How to be Classically Masculine

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Published 2024-01-30

All Comments (21)
  • @James777921
    Calm, composed, competent, professional and polite.
  • @user-vg4hk7th7m
    Being masculine requires manners and a suave demeanor .. seemingly lacking these days Those men were clean, confident. classy.
  • You cant fake it: It is the fire behind the eyes. This comes from genuine hardship and ambition
  • @jonnyaesthetic
    This is exactly why I still prefer watching movies from the 50s-80s era. Style, eloquence, and class will never go out of style.
  • @danzbeard
    Being masculine is more about the energy you possess and project rather than your outside facade.
  • Remember, Sean Connery started out as a bodybuilder, not an actor. Of course, this was before steroids were used to get jacked. So, yes, he pumped iron for the sake of it, not just for sport. His physique was partially why he got the Bond role.
  • @RaHeadD10
    Ancient masculinity is where it’s at.
  • @nothing0062
    Today's blokes see masculinity as wearing their girlfriends leggings, a shirt 2 sizes too small, and being a complete nob.
  • @K_gh2000
    Henry Cavil is a good example of classic masculinity
  • @Seriouslyfunny1
    Someone made this finally. I've been sick of these 'red pill' videos which base the idea of masculinity revolving just around getting girls to your bed. While some of those videos do give good advice about your dressing, self improvement and fitness, most of them are manipulative and assume that world works linearly. Glad you did this video.
  • @The2Pandas
    Who else think that we born in the wrong era...
  • I'm 56 and you reminded me of something I've lost thank you . I'm glad to see young men like you thinking this way
  • @SigmaLegendus69
    It is not the smoking that makes them masculine, its more of their outfit, facial expressions and personality and traits.
  • @MrFenris75
    For quite some time, I have been drawn to the rather stoic yet debonair Humphrey Bogart. His style, wit, and nonchalant attitude truly enhanced his confident demeanor. Men, today, mistake bluster for masculinity, when in reality, it makes them come across as insecure, immature, or both. When I was in the Navy, we had a saying, "Big mouths have small......".
  • @V.S.745
    I'm looking for a man like that. A man who is calm, collected and respectful, who is not controlled by his ego complexes. A man of substance and class.
  • @newbee2262
    Measure of a man is his character, his virtue Manners and verbosity is how the virtue exhibits itself Strength is also necessary
  • @markkennedy9767
    That controlled aggression point was spot on. And the lack of attention-seeking is again spot on. So simple yet so true. Something almost forgotten nowadays. Subscribed.
  • @JamesRDavenport
    What helps me is to remember a phrase I heard a lot growing up as the son of a military officer, "squared away." It is the embodiment of the classical masculine ideal. Everything in proper order, appearance, competence, focus. As to a style example, I look to Ian Fleming's cousin, the late Sir Christopher Lee. Elegance, competence, dignity, humility. Squared away in all things.