This is not about gay, straight, or bi. This is about the male form in transition.
Behind three men, a mushroom cloud rises over Bikini Atoll.
In 1946, days after the atomic tests there made the atoll’s name synonymous with annihilation, the shock of the bomb moved into culture almost immediately and never left. The fallout includes an ever-evolving understanding of the male form as best suited to responding to the events of its day — call it the mod bod. This is a formal analysis of that form, tracked across seventy years, the way an art historian might track sculpture’s handling of the male body from the Renaissance into the Baroque and on into the neoclassical. Three mod bods, seventy years, each a different answer to a question the bomb first asked and has never stopped asking: what shape, what armor, what strategy does a man need to survive what’s coming?
1950s
The mod bod of the fifties is the jet fighter. Smooth, untoned, unbothered by definition — power carried not in the body but in the sleek, disciplined image projected outward. The suit is the fighter’s fuselage, giving nothing away about the machinery inside. This is the triumph of American democracy on the surface, and underneath it, the low hum of the duck-and-cover drill — a generation of children folded under classroom desks, living inside the jet age’s promise that the next war would be fast, airborne, and over before anyone had time to brace. The form performs readiness. It assumes the position.
1970s
The mod bod of the seventies is the aircraft carrier. Brutalist architecture is all the rage; in May 1975, the USS Nimitz is commissioned — nuclear-powered, over a thousand feet long, the largest warship ever built, able to run for decades without refueling. That same decade, the male form stops being worn and starts being built on the same principle: overwhelming scale, overwhelming endurance, a body designed to dominate by being too large to challenge directly. Call it the brutalist body — heavy, fortress-like, all visible structure. Like the carrier, it could not simply happen. It had to be commissioned, fueled — steroids were everywhere in the decade’s bodybuilding culture, more than ten years before any law regulated them. The carrier body moves slowly, then stands its ground. It projects power by simply being present.
2020s
The mod bod of the twenty-first century is the drone. Call it Twinky Abs: a lean, defined midsection built by stripping away rather than adding — high-intensity circuit work trading the carrier’s mass for something smaller, faster, harder to hit. It’s also a real workout routine many young American men are actively following. Agility is now the governing value, the same logic reshaping actual warfare: a carrier costs a decade and billions to build and can be threatened by a drone costing a few thousand dollars, too fast and light to catch. The current mod bod follows that doctrine — built for a fight that no longer rewards standing still and absorbing the hit.
The Atomic Jacket
A jet fighter. An aircraft carrier. An unmanned drone. Three vehicles of survival, descended from one unbroken thread — a species that has spent seventy years, after two thousand years of a far more static male form, redesigning the male body against a threat that never resolves and never leaves. This isn’t about who or how a man loves. It’s about what his own form has been asked to become.
A bomb dropped once. The male body has been absorbing its shockwave ever since.
— Behan