Popular Culture Review Vol. 17, No. 1, Winter 2006 | Page 12

8 Popular Culture Review representation of “European myths about the aggressive, violent, and animalistic ‘nature’ of black sexuality . . . fabricated . . . by the phallocentric anxieties and fantasies of the all-powerful white ‘master’” (qtd. in Julien/Mercer 169). For example, Jess Cagle, in Time magazine, refers to the actor’s “exotic looks— olive skin and full lips,” and adds that “he’s widely assumed to be of African and Italian heritage, but Diesel resolutely refrains from identifying his ethnicity.” Cagle’s use of the word “exotic” is telling because common associations paradoxically objectify an “exotic” person as alien, or “other,” as mysterious and of obscure and distant geographical or cultural origin, yet associate that person with an amoral sensuality and sexuality, and by extension, with desire. (It therefore makes sense that in American culture there are “exotic” dancers who are actually erotic dancers, and men trolling the Internet for wives from “exotic” places.) David Hochman, in Details, also focuses on Diesel’s physical image, introducing his readers to Diesel’s “kryptonics”—his biceps— and then claiming that “his shaved head could have been sculpted by an Etruscan, perhaps an entire village of Etruscans, and [that] even his jaw muscles look like they practice Tae Bo” (158). Rolling Stone’s cover dubs Diesel “an international man of mystery,” and Jeffrey Wells article therein bullets what he will or will not admit about his background, his family, and his sex life; however, the photo portrait showing Vin gracefully posed, alluringly lit in a way which emphasizes the pure power of his physique dominates the page. What is interesting is that magazines which don’t often focus on male skin spice up their stories with photos of Diesel shirtless. What is more interesting is that of those surveyed, the only magazine featuring a fully clothed Diesel, in a headshot and then in a dark, inconspicuous sweater which hides most of his physique, is Savoy, an African-American magazine. Shively’s ideas about fantasy seem to be fully operational here. There’s also an undercurrent of disbelief on the part of mainstream reporters concerning the information that Diesel gives them—and information he will not give them. For example, in Rolling Stone, Jeffrey Wells announces that [Diesel] “is building a myth about his multiracial lineage. Is he AfricanAmerican? Italian? Hispanic? Diesel won’t say. He wants to be all-inclusive” (44). If Diesel won’t say, where is the myth? Merriam-Webster offers these definitions of “myth”: 1. a. A usually traditional story of ostensibly historical events that serves to unfold part of the worldview of a people or explain a practice, belief, or natural phenomenon, b. Parable, allegory. 2. a. A popular belief or tradition that has grown up around something or someone; especially: one embodying the ideals and institutions of a society or segment of society {Merriam-Webster Online). According to either definition, a myth is a constructed story. However, the myth to which Wells is referring is not a story at all, but actually a carefully