People magazine’s pick for their annual “Sexiest Man Alive” cover story is … another white guy.
David Beckham, the 40-year-old retired soccer star, received the nod on Tuesday, making him the latest in a long line of white men so honored since the magazine started awarding the title 30 years ago. Denzel Washington is the only person of color to ever grace a “Sexiest Man Alive” cover, and that was 19 years ago. Meanwhile, four white actors (Richard Gere, George Clooney, Brad Pitt and Johnny Depp) have earned the distinction twice.
And PEOPLE's #SexiestManAlive for 2015 is… DAVID BECKHAM! https://t.co/3IOG9dLX0Z pic.twitter.com/pIYFEAazBT
— People magazine (@people) November 18, 2015
The magazine arrives on newsstands amid an ongoing debate about diversity in Hollywood. Studies have shown that while minorities make up a disproportionately high percentage of the movie-going and television-viewing public, their numbers are not reflected either in front of or behind the camera. This year alone, actress Viola Davis, director Spike Lee, Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences president Cheryl Boone Isaacs, and even Jessica Chastain, a white actress, have used awards show stages to highlight the problem. “Selma” director Ava DuVernay has also been outspoken about the uphill battle filmmakers of color face. And the Hollywood establishment’s stubborn refusal to embrace a wider spectrum when it comes to beauty standards has become a routine talking point.
The emergence of Oscar winner Lupita Nyong’o as a reliable cover girl has been hailed for this very reason and yet, when it comes to People magazine’s annual homage to hunky celebs, the move toward a more diverse Hollywood landscape appears not to have translated. The chorus of critics has been there for years, and has picked up steam recently, when seemingly viable alternatives like Idris Elba and Michael B. Jordan were passed over for the likes of Channing Tatum, Adam Levine and Chris Hemsworth.
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“I’m not personally slighted by it, majorly because I don’t really expect publications like PEOPLE to acknowledge men who look like me based on precedence. I will say, though, whether done subconsciously or not, it’s a reminder that whiteness is centered and anything outside of that remains in the pile of ‘less than,’” Ebony magazine columnist Michael Arceneaux told MSNBC via email.
People magazine naming David Beckham 'Sexiest Man Alive' is equivalent to @Oprah holding a press conference to tell us she's rich.
— laire (@laire) November 18, 2015
Some might argue that a magazine cover doesn’t matter, but BET.com editor Clay Cane counters that in a world where Elba is deemed “too street” to play James Bond and director Ridley Scott can mount a production about ancient Egypt with no stars of color, that dismissal is short sighted.









