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College Men: Rhett Straight

He’s the guy who quotes philosophy between bites of a gas station hot dog. He wears a flannel like a second skin, laughs too loudly in the library, and somehow makes vulnerability look effortless. He’s not the frat-star of 2010, nor the silent brooder of 1990s cinema. He’s the Rhett Straight College Man — and he’s quietly reshaping masculinity on campus. Defining the Rhett Named (loosely, affectionately) after Rhett McLaughlin — one half of the Internet’s beloved Good Mythical Morning — this archetype blends intellectual curiosity, Southern-adjacent storytelling, and an unpolished warmth. He’s straight, but not rigid. He’s masculine, but not threatened by emotions. He’ll arm-wrestle you, then ask about your childhood pet.

Unlike the hyper-competitive “Chad” stereotype or the detached “sigma male,” the Rhett man moves through college life with a kind of improvisational sincerity. He studies engineering or English — sometimes both. He leads a hiking club or runs a niche podcast about breakfast cereals. He’s comfortable in silence. He’s even more comfortable making you laugh. For decades, straight college men have been boxed into narrow scripts: drink beer, suppress feelings, dominate conversations, avoid “feminine” interests. But the Rhett figure represents a quiet rebellion. He’s proof that straightness doesn’t require emotional starvation. rhett straight college men

Jake now runs a small men’s discussion group on campus. They call it “Mythical Mornings” as a joke. But every Tuesday at 8 a.m., ten straight college guys show up to talk about loneliness, ambition, and what they’re actually afraid of. Perhaps the most Rhett trait of all: deep, platonic male friendship. In a culture where straight men often keep each other at arm’s length, the Rhett man builds intimacy without irony. He’s the one who texts “you good?” at 2 a.m. He’s the one who holds his friend’s hand after a breakup — not as a statement, just as comfort. He’s the guy who quotes philosophy between bites

“I grew up thinking I had to be either a jock or a nerd,” says Jake, a junior at UNC-Chapel Hill. “Then I found Rhett and Link — two grown men who just… talk honestly. About fears, friendship, even their own tears. That blew my mind.” He’s the Rhett Straight College Man — and