Esquire's The New Rules for Men

Esquire's The New Rules for Men

Language: English

Pages: 192

ISBN: 161837186X

Format: PDF / Kindle (mobi) / ePub


Times change. Technology changes. Menus change. And so the guidelines for men must be adjusted. That’s why Esquire: The Rules is back in an all-new edition, with all-new proclamations, restrictions, exhortations, and nuggets of essential advice. From sex and women (Rule No. 870: Nobody makes a sex tape and comes out of it a winner) to drinking and dining (Rule No. 56: Saying “Allow me” without actually reaching for the check does not suggest sincerity), work and leisure, and health and fitness, Esquire: The New Rules for Men defines the codes every successful man needs to live by now. And if all else fails, just remember Rule No. 88: No shaking hands in the men’s room at work.

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SHIRT TO MATCH THE TIE I’VE SELECTED [FIG. 6]. ANY THOUGHTS? JOSHUA K. TAMPA, FLA. IS THERE A DIFFERENCE BETWEEN TUCKING IN A T-SHIRT, A POLO, AND A DRESS SHIRT? The old rule of thumb is if a shirt is knitted (like a Tshirt or polo shirt) or has a flat bottom hem (like, say, a Hawaiian shirt), you don’t tuck. If it’s a dress shirt, with tails, you do. However, things have a tendency of changing with the times. One Thomas Magnum [Fig. 5], for instance, acquitted himself quite well with a

the family for propriety’s sake—“Umbrella.” “Umbrella” meant “You know, I can live with you jamming the umbrella up my ass. Just don’t open it.” > I’ve never fought the word genius when people have said that about me. But what it is is instinct and a set of skills that are working so fast you don’t know they’re working. > The only time I get writer’s block or panic is when I don’t have the idea. > I have a leafy brain, according to the theory of the leafy brain. I associate things that many

back of the newsroom and said: “Look, I just wanna apologize.” Jim was always in such a great mood, the Pied Piper, a wonderful man. “Why?” he asked. I said, “I purposely stayed away from you ’cause I couldn’t go through it again.” He said, “What do you mean?” I said, “My dad died of cancer.” I’ll never forget what he said next. “How long did they give him to live?” I told him: “Six months.” “How long did he live?” I said, “Six months.” And you could just see him crestfallen. > As a father, you

chunks.” Jerry Greenfield: “So it turns out Ben was right.” Interviewed by John H. Richardson and Tom Junod 62 DAWN WELLS AND TINA LOUISE (MARY ANN AND GINGER) Wells: “Sherwood Interviewed by Cal Fussman 68 ARCHIE MANNING Schwartz was smart enough to put me in short shorts so that there was the sex appeal, too.” Louise: “A lot of men are afraid of redheads. There’s not that many— and we’re different.” Interviewed by Cal Fussman Interviewed by Cal Fussman 64 GLENN GREENWALD GREGG ALLMAN

Seem American” (October). One man didn’t get the joke, and in the intervening months he has sent us six postcards with various other descriptions he finds more appropriate: “American as jack,” “honorary member of the ‘quack pack,’ ” “Brentwood’s resident cougar,” “actress,” “go-go dancer,” “author,” “America’s favorite Schwinger,” “bakes her own cookies,” “bakes her own muffins.” THIS MONTH ON THE HOW TO BET THE PONIES Horseplayers, premiering January 7 on the Esquire Network, is the real-life

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