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For as long as he can remember, Trevor Larcom wanted to look different.
He’d grown up overweight in the public eye as a child actor, appearing on the sitcoms “Fresh Off the Boat” and “Fuller House.” He was 18 years old and 300 pounds when he turned his focus to working out and cutting calories.
Yet once he was down to 170 pounds, he still felt insecure. Dating wasn’t going well. What if I could change how my face is presented to people? he recalled thinking.
“One of the first things I looked up was ‘how to get a better jawline,’” said Larcom, now 22.
That’s how he fell into the online world of looksmaxxing, where young men relentlessly pursue physical ideals. He dyed his eyebrows. He did neck exercises and chewed extra-firm gum that he’d seen looksmaxxers claim would help build the jawline’s masseter muscles. And after seeing numerous before-and-after transformations, he ordered a peptide “stack,” or a combination of several peptides for supposed enhanced results.
Unrealistic beauty standards have long saddled women and girls, from models to movie stars to the growing masses of GLP-1 users. Now men and boys are facing their own heightened images of perfection: sharp jawlines, massive muscles, glowing skin.
Read the full story at the link in bio or on wsj.com.
Written by Sara Ashley O’Brien
Photos: @rsamuelhayes

For as long as he can remember, Trevor Larcom wanted to look different.
He’d grown up overweight in the public eye as a child actor, appearing on the sitcoms “Fresh Off the Boat” and “Fuller House.” He was 18 years old and 300 pounds when he turned his focus to working out and cutting calories.
Yet once he was down to 170 pounds, he still felt insecure. Dating wasn’t going well. What if I could change how my face is presented to people? he recalled thinking.
“One of the first things I looked up was ‘how to get a better jawline,’” said Larcom, now 22.
That’s how he fell into the online world of looksmaxxing, where young men relentlessly pursue physical ideals. He dyed his eyebrows. He did neck exercises and chewed extra-firm gum that he’d seen looksmaxxers claim would help build the jawline’s masseter muscles. And after seeing numerous before-and-after transformations, he ordered a peptide “stack,” or a combination of several peptides for supposed enhanced results.
Unrealistic beauty standards have long saddled women and girls, from models to movie stars to the growing masses of GLP-1 users. Now men and boys are facing their own heightened images of perfection: sharp jawlines, massive muscles, glowing skin.
Read the full story at the link in bio or on wsj.com.
Written by Sara Ashley O’Brien
Photos: @rsamuelhayes

For as long as he can remember, Trevor Larcom wanted to look different.
He’d grown up overweight in the public eye as a child actor, appearing on the sitcoms “Fresh Off the Boat” and “Fuller House.” He was 18 years old and 300 pounds when he turned his focus to working out and cutting calories.
Yet once he was down to 170 pounds, he still felt insecure. Dating wasn’t going well. What if I could change how my face is presented to people? he recalled thinking.
“One of the first things I looked up was ‘how to get a better jawline,’” said Larcom, now 22.
That’s how he fell into the online world of looksmaxxing, where young men relentlessly pursue physical ideals. He dyed his eyebrows. He did neck exercises and chewed extra-firm gum that he’d seen looksmaxxers claim would help build the jawline’s masseter muscles. And after seeing numerous before-and-after transformations, he ordered a peptide “stack,” or a combination of several peptides for supposed enhanced results.
Unrealistic beauty standards have long saddled women and girls, from models to movie stars to the growing masses of GLP-1 users. Now men and boys are facing their own heightened images of perfection: sharp jawlines, massive muscles, glowing skin.
Read the full story at the link in bio or on wsj.com.
Written by Sara Ashley O’Brien
Photos: @rsamuelhayes

For as long as he can remember, Trevor Larcom wanted to look different.
He’d grown up overweight in the public eye as a child actor, appearing on the sitcoms “Fresh Off the Boat” and “Fuller House.” He was 18 years old and 300 pounds when he turned his focus to working out and cutting calories.
Yet once he was down to 170 pounds, he still felt insecure. Dating wasn’t going well. What if I could change how my face is presented to people? he recalled thinking.
“One of the first things I looked up was ‘how to get a better jawline,’” said Larcom, now 22.
That’s how he fell into the online world of looksmaxxing, where young men relentlessly pursue physical ideals. He dyed his eyebrows. He did neck exercises and chewed extra-firm gum that he’d seen looksmaxxers claim would help build the jawline’s masseter muscles. And after seeing numerous before-and-after transformations, he ordered a peptide “stack,” or a combination of several peptides for supposed enhanced results.
Unrealistic beauty standards have long saddled women and girls, from models to movie stars to the growing masses of GLP-1 users. Now men and boys are facing their own heightened images of perfection: sharp jawlines, massive muscles, glowing skin.
Read the full story at the link in bio or on wsj.com.
Written by Sara Ashley O’Brien
Photos: @rsamuelhayes

For as long as he can remember, Trevor Larcom wanted to look different.
He’d grown up overweight in the public eye as a child actor, appearing on the sitcoms “Fresh Off the Boat” and “Fuller House.” He was 18 years old and 300 pounds when he turned his focus to working out and cutting calories.
Yet once he was down to 170 pounds, he still felt insecure. Dating wasn’t going well. What if I could change how my face is presented to people? he recalled thinking.
“One of the first things I looked up was ‘how to get a better jawline,’” said Larcom, now 22.
That’s how he fell into the online world of looksmaxxing, where young men relentlessly pursue physical ideals. He dyed his eyebrows. He did neck exercises and chewed extra-firm gum that he’d seen looksmaxxers claim would help build the jawline’s masseter muscles. And after seeing numerous before-and-after transformations, he ordered a peptide “stack,” or a combination of several peptides for supposed enhanced results.
Unrealistic beauty standards have long saddled women and girls, from models to movie stars to the growing masses of GLP-1 users. Now men and boys are facing their own heightened images of perfection: sharp jawlines, massive muscles, glowing skin.
Read the full story at the link in bio or on wsj.com.
Written by Sara Ashley O’Brien
Photos: @rsamuelhayes

For as long as he can remember, Trevor Larcom wanted to look different.
He’d grown up overweight in the public eye as a child actor, appearing on the sitcoms “Fresh Off the Boat” and “Fuller House.” He was 18 years old and 300 pounds when he turned his focus to working out and cutting calories.
Yet once he was down to 170 pounds, he still felt insecure. Dating wasn’t going well. What if I could change how my face is presented to people? he recalled thinking.
“One of the first things I looked up was ‘how to get a better jawline,’” said Larcom, now 22.
That’s how he fell into the online world of looksmaxxing, where young men relentlessly pursue physical ideals. He dyed his eyebrows. He did neck exercises and chewed extra-firm gum that he’d seen looksmaxxers claim would help build the jawline’s masseter muscles. And after seeing numerous before-and-after transformations, he ordered a peptide “stack,” or a combination of several peptides for supposed enhanced results.
Unrealistic beauty standards have long saddled women and girls, from models to movie stars to the growing masses of GLP-1 users. Now men and boys are facing their own heightened images of perfection: sharp jawlines, massive muscles, glowing skin.
Read the full story at the link in bio or on wsj.com.
Written by Sara Ashley O’Brien
Photos: @rsamuelhayes

For as long as he can remember, Trevor Larcom wanted to look different.
He’d grown up overweight in the public eye as a child actor, appearing on the sitcoms “Fresh Off the Boat” and “Fuller House.” He was 18 years old and 300 pounds when he turned his focus to working out and cutting calories.
Yet once he was down to 170 pounds, he still felt insecure. Dating wasn’t going well. What if I could change how my face is presented to people? he recalled thinking.
“One of the first things I looked up was ‘how to get a better jawline,’” said Larcom, now 22.
That’s how he fell into the online world of looksmaxxing, where young men relentlessly pursue physical ideals. He dyed his eyebrows. He did neck exercises and chewed extra-firm gum that he’d seen looksmaxxers claim would help build the jawline’s masseter muscles. And after seeing numerous before-and-after transformations, he ordered a peptide “stack,” or a combination of several peptides for supposed enhanced results.
Unrealistic beauty standards have long saddled women and girls, from models to movie stars to the growing masses of GLP-1 users. Now men and boys are facing their own heightened images of perfection: sharp jawlines, massive muscles, glowing skin.
Read the full story at the link in bio or on wsj.com.
Written by Sara Ashley O’Brien
Photos: @rsamuelhayes

For as long as he can remember, Trevor Larcom wanted to look different.
He’d grown up overweight in the public eye as a child actor, appearing on the sitcoms “Fresh Off the Boat” and “Fuller House.” He was 18 years old and 300 pounds when he turned his focus to working out and cutting calories.
Yet once he was down to 170 pounds, he still felt insecure. Dating wasn’t going well. What if I could change how my face is presented to people? he recalled thinking.
“One of the first things I looked up was ‘how to get a better jawline,’” said Larcom, now 22.
That’s how he fell into the online world of looksmaxxing, where young men relentlessly pursue physical ideals. He dyed his eyebrows. He did neck exercises and chewed extra-firm gum that he’d seen looksmaxxers claim would help build the jawline’s masseter muscles. And after seeing numerous before-and-after transformations, he ordered a peptide “stack,” or a combination of several peptides for supposed enhanced results.
Unrealistic beauty standards have long saddled women and girls, from models to movie stars to the growing masses of GLP-1 users. Now men and boys are facing their own heightened images of perfection: sharp jawlines, massive muscles, glowing skin.
Read the full story at the link in bio or on wsj.com.
Written by Sara Ashley O’Brien
Photos: @rsamuelhayes
WSJ's Valerie Bauerlein explains why the South Carolina Supreme Court overturned Alex Murdaugh’s 2023 conviction in the double-murder of his wife and son, all but ensuring a do-over of one of the most-watched court cases in memory.
Murdaugh, a 57-year-old disbarred lawyer, is imprisoned in the rural western corner of the state and will likely spend the rest of his life in prison on separate financial crimes regardless of Wednesday’s ruling.
Read more at the link in our bio.
Photo: Pool/via Reuters

The Senate confirmed Kevin Warsh as the Federal Reserve’s 17th chair Wednesday in a party-line vote that reflected how tensions with the White House have dragged the Fed deeper into the political fray.
Warsh won confirmation 54–45, earning support from all Senate Republicans but just one Democrat, John Fetterman of Pennsylvania. No Fed chair has been confirmed by such a narrow margin since Senate approval became a requirement for the job in 1977.
Chair Jerome Powell, whose leadership tenure ends Friday, captured at least 80 votes in Senate confirmations for each of his two terms atop the Fed. The previous chair, Janet Yellen, was confirmed 56–26 in 2014, with many senators absent because of bad weather.
A difficult economic backdrop and President Trump’s broadsides against the Fed’s independence have set up the central bank for a thorny leadership transition.
Read more at the link in our bio.
Photo: Graeme Sloan/Bloomberg News
In a heated exchange, FBI Director Kash Patel said allegations that he has been unreachable to his staff while drinking were "unequivocally, categorically false."
Photo: Jose Luis Magana/AP

The South Carolina Supreme Court overturned Alex Murdaugh’s conviction Wednesday in the double-murder of his wife and son, all but ensuring a do-over of one of the most-watched court cases in memory.
Murdaugh, a 57-year-old disbarred lawyer, was convicted in March 2023 of gunning down his wife Maggie and son Paul on a quiet summer evening at Moselle, the family’s estate. The S.C. attorney general’s office argued Murdaugh’s motive was to create a distraction and throw those close to Murdaugh off the trail of his thefts of millions of dollars from his personal-injury clients.
Read more at the link in our bio.
Photo: Andrew J. Whitaker/AP
Asked by a reporter to what extent he was motivated by Americans’ financial situation to make a deal with Iran to end the war, President Trump replied: "not even a little bit."
“I don’t think about Americans’ financial situation,” the president said, noting that he is only concerned about Iran having a nuclear weapon. “I don’t think about anybody."
Photo: Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images
Personal tech journalist Joanna Stern spoke about the hard lesson her son had to learn about AI hallucinations.
Stern let AI be her doctor, driver, colleague, housekeeper, therapist and lover as research for her new book "I Am Not a Robot." At the link in our bio, watch more from this live taping of The Journal podcast.

Wichita, Kan., is that rare American city betting its future on the middle class.
While Sunbelt boomtowns from Miami to Austin, Texas, expand their tax bases by courting wealthy finance executives and tech workers, Wichita businesses and politicians are reaching out to middle-income earners in fields such as healthcare services, energy and manufacturing.
On the housing front, rows of affordable duplexes are sprouting up for young families, retirees and empty-nesters next to single-family homes and farmland.
Wichita is marketing itself as a rare mecca of affordability for the new middle class in an era of perpetually rising costs, especially the soaring cost of housing. The median household income there is around $66,000, while the average monthly rent for all apartments is $950. That is about 45% cheaper than the national average of $1,750, according to figures from RentCafe.
Wichita’s strategy appears to be working. Over the past five years, the population of Sedgwick County, which includes Wichita, increased by 15,000 people to 528,000, outpacing the growth rate of the rest of the state, according to census data.
The city maintains a smaller-town feel. The cost of utilities, food and transportation is lower than in the rest of the U.S. And locals like to say that everything is a 15-minute drive to everywhere else, from downtown to acres of farmland.
Read more at the link in our bio.
Photo: Getty Images
"Subway Takes" creator Kareem Rahma knows his way around an office—and a hot take. So we asked him all our questions about how to behave in the modern workplace. From bosses who adore AI to coworkers who expose their toes, he had answers.
Read our full profile of Kareem Rahma at the link in bio.
Producer: Rebecca Alifimoff

Kareem Rahma used to keep a Post-it note in his home office that read: “The secret to doing things is doing them.”
At 33, he abandoned a career in media in the hopes of becoming a famous comedian. (“A midlife enlightenment,” he calls it now.) He ripped through courses in improv, stand-up and screenwriting. He dropped $14,000 on video cameras.
He tried out a handful of concepts before striking gold with Subway Takes, a social media show where he asks New York City commuters—comedians, civilians, A-list celebrities—to share their most firmly held opinions while riding in an active train car.
Those opinions can be bold (“Nature is boring”) or asinine (“All sauce should come on the side”). They can be prescient, too, like when Zohran Mamdani offered, days before winning the New York Democratic mayoral primary: “I should be the mayor.” Rahma engages in good-natured banter, responding to each proposition with “100% agree” or “100% disagree.”
“There’s so many of these short-form talk shows,” says Adam Faze, a producer of Rahma’s show "Keep the Meter Running." “Subway Takes is the only one that you actually give a s— what the host is saying.”
Read our full profile of Kareem Rahma at the link in bio or on wsj.com.
Written by @samschube
Photos: @tonjethilesen

Kareem Rahma used to keep a Post-it note in his home office that read: “The secret to doing things is doing them.”
At 33, he abandoned a career in media in the hopes of becoming a famous comedian. (“A midlife enlightenment,” he calls it now.) He ripped through courses in improv, stand-up and screenwriting. He dropped $14,000 on video cameras.
He tried out a handful of concepts before striking gold with Subway Takes, a social media show where he asks New York City commuters—comedians, civilians, A-list celebrities—to share their most firmly held opinions while riding in an active train car.
Those opinions can be bold (“Nature is boring”) or asinine (“All sauce should come on the side”). They can be prescient, too, like when Zohran Mamdani offered, days before winning the New York Democratic mayoral primary: “I should be the mayor.” Rahma engages in good-natured banter, responding to each proposition with “100% agree” or “100% disagree.”
“There’s so many of these short-form talk shows,” says Adam Faze, a producer of Rahma’s show "Keep the Meter Running." “Subway Takes is the only one that you actually give a s— what the host is saying.”
Read our full profile of Kareem Rahma at the link in bio or on wsj.com.
Written by @samschube
Photos: @tonjethilesen

Kareem Rahma used to keep a Post-it note in his home office that read: “The secret to doing things is doing them.”
At 33, he abandoned a career in media in the hopes of becoming a famous comedian. (“A midlife enlightenment,” he calls it now.) He ripped through courses in improv, stand-up and screenwriting. He dropped $14,000 on video cameras.
He tried out a handful of concepts before striking gold with Subway Takes, a social media show where he asks New York City commuters—comedians, civilians, A-list celebrities—to share their most firmly held opinions while riding in an active train car.
Those opinions can be bold (“Nature is boring”) or asinine (“All sauce should come on the side”). They can be prescient, too, like when Zohran Mamdani offered, days before winning the New York Democratic mayoral primary: “I should be the mayor.” Rahma engages in good-natured banter, responding to each proposition with “100% agree” or “100% disagree.”
“There’s so many of these short-form talk shows,” says Adam Faze, a producer of Rahma’s show "Keep the Meter Running." “Subway Takes is the only one that you actually give a s— what the host is saying.”
Read our full profile of Kareem Rahma at the link in bio or on wsj.com.
Written by @samschube
Photos: @tonjethilesen

Kareem Rahma used to keep a Post-it note in his home office that read: “The secret to doing things is doing them.”
At 33, he abandoned a career in media in the hopes of becoming a famous comedian. (“A midlife enlightenment,” he calls it now.) He ripped through courses in improv, stand-up and screenwriting. He dropped $14,000 on video cameras.
He tried out a handful of concepts before striking gold with Subway Takes, a social media show where he asks New York City commuters—comedians, civilians, A-list celebrities—to share their most firmly held opinions while riding in an active train car.
Those opinions can be bold (“Nature is boring”) or asinine (“All sauce should come on the side”). They can be prescient, too, like when Zohran Mamdani offered, days before winning the New York Democratic mayoral primary: “I should be the mayor.” Rahma engages in good-natured banter, responding to each proposition with “100% agree” or “100% disagree.”
“There’s so many of these short-form talk shows,” says Adam Faze, a producer of Rahma’s show "Keep the Meter Running." “Subway Takes is the only one that you actually give a s— what the host is saying.”
Read our full profile of Kareem Rahma at the link in bio or on wsj.com.
Written by @samschube
Photos: @tonjethilesen

Kareem Rahma used to keep a Post-it note in his home office that read: “The secret to doing things is doing them.”
At 33, he abandoned a career in media in the hopes of becoming a famous comedian. (“A midlife enlightenment,” he calls it now.) He ripped through courses in improv, stand-up and screenwriting. He dropped $14,000 on video cameras.
He tried out a handful of concepts before striking gold with Subway Takes, a social media show where he asks New York City commuters—comedians, civilians, A-list celebrities—to share their most firmly held opinions while riding in an active train car.
Those opinions can be bold (“Nature is boring”) or asinine (“All sauce should come on the side”). They can be prescient, too, like when Zohran Mamdani offered, days before winning the New York Democratic mayoral primary: “I should be the mayor.” Rahma engages in good-natured banter, responding to each proposition with “100% agree” or “100% disagree.”
“There’s so many of these short-form talk shows,” says Adam Faze, a producer of Rahma’s show "Keep the Meter Running." “Subway Takes is the only one that you actually give a s— what the host is saying.”
Read our full profile of Kareem Rahma at the link in bio or on wsj.com.
Written by @samschube
Photos: @tonjethilesen

Kareem Rahma used to keep a Post-it note in his home office that read: “The secret to doing things is doing them.”
At 33, he abandoned a career in media in the hopes of becoming a famous comedian. (“A midlife enlightenment,” he calls it now.) He ripped through courses in improv, stand-up and screenwriting. He dropped $14,000 on video cameras.
He tried out a handful of concepts before striking gold with Subway Takes, a social media show where he asks New York City commuters—comedians, civilians, A-list celebrities—to share their most firmly held opinions while riding in an active train car.
Those opinions can be bold (“Nature is boring”) or asinine (“All sauce should come on the side”). They can be prescient, too, like when Zohran Mamdani offered, days before winning the New York Democratic mayoral primary: “I should be the mayor.” Rahma engages in good-natured banter, responding to each proposition with “100% agree” or “100% disagree.”
“There’s so many of these short-form talk shows,” says Adam Faze, a producer of Rahma’s show "Keep the Meter Running." “Subway Takes is the only one that you actually give a s— what the host is saying.”
Read our full profile of Kareem Rahma at the link in bio or on wsj.com.
Written by @samschube
Photos: @tonjethilesen

Kareem Rahma used to keep a Post-it note in his home office that read: “The secret to doing things is doing them.”
At 33, he abandoned a career in media in the hopes of becoming a famous comedian. (“A midlife enlightenment,” he calls it now.) He ripped through courses in improv, stand-up and screenwriting. He dropped $14,000 on video cameras.
He tried out a handful of concepts before striking gold with Subway Takes, a social media show where he asks New York City commuters—comedians, civilians, A-list celebrities—to share their most firmly held opinions while riding in an active train car.
Those opinions can be bold (“Nature is boring”) or asinine (“All sauce should come on the side”). They can be prescient, too, like when Zohran Mamdani offered, days before winning the New York Democratic mayoral primary: “I should be the mayor.” Rahma engages in good-natured banter, responding to each proposition with “100% agree” or “100% disagree.”
“There’s so many of these short-form talk shows,” says Adam Faze, a producer of Rahma’s show "Keep the Meter Running." “Subway Takes is the only one that you actually give a s— what the host is saying.”
Read our full profile of Kareem Rahma at the link in bio or on wsj.com.
Written by @samschube
Photos: @tonjethilesen
President Trump says he will raise the case of Jimmy Lai, the imprisoned Hong Kong pro-democracy publisher, during this week’s talks in China with Xi Jinping. Lai’s son, Sebastien Lai campaigns for his release, @wsjfreeexpression via @wsjopinion.
Watch the full video at the link in @wsjfreeexpression’s bio.
Photo: Henry Nicholls/AFP/Getty
Poppi co-founder Allison Ellsworth says she enjoyed the "chaos" of starting her company and becoming a mother at the same time.
At the link in our bio, Ellsworth opens up about how she and her husband manage their wealth, the post-exit blues and her $1 million family vacation to Europe.
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