Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Photographer's Book Challenges Racist Sexual Stereotypes About Asian Men

Photographer's Book Challenges Racist Sexual Stereotypes About Asian Men
@asianmaleportraits/Instagram

American photographer, West Phillips, has traveled all over the world, photographing various cultures of people, landmarks and traditions.

Much of his work, however, has centered around his photo sessions with swimsuit-clad muscle men.


Phillips began to notice, in his travels and in the work by some of his favorite photographers, that there was little representation of male Asian models, especially in the gay community.

Once he recognized this pattern, Phillips decided to launch a project of his own to help to mend the social gap.

Enter Asian Male Portraits, West Phillips' latest photography collection, focused on male Asian models. This coffee table book aims to enrich Asian representation and attractiveness in photography, as well as celebrate the gay Asian community.

According to the project's website:

"With over 100 models from over 10 countries, this book is a sort of 'best of' collection from what Phillips has amassed so far."

Asian Male Portraits, PHOTO BOOK by West Phillipsyoutu.be

In addition to providing more male Asian models to the current photography landscape, Phillips' project also addressed an important, if muted, social problem: sexual racism.

By social definition, sexual racism is one's statement of personal dating preference, in regards not only to sex and gender, but also race.

People fairly commonly will state to their friends, for example, that they enjoy dating men, but they find one "other" race unattractive, and therefore, undateable.

With the few examples we have of Asian males in photography, commercials and dating publications, it's clear that the Asian population may be a more frequent victim of sexual racism in Western Culture. While Asian women are fetishized and overly sexualized, Asian men are neutered.

Of the origin of his project, Phillips said:

"I think the mass media in the West don't find [Asian men] to be appealing, they don't find them to be sexual, and that's something that I didn't understand."

Phillips' coffee table book collection, Asian Male Portraits, features the men in a variety of artistic and diverse settings. The book does include nudity.

You can see some examples from the collection below.







As more people become aware of the project and see more examples of Asian models, the photographer hopes the ideology around what is "sexy" and "dateable" may begin to shift.

With more acceptance around what is attractive, maybe there will be less "otherness" between peoples. And gay dating apps may finally lose the prevalent request of "no Asians."

Phillips' Asian Male Portraits book as well as calendars and other products are available through his website here. And they're currently having a sale.

Phillips is also featured with an interview and photographs in Volume 5 of Vitruvian Lens: Fine Art Male Photography, available here.

More from Trending/best-of-reddit

Coca-Cola Defends Decision To Use AI To Make New Holiday Commercial After Backlash

In 1995, Coca-Cola aired one of the most enduring Christmas commercials of all time: "The Holidays Are Coming."

The ad featured glowing red trucks driving through snowy towns, with Santa Claus smiling from the side of each trailer. Its soundtrack evoked a strong sense of nostalgia. The advertisement was pure, fizzy magic—a charming piece that made people feel warm and loyal to the brand simultaneously.

Keep ReadingShow less
Neil DeGrasse Tyson
Roy Rochlin/Getty Images

Neil DeGrasse Tyson Reveals Just How Convincing AI Deepfake Videos Have Gotten—And Yikes

Well friends, it's been fun but it seems the end of civilization is officially here: Neil DeGrasse Tyson is a flat Earther.

Okay, not really. But our AI overlords have gotten so good at deepfakes there's now a video of DeGrasse Tyson saying he's become a flat Earther that is indistinguishable from the real DeGrasse Tyson.

Keep ReadingShow less
Donald Trump
Samuel Corum/Getty Images

Trump Dragged After Firing Off Panicked Posts Blaming Everyone But Himself For GOP Losses On Election Night

President Donald Trump was widely mocked after sharing a flurry of posts on Truth Social after it became clear that Democrats were crushing Republicans across the country during yesterday's election.

Democrats won significant victories in races around the country, particularly in Virginia, where Abigail Spanberger became the first woman to the win the governorship in the state's history, and in New York City, where Zohran Mamdani, a democratic socialist, successfully took on the establishment to become the first South Asian, first Muslim, and first millennial mayor-elect.

Keep ReadingShow less
students in classroom
Maskot/Getty Images

Mom Dragged For Melting Down Over Daughter's Puberty Lesson After Ignoring School's Permission Slip

Delta Ozzimo, a self-identified sex workers' rights activist, sounded off on social media after her pre-teen daughter came home with worksheets depicting basic female anatomy.

Ozzimo, whose right-wing posts include ethnocentric and racist language, initially gained some sympathy for her outrage. The mother claimed she wasn't given a chance to consent to her fifth-grade daughter's participation in a Planned Parenthood-led sex education unit by her school.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshot of Seth Meyers discussing Donald Trump
@MarcoFoster/X

Seth Meyers Responds To Trump's 'Truly Deranged' Personal Attack Against Him With Hilarious Takedown

After President Donald Trump lashed out at late-night host Seth Meyers on Truth Social over the weekend and called him a "truly deranged lunatic," Meyers responded to Trump’s “ranting and raving” about him with a damning supercut on his program.

Trump apparently tuned in to Thursday night’s episode of Late Night with Seth Meyers, where Meyers poked fun at the president’s complaints about Navy aircraft carriers using electromagnetic catapults instead of traditional steam-powered ones. Meyers joked that Trump "spends more time thinking about catapults than Wile E. Coyote."

Keep ReadingShow less