Skip Nav

Hasan Minhaj Sheds Light on Hollywood's "Approachable" Men

Hasan Minhaj Had a Point About the Attractiveness of White Male Actors

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - NOVEMBER 04 Hasan Minhaj attends 13th Annual Stand Up For Heroes at The Hulu Theatre at Madison Square Garden on November 04, 2019 in New York City. (Photo by John Lamparski/Getty Images)Image Source: Getty / John Lamparski

Hasan Minhaj is well-known for several things, but most importantly, he's known for being really damn funny while also speaking the truth. So, it's no surprise that when his name started trending on Twitter on Monday morning, it was because he was handing out a hot cup of facts about Hollywood's "approachable man" trend.

On 22nd Nov., a fan posted a clip of Minhaj taking Vanity Fair's famous lie detector test back in December 2019. In the interview, he was asked about his appearance on Dax Shepard's podcast Armchair Expert. The test administrator asked Hasan how he felt about Shepard rating him a "9 out of 10" in the looks department — a rating that Minhaj said was too high — and how he would rate Shepard. Immediately hesitant, Minhaj eventually answered that he would give Shepard a 6.5/7, which the administrator noted seemed harsh. It was at this point, dear readers, that Minhaj decided he wasn't going to bullsh*t around and proceeded to break down his rationale.

The face of a man about to go all in. (Image Source: Youtube User Vanity Fair)

"Dax is part of a thing where, in show business, there's this whole movement of approachable white dudes, whereas with like, men of colour, it's like Idris Elba, Henry Golding, Zayn Malik or you work in IT," he explained. "There is no middle. You know how there's a whole class of white dudes, like just schlubby white dudes who went to high school with me, but now made it in showbiz? There's no that [for men of colour.] . . . You gotta be Daniel Dae Kim ripped. You can't ever have bread or cereal." When the host asked Minhaj if he thought he was more attractive than Shepard, he confidently said "yes," adding, "But I will not get the same opportunities that Dax does."

Now, it's important to note that Minhaj's point isn't about whether or not you're more attracted to him or Shepard (everyone is entitled to their wrong opinions there). What is important is this: to the comedian's point, Hollywood has essentially created a lane for "schlubby" white dudes to reach a sex symbol status that men of colour can't aspire to unless they reach Jason Momoa in Aquaman levels of attractiveness. Twitter was alight with examples of white actors who have become leading men because of this very trend; stars like Seth Rogen, Adam Driver, Michael Cera, Jesse Eisenberg, and Jonah Hill round out the list. Hell, even Adam Sandler has made a truly obscene number of films where he's married to or wooing Hollywood's most beautiful actresses. Blake Shelton was crowned People's Sexiest Man Alive in 2017. Meanwhile, we're still wondering when actors like John Cho, Trevante Rhodes, or Manny Jacinto will get their chance to shine as leading men in a rom-com.

We've talked about how the beauty standards of Hollywood (and society in general) affect Black women, but Minhaj's interview highlights the other side of that issue. Unless men of colour are undeniably 9s or 10s or paired with women of colour, they're overlooked for the leading role or the love interest. Even "schlubby" men of colour haven't gotten the treatment their white counterparts have, unless they're in a production helmed by another person of colour (take black-ish's Anthony Anderson, for example). If "schlubby" actors of colour are not the comedic relief, they're regulated to the background, as if they should just be happy to be there at all. It's just like Papa Pope said to Olivia in that infamous speech during Scandal's heyday: "You have to be twice as good as them to get half of what they have."

In a lot of people's minds, the rise of the "approachable" male lead has been a step forward in doing away with Hollywood's picture-perfect standards and embracing a more nuanced idea of what beauty means in media — but that doesn't work when it's only applied to white men. Instead of giving me another movie with Liam Hemsworth, give me a movie where a woman waxes poetic about Winston Duke's thighs to her besties over brunch. Give me someone falling in love with Dev Patel's warm brown eyes after bumping into him in Paris. I want John Boyega in a period romance where he rides in on a horse and sweeps me someone off their feet. Hell, put Minhaj in a romantic comedy where he gets to be hot and funny, and I'll give you my damn money!

Latest Celebrity