pubescent girls.

lane ranger said...

Anthony said
Althouse is the LibsofTikTok for the media.

I literally laughed out loud. And then wondered whether my own theory - that Ann is just trolling us because it amuses her - was in fact wrong.

Tina Trent said...

Whenever I feel down, I read the Times' house hunt section and laugh myself silly at the idea of paying half a million dollars for a crappy walk-up smaller than my kitchen.

Maybe that's mean, but nobody held a gun to their heads. At least probably not during the closing.