Culture Soft Jocks Take The Field - A new crop of athletes are choosing to forgo alpha-maledom and instead embrace sensibilities their teammates might once have decried as “beta.”

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Soft Jocks Take The Field​

In the late aughts, toxic masculinity was all the rage. The movie 300 hit theaters and convinced every young man in America that the coolest thing you could do was kill people while wearing a loincloth. Friday Night Lights graced our televisions, introducing a generation of women to bad-boy running back Tim Riggins. FNL’s female lead, Minka Kelly, was an “it couple” with legendary New York Yankee (and playboy) Derek Jeter. The NFL became a fertile dating ground, with Tom Brady and Gisele Bündchen, Jessica Simpson and Tony Romo, and Kim Kardashian and Reggie Bush all getting together. These men were ultra-dominant alpha males, just oozing testosterone and barely concealed insecurity — “no homo,” they said, as they made each other protein-powder smoothies.

But that man’s time has passed. These days, the highest praise a guy can receive is being called a“babygirl,” and physical prowess no longer exerts the same cache. Just ask Jacob Elordi, Saturday Night Live’s very own babygirl, who offsets his imposing 6-foot-5 frame by carrying purses and paperbacks. Or Paul Mescal, who pairs his hulking thighs with a deep appreciation for sad girl music, regularly posting Mitski and Ethel Cain songs on his Instagram stories. Not to mention the cozy, bordering on queerbaitingbehavior these two have exhibited with co-stars (Barry Keoghan and Andrew Scott, respectively) in their latest press cycles. When these men redirect attention from their washboard abs to their soft underbellies, they convey that they’re nothing like the problematic archetypes of yore. They’re sensitive, nonthreatening, and apparently Princess Diana-coded.

Lately, this softening has also infiltrated the white-hot center of toxic masculinity: the locker room. Whether it’s Travis Kelce and his unabashed simping for his girlfriend, Taylor Swift; or Miami Heat power forward Kevin Love balancing his mental health advocacy with his fine-art collecting; or Love’s teammate and emo king Jimmy Butler, who spends his free time working on a country music album, playing dominoes, and practicing his latte art — they’re giving way to a new platonic ideal of man.

Say hello to the Soft Jock: athletes (or athletic-looking men) who choose to forgo alpha-maledom and instead embrace sensibilities their teammates might once have decried as “beta.”

These are jocks like Rebecca’s* husband, who grew up playing football and now loves his fantasy league as much as he did the Barbie movie. “He’s 6 foot and solidly built, so no matter how lazy he gets, he’ll always have biceps. But he loves to listen to classic Disney soundtracks at work, [like] the original Beauty and the Beast, gives our dog more treats than I do, and sobbed throughout The Last of UsEpisode 3,” she tells Bustle.

Or like Hillary’s recent ex: “He was a 5’9” gym rat who coached middle school girl’s basketball and told me he was on antidepressants, so that’s why he couldn’t stay hard when we had sex. How could I be mad at that? Tender king!”

Men have learned they can cut a formidable figure while maintaining a decidedly unformidable vibe — or, more simply, they can have their sports and their feelings, too.

“I do think a lot of [the appeal] is feeling safe, not scared of this physically powerful person. And personality seems to be a big part of it,” says Hannah, who meets a steady flow of Soft Jocks at her Brazilian jujitsu gym.

While many of the women I spoke to only just started swiping right on Soft Jocks, the archetype isn’t entirely new. We’ve witnessed the rise and fall of similar tropes in the recent past: the wife guy, the golden retriever boyfriend, the himbo, and even the yogurt male. But while the Soft Jock shares many of his predecessors’ positive attributes — like their optimism, admiration for their partner, and self-secure confidence — he sidesteps their faults: He’s (usually) not dumb as a rock like the himbo, and not over-eager to identify with his partner, like the wife guy or golden retriever boyfriend, or as pretentious as the yogurt male. Instead, he’s effortless, hot, and kind but not self-consciously so. (One does not try to be a Soft Jock; one simply is.)

He has progenitors in pop culture, too. Just ask Kirsty, who grew up in Edinburgh, where “teen boys look like they’re made from spaghetti,” and often fantasized about the Soft (American) Jocks she saw on screen. “Like Ryan from The O.C., who was a soccer player strong enough to lift Marissa from a car wreck but soft enough to cry as ‘Hallelujah’ wailed in the background. Alex Karev in Grey’s Anatomy, who was an ex-wrestler with a soft heart,” she says. Nowadays, she looks for guys who love their little hobbies as much as their sports — like her ex, an American soccer player turned potter: “I dare you to find a sluttier Soft Jock combination.”

Sluttier, maybe not, but there are certainly plenty of Ryans and Karevs in the cultural consciousness, be it the heroes of the newly popular book subgenre, hockey romance novels, or current Bachelor Joey Graziadei, who worked as a tennis pro before his reality TV tenure. (It was actually fellow Bachelor nation member Tyler Cameron who led me to my Soft Jock awakening, given his big-brother-like friendship with JoJo Siwa and ability to carry a 220-pound boat through a river on Special Forces.) And then, of course, there is the man of the hour: Travis Kelce. Whether he’s making his own friendship bracelets to court Swift; cooing over his young nieces (“hey, girly!”) on his New Heights podcast; or sharing tender, emotional exchanges on the field with his brother, Jason — Kelce has earned legions of fans and inspired tweets like “Is there a phrase for the opposite of toxic masculinity? Soft masculinity, gooey masculinity, explosions in the sky-scored masculinity.”

Those I spoke to had two opposing takes on what he means for the state of the culture: Either the Soft Jock is a refreshing change of pace, or he is a false sign of progress — proof that male softness is only desirable if it comes with biceps the size of your head.

Among the optimists is romance novelist Lyssa Kay Adams, author of The Bromance Book Club, in which a baseball player joins a secret romance book club made up of all alpha males to help spice up his marriage. “To me, the Access Hollywood tape was [the turning point],” says Adams of the romance genre’s move away from Christian Grey-esque alpha males. “It was the compilation of everything we had feared, that the minute we left a room full of men, they immediately resorted to that most toxic of male bonds: the sexual degradation of women.” As for the state of 2024’s romantic heroes, she adds, “These books, or even Ted Lasso’s characters, give us hope that there are men out there who disprove the lessons that many of us were raised with that equate physical masculinity with unkindness.”

Journalist Michelle Ruiz, who recently wrote an op-ed for Voguetitled “I Followed Taylor Swift Into Her NFL Era—And I Haven’t Looked Back,” thinks there’s some doublespeak going on. “There’s a basic, primal thirst for [Travis Kelce]. In my texts with other people… they think that he is a large, attractive, beef-ish man on a very base level,” she says. “Softness is definitely more palatable, societally or culturally, in a Travis Kelce-shaped package. He can be vulnerable, sweet, and adoring in interviews and stuff because he kind of presents as this Herculean, traditionally typically attractive 6’5” NFL tight end.”

Meaning, anyone can be soft, but unless you also bench press 250, don’t expect to be celebrated for it. “The people we hold up as great examples of challenging gender norms are often people who have what you might call ‘psychosexual capital,’” says Jason Rogers, an Olympic medalist and regular contributor to Men’s Health. “It’s also a bit of a status flex, like ‘I’m so off-the-charts masculine in certain ways that I can depart from the masculine archetype without any fear of judgment. In fact, I can accumulate more social capital for doing so.’”

Yet in an Internet culture where we’re so eager to flatten people — and men themselves, more often than not, fall flat — there's still power in the Soft Jock’s ability to resist our ready-made molds. Or as Rebecca puts it, “Humans are so hard-wired to categorize that we get confused when things don’t fit neatly into one box. So fundamentally, the celebration of the Soft Jock is acknowledging that people aren’t one-dimensional.” Men: They’re people, too.

*First names have been used for purposes of anonymity, and pseudonyms were given where requested.
 
Or like Hillary’s recent ex: “He was a 5’9” gym rat who coached middle school girl’s basketball and told me he was on antidepressants, so that’s why he couldn’t stay hard when we had sex. How could I be mad at that? Tender king!”

So, ED is acceptable, if you're attractive and ripped? That's shocking.

This "trend" doesn't surprise me. It's the female version of the woman men want, which is a loyal, sweet, kind, loving homemaker and mother to their children, and a total slut between the sheets. The woman version of this is a guy who is emotionally available, but is 6'0"+, handsome, ripped, with a well paying job, who lifts all heavy things, and can dick her down in an expert way.

This does not surprise me.
 
So a glorified submissive meat slave. Ironically, the guy being extremely submissive is what drives women to cheat in the first place.

Islam is right about women.
 
Islam is right about women.
What, keeping them in full body bin liners is the secret to a stable and well-adjusted society?

This entire article seems to be women discovering that being attracted to muscular men who aren't absolutely psychotic isn't some taboo fetish.
 
This is just the modern adult equivalent of trying to get boys to play with dolls. Eventually the men will either get tired of putting up a false front for female attention or realize that they are, in fact, gay.
 
Pretty interesting article tbh. I'm honestly pretty neutral on this whole thing. Gender norms change pretty regularly between generations and this was already precluded by the himbo craze so I'm not surprised.
 
I don't think this is actually real-its a media phantasm. Most "jocks" aren't super sensitive and pro "mental health" like the way this article implies. Obviously, liberals would love to see this idea be real but I don't think it is.
 
They’re sensitive, nonthreatening, and apparently Princess Diana-coded.
This article is pretty crap but I'll concede that this photo of Paul Mescal somehow is Princess Diana coded.
FuRYIJ7XsAIl6wE.jpg
 
In the late aughts, toxic masculinity was all the rage. The movie 300 hit theaters and convinced every young man in America that the coolest thing you could do was kill people while wearing a loincloth. Friday Night Lights graced our televisions, introducing a generation of women to bad-boy running back Tim Riggins. FNL’s female lead, Minka Kelly, was an “it couple” with legendary New York Yankee (and playboy) Derek Jeter. The NFL became a fertile dating ground, with Tom Brady and Gisele Bündchen, Jessica Simpson and Tony Romo, and Kim Kardashian and Reggie Bush all getting together. These men were ultra-dominant alpha males, just oozing testosterone and barely concealed insecurity — “no homo,” they said, as they made each other protein-powder smoothies.

Ah yes because 300 should have been about the homoerotic relationships.

I just wonder, why does it seem like the writer is projecting something by mentioning "barely concealed insecurity". ISTG, the "no homo" thing has also been played for laughs just as often as it's been said seriously.

Does this fucking dipshit writer just get fucking terrified if he walks near some construction site? Like, what?
Meaning, anyone can be soft, but unless you also bench press 250, don’t expect to be celebrated for it. “The people we hold up as great examples of challenging gender norms are often people who have what you might call ‘psychosexual capital,’” says Jason Rogers, an Olympic medalist and regular contributor to Men’s Health. “It’s also a bit of a status flex, like ‘I’m so off-the-charts masculine in certain ways that I can depart from the masculine archetype without any fear of judgment. In fact, I can accumulate more social capital for doing so.’”
fucking "psychosexual capital". Give me a fucking break. Bruce Jenner being an iconic athlete for a generation doesn't give him "psychosexual capital" that makes us fully believe he's an authentic woman.

But that man’s time has passed. These days, the highest praise a guy can receive is being called a“babygirl,” and physical prowess no longer exerts the same cache. Just ask Jacob Elordi, Saturday Night Live’s very own babygirl, who offsets his imposing 6-foot-5 frame by carrying purses and paperbacks. Or Paul Mescal, who pairs his hulking thighs with a deep appreciation for sad girl music, regularly posting Mitski and Ethel Cain songs on his Instagram stories. Not to mention the cozy, bordering on queerbaitingbehavior these two have exhibited with co-stars (Barry Keoghan and Andrew Scott, respectively) in their latest press cycles. When these men redirect attention from their washboard abs to their soft underbellies, they convey that they’re nothing like the problematic archetypes of yore. They’re sensitive, nonthreatening, and apparently Princess Diana-coded.
No, you're getting weird looks at best.

But, it sounds like the key word here is "nonthreatening". It seems they just want everything traditionally masculine (or toxically masculine) to be turned "nonthreatening". The issue is that the definition of what "nonthreatening" masculinity is keeps getting its goalpost moved.

When I was a kid, we just went with the idea of "don't be a dick, don't be a snitch, treat the female of the species with more consideration". Now they want us to act like metrosexuals.
 
Author's physicality checks out. She's still mad that none of those football Chads glanced in her direction during high school.
1707567704873.png

“The people we hold up as great examples of challenging gender norms are often people who have what you might call ‘psychosexual capital,’” says Jason Rogers, an Olympic medalist and regular contributor to Men’s Health.
You weren't pushed into enough lockers or dunked in enough toilets, clearly.
 
Lately, this softening has also infiltrated the white-hot center of toxic masculinity: the locker room. Whether it’s Travis Kelce and his unabashed simping for his girlfriend, Taylor Swift; or Miami Heat power forward Kevin Love balancing his mental health advocacy with his fine-art collecting; or Love’s teammate and emo king Jimmy Butler, who spends his free time working on a country music album, playing dominoes, and practicing his latte art — they’re giving way to a new platonic ideal of man.
How is any of that soft? Wow Jimmy Butler likes good Coffee and country music what a fucking sissy! We all know real men only drink GATORADE and Motor Oil. Okay I just looked up Jimmy Butler's Emo look and yeah that is fucking hilarious at first glance and I first assumed it was the product of photoshop.
jimmy butler emo.jpg
But then I think "This rich nigga has such balls that he doesn't mind looking absurd." And frankly that's the most "sigma male" shit possible. As a fellow Coffee Nerd who just looked at his "Bigface" coffee site I'm legitimately impressed by the clean packaging and accessible layout and that it's in re-sealable bags like high end coffee should be put in. I would not buy it because it does seem quite overpriced (like basically all celeb brands) but I respect the man's hustle and I would share a cup of joe with him and discuss brewing methods. The man uses French Press and if he's dedicated to not wind up having grounds in his coffee I have respect for him.

But seriously he looked like a queer with that haircut and painted nails.
 
just looked up Jimmy Butler's Emo look and yeah that is fucking hilarious at first glance and I first assumed it was the product of photoshop.
How is he different from Denis Rodman wearing dress?
 
How is he different from Denis Rodman wearing dress?
Man what a different world I was born in. We had a major Hollywood movie (Men in Black) end by joking that Dennis Rodman had to have been an ALIEN for wearing that dress and dying his hair. There wasn't even any serious talks that maybe he was GAY OR """""GENDERFLUID"""" because Rodman was dicking CARMEN ELECTRA.
 
Yes, please give me the total numbers of effeminate masculine men that aren't complete faggots and aren't figments of the authors imagination. I'm sure we are absolutely looking at a new movement and not a statistical outlier.
 
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