The NY Times reports:
With all due respect, the look that Prince William sported at the starry reopening of Notre-Dame in Paris this month was nothing special: a well-tailored overcoat, a dark blue tie, a pressed white shirt. And, naturally, his new beard.
But that simple outfit did not fail to wow one luminary.
“He looked really, very handsome last night,” President-elect Donald J. Trump said about the future king of England, according to The New York Post. “Some people look better in person? He looked great. He looked really nice, and I told him that.”
His praise was just the latest instance in which Mr. Trump, 78, had complimented another man’s looks, part of a larger pattern of obsession he has with the personal appearance of individuals. That includes during the presidential campaign, when Mr. Trump often waxed poetic about the pilots posted to Air Force One, during his first term, likening them to taller versions of Tom Cruise.
“These guys are specimens,” he said during a late October interview with Joe Rogan. “Like perfect specimens.”
[…]
In the last three months alone, Mr. Trump has praised the looks of a sheriff in Tempe, Ariz.; a Mexican government negotiator; Shinzo Abe, a former leader of Japan; Senator Eric Schmitt, Republican of Missouri; and Mike Pompeo, his former secretary of state, who he noted had lost weight. (“You look so handsome,” he said about Mr. Pompeo.) He also famously alluded to the size of genitalia of the deceased golfer Arnold Palmer, whose looks Mr. Trump has also apparently approved of.
“They look like Arnold Palmer,” Mr. Trump said about a group of gun-toting security officials at an event in October. “Can’t look better than Arnold.”
Mr. Trump’s focus on being easy on the eye seems to extend to personnel decisions, as he has an apparent desire for those serving under him to fit the mold of “central casting,” a superficial but significant strategy of finding telegenic surrogates who look the part, regardless of their actual job qualifications.
Cases in point: Pete Hegseth, Mr. Trump’s pick for secretary of defense after his run as weekend host on Fox News; and Mehmet Oz, also known as Dr. Oz of daytime television fame, tapped to run the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. Mr. Trump has also spoken glowingly of the looks of Scott Bessent, his choice for Treasury secretary, who would be serving in his first government job after a long career in finance.
The story actually goes on for quite a while listing dozens of the men Trump has said were handsome. Of course, he constantly talks about his own allegedly exceptional good looks as well and he certainly notices how hot (or not) women are. (He practically had a meltdown over the Time magazine cover of Kamala Harris shrilly insisting that they went back and redid the portrait to make her look better than she is.) He is obsessed with looks. In fact, he makes many of his important decisions based upon what people look like.
Psychologists are interviewed and they say things like it’s “a classic indicator of a narcissist’s need for social conquest” and the need to be a “man’s man.” Perhaps. But I think it’s simpler than that. He does not have the capability of critical thinking and doesn’t understand what most people are telling him. And yes, he is certainly a narcissist. But the chilling fact is that he is simply the shallowest man who ever occupied the presidency.