
Mr. Man — The definitive scoreboard for male nudity in film and TV — built by someone who actually did the homework.
Mr. Man is a subscription-based archive of male nudity sourced exclusively from mainstream movies and television. Think of it as the IMDB of 'yes, that was real' — every clip indexed, rated, and described with the same bawdy-but-informed commentary style Mr. Skin pioneered. The site launched in October 2013 under SK Intertainment, Jim McBride's company, and has grown into the single most comprehensive resource of its kind anywhere. If you want to know which actors have gone full-frontal, which scenes are genuinely worth the runtime, and how a particular moment stacks up against the rest — this is the only place that answers all three questions in one click.
The verdict up front: for the audience it serves, Mr. Man is close to irreplaceable. There is no serious competitor doing this at this scale. Whether it's worth $5 a month depends entirely on how often you're actually hunting for this kind of content — but the database alone justifies a month of access.
Over 11,500 film and TV titles. Nearly 37,000 individual clips. Approximately 14,000 actors cataloged. Those aren't marketing numbers — they're the practical reason Mr. Man has staying power a decade after launch.
The search functionality is the real product. You can look up an actor by name and immediately surface every documented scene, rated by nudity level (from shirtless to explicit full-frontal) and quality. Playlists curate by theme, era, or body part if that's your thing. Daily blog posts cover new releases and streaming additions, which means the database stays current rather than sitting as a static archive. The site marked its 10-year anniversary in 2024 with curated retrospectives — the kind of thing that only lands if you actually have years of credible content to pull from.
The tone is the differentiator. Mr. Man doesn't take itself seriously in the way most adult sites do. The commentary borrows from Mr. Skin's DNA — genuinely funny, specific, not leering — which makes browsing feel more like reading a sharp pop-culture blog than anything that would require clearing your browser history at work. (You might still clear it. But you get the point.)
HD video quality across the catalog is strong, particularly for clips sourced from modern streaming titles. The Manatomy Awards — now in their 11th year — give the site a legitimate cultural anchor: annual recognition of best nude/sexy moments in film and TV, with categories like Best Full-Frontal and Rising Star. It's the kind of thing Out.com and Bear World Magazine cover without embarrassment, which tells you something about the brand's mainstream credibility.
Free preview access without an account is a genuinely useful feature. You can browse names, read scene descriptions, and confirm the site has what you're looking for before committing to a membership. That's a level of transparency most adult sites skip entirely.
The content itself is clips from third-party mainstream productions — Mr. Man didn't film anything. That means you're paying for curation, organization, and access, not exclusive content. If a studio pulls a title or a streaming service locks down its clips, the library can develop gaps.
The audience split creates occasional tension in the browsing experience. The site serves gay men and straight women, which are related but distinct interests. Curation sometimes leans harder in one direction, and the 'everything for everyone' approach means neither group gets a fully tailored experience.
Price transparency at the join page has historically been inconsistent — some users report confusion about trial terms and auto-renewal timing. Chargeback guides exist for a reason. Read the billing terms before you enter a card.
Published pricing puts Mr. Man at approximately $5 per month — a price point that was confirmed by multiple third-party sources, though the official join page blocked direct verification at the time of this review. At that rate, a month of access costs less than a single movie ticket and unlocks a database that would take years to assemble yourself. The annual membership historically offered a discount, though current annual pricing was not independently confirmed.
For the core use case — gay men or women who want a reliable, well-maintained index of male nudity in mainstream entertainment — the math is simple. One good discovery pays for the subscription. If you're only casually curious, the free preview tier does a legitimate job of sampling the goods before you commit.
If male nudity in mainstream film and TV is something you actively seek out, yes. The database is the largest of its kind — 37,000+ clips, 14,000+ actors — and the curation quality is genuinely high. At roughly $5/month, it's hard to argue against at least a trial month.
Third-party sources consistently report approximately $5 per month. An annual option has historically been available at a discount. The site's official join page was not directly accessible for this review, so confirm current pricing before subscribing. The live price is being rechecked.
Unlimited streaming of 37,000+ male nudity clips from mainstream film and TV, full access to the actor database (14,000+ names), curated playlists, HD downloads depending on your plan tier, daily blog posts, and access to original editorial content including the Manatomy Awards archive.
Despite being marketed toward straight women, the audience is roughly 60% gay men and 40% women. If you're in either camp and appreciate male nudity in a mainstream-entertainment context — not produced adult content — this is the right site.
Cancel through your account settings or by contacting support directly. Auto-renewal is on by default, so cancel before your billing date if you don't want to be charged for the next cycle. Read the terms at sign-up to understand the trial window.
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