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In Short

Daniel Lombroso on Men, Bodies, and the Silence in Between

Lonely man on bridge

麻豆果冻传媒 2026 Fellow Daniel Lombroso spoke about his new film Manhood, for 鈥淭hree questions鈥 in The Fifth Draft, the Fellows Program鈥檚 monthly newsletter. Lombroso is a director and journalist who spent the past nine years building the Oscar-nominated video departments at The New Yorker and The Atlantic.

Your last documentary, , took you inside the alt-right. Your new film, , follows a penile enhancement entrepreneur and his patients. How did you get from there to here?

I’m fascinated by the strange and terrifying corners of American life. When I learned about a revolution in girth enhancement鈥攁nd a broader uptick in male cosmetics鈥擨 was riveted, and felt it was a perfect vehicle to explore male mental health, body image, and the often malicious influence of social media, porn, and the manosphere. In the patients, who often treated the injection table like a therapy session, I felt a portrait of a pained country emerge鈥攐ne I hadn’t seen before. At that point, I knew it had to be my second feature-length film.

I'm fascinated by the strange and terrifying corners of American life.

The film shows men at their most exposed鈥攂oth physically and emotionally. How did you earn their trust in sharing such vulnerable moments, and how are you protecting that trust now that the film is in front of audiences?

I’m a patient storyteller. Early on, I booked tickets to Dallas several times and simply sat in the waiting room of a clinic, introducing myself to the men there. I’d explain that I was a journalist鈥攑reviously at The New Yorker and The Atlantic鈥攁nd that this wasn’t a commercial for them or the clinic, but that I had a genuine interest in breaking the taboos around the male body and male mental health. These men understood the pitch immediately. Many had been suffering in silence for years, and the ones who were ready to break that silence became the film’s main characters.

In Manhood, Ruben spends thousands on injections while his family faces eviction, despite his wife鈥檚 reservations. Meanwhile, the penile enhancement industry is booming. At what point does this stop being a matter of personal choice and become a question for public policy?

The body modification space is deeply underregulated, and girth enhancement is one of the most egregious examples. The main practitioner in the film, Bill Moore, is not licensed as a doctor or nurse, yet can legally perform these procedures in Texas鈥攖hough a new law may change that. His outcomes are mostly positive, at least. The far more troubling cases involve practitioners injecting highly dangerous materials, most notably liquid silicone, which can turn the penis into something resembling concrete. We’ve met or heard from dozens of men who’ve been mutilated by that procedure, many performed by doctors operating with impunity. Because these men are already so ashamed of their size, they’re even more afraid to say that they鈥檝e been botched鈥攎ost staying silent, until now. We hope聽Manhood聽is the beginning of change: more regulation and closer oversight of what goes into men’s bodies.


厂耻产蝉肠谤颈产别听here聽to receive next month鈥檚 issue of聽The Fifth Draft.

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Daniel Lombroso
Daniel Lombroso
Daniel Lombroso

麻豆果冻传媒 Fellow, 2026

Director, Manhood

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Daniel Lombroso on Men, Bodies, and the Silence in Between