FHM is a monthly publication that give guys what they want. Everything from the most beautiful woman in the world, cars, fitness, food, sport, fashion to tech, gadgets, travel and gaming. If you're a guy, we will have something of interest for you.
You’ve probably seen him — or maybe you haven’t. He’s not the guy posting motivational quotes at 6 a.m. or livestreaming from the driver’s seat of a leased sports car. He’s not selling a course, pitching a crypto scheme, or measuring his worth by likes and followers. He moves differently. He’s the one who slips out of the restaurant before the bill hits the table, already paid in full, no photo evidence required. He’s the man who pays cash, invests quietly, and stacks assets instead of attention. You won’t catch him flexing online because the validation he needs isn’t digital — it’s sitting comfortably in his accounts, growing while everyone else is scrolling. Welcome to the Age of the Invisible Winner — the rise of the Quiet Hustler. These are…
Instagram @jaanadiamant Tell us about the moment you found out you would be featured in the magazine. What was your initial reaction? It was an amazing suprise it felt like it was my birthday, I was super happy and excited to be featured. Can you share your favorite shot or spread from the magazine and why it holds special significance for you? I love the hanging from the rail pic; it was a new idea for a pose that the photographer had, and I love how it turned out. I love trying out new things and jumping in to the moment when creating something new, it’s a wonderful feeling. Are there any particular hobbies or interests outside of your influencer work that you’re passionate about? Fashion is my number one…
There was a time when daytime TV wasn’t about soft-spoken doctors, carefully curated recipes, or polite panel discussions—it was about pure, unfiltered mayhem. The ‘90s talk show era was television at its wildest, a glorious spectacle of dysfunction where truth and chaos shared the same stage. It was a world where guests screamed secrets into microphones, security guards doubled as referees, and studio audiences roared like sports fans as paternity tests and confessions detonated on live TV. Every weekday afternoon, millions of viewers—students skipping class, bored housewives, late-shift workers, and curious channel surfers—gathered around the glow of their boxy screens to witness humanity’s most scandalous circus. Jerry Springer, Maury Povich, Jenny Jones, Ricki Lake—these weren’t just talk show hosts; they were the ringleaders of America’s most unapologetically raw era. Their…
Before podcasts, before Spotify playlists, before curated algorithmic radio stations, there was chaos in the dial. The late ’70s, ’80s, and ’90s were the golden era of pirate radio and shock jocks — renegades who broadcasted rebellion, comedy, and pure anarchy to anyone who would tune in. They didn’t ask for permission. They didn’t follow rules. They just cranked the volume, pressed record, and shook the system. From hidden antennas on ships off the coast to basement studios in major cities, these voices were raw, unfiltered, and often outright illegal. They were the original influencers -except their influence came with static, fines, and sometimes a knock on the door from the FCC. And the listeners? Hooked. THE PIRATE RADIO PHENOMENON The term “pirate radio” evokes romance, rebellion, and a sense…
Remember a time when logging online was an event, not a reflex? When you didn’t mind waiting for dial-up tones to connect because the moment you hit “Enter,” a whole world of possibility awaited? When connecting with your friends meant checking MSN Messenger over and over, hoping they’d be “online,” or leaving carefully crafted away messages that hinted at your mood, your drama, or your latest obsession? When spending hours tweaking your MySpace profile—picking the perfect background, embedding glittery GIFs, coding HTML to play your favorite song automatically—was the highlight of your evening? That was life online before everything was monetized, curated, and algorithmically optimized. This was the early 2000s — the internet’s untamed adolescence, raw, unpredictable, and full of energy. It was a digital frontier where creativity, chaos, and…
Model @itsmichelenarose If beauty is in the eye of the beholder, what do you see when you look at yourself? When I look at myself, I see the full package….fun, loving, genuine, intelligent, nurturing, and cool as hell. I’m the kind of beauty that makes people double-take, laugh a little too loud, and wonder how the fuck I pull it all off so effortlessly. Basically… I’m the beholder’s lucky day. What’s one thing that you’ve learned from your journey as an influencer that you wish you knew when you started? That influence isn’t given, it’s earned… and it’s not earned in likes, it’s earned in impact. I wish I knew sooner that my voice, my energy, and my choices would always be my strongest brand. The photos might draw people…