''Men are becoming more and more aware of hygiene, of products and their appearance but women don't want perfection. ''My girlfriends and I don't want cavemen but hairless men are too feminine,'' says the brow and grooming specialist. where's the body hair? Credit:Getty Imagesīut who is it for? Amy Jean Linnehan says she finds smooth men ''really creepy''. In the old days it was gay men but you only have to go to Fitness First and see that 95 per cent of straight men are getting rid of all their body hair.''īald beauty. ''The swimmers want to be the best, they want to compete and be top of their game - and so do we. ''More than ever sporting stars are young Australian men's sporting heroes and if James Magnussen is doing it, we're doing it,'' says grooming expert Will Fennell. He may wax like the ladies or use a wet razor like the Olympic swimmers did hours before the final, but if he likes to look after his body he is definitely doing something to get rid of the hair.
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Hair-free chests, backs and, now especially, legs are essential for any straight young man who cares about his appearance. But it is has also become essential for image-conscious men who think they are doing it to impress the girls but are more often doing it for themselves.
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Hairlessness is aerodynamic dynamite, according to a former gold medallist, and essential at elite sporting level. The chests that featured in this morning's dramatic 100-metre freestyle final at the Olympics were strong, broad and, to the last man, hairless. His nemesis Nathan Adrian was a vision of smooth manliness and the buff bloke from Brazil was pure razor-cut definition. James Magnussen had lost his tender tendrils of chest hair.