Men’s Journal aims to feature only the best products and services. If you buy something via one of our links, we may earn a commission.
Often overlooked, the slipper is the perfect house shoe and should be in every man’s rotation. While most brands craft theirs with comfort solely in mind, Huckberry decided to add functionality to some of its models, and you can score a pair that highlights both traits for nearly half off right now.
The Greys Ripstop Mule Slippers are on sale for just $59 at Huckberry, a rare 45% discount off their full price of $108. This pair has received some mixed reviews, but those who seemed to take issue with them mainly mentioned that they run a little small, which can be circumvented by ordering a size up. Those who did order the correct size loved them, noting that they’re “super warm and comfy.” They are currently available in green and navy in sizes 4 to 13, but when shoes go on sale at Huckberry, they tend to disappear fast, so grab the one you want ASAP.
Greys Ripstop Mule Slippers in Olive/Black, $59 (was $108) at Huckberry
Crafted for comfort, these slippers are ready to go anywhere. Their durable build features a tear-resistant, sturdy upper nylon that breathes surprisingly well. They are built with synthetic down insulation that keeps them very lightweight without making your feet overly sweaty if you decide to wear them outside. Their rubber soles provide excellent traction, while the cushioned cork-lined insoles provide a perfect, plush feel. They also have a stub-proof toe box, which comes in handy when walking around in the dark.
“Excellent—I really enjoy the Ripstop Mule Slipper,” exclaimed one shopper. “The slippers are well-made, light but substantial, and are perfect for the home and yard.”
Greys Ripstop Mule Slippers in Navy/Black, $59 (was $108) at Huckberry
“Great slippers that provide excellent traction and sufficient warmth—a welcome addition,” stated another buyer.
When Huckberry marks down some of its fan-favorite gear, it tends to sell fast. With a discount like this, the Greys Ripstop Mule Slippers won’t be around forever—make sure you grab your pair today.
It’s been nearly six months since Marvel announced that Tom Holland would be returning for a fourth standalone Spider-Man film. Now we’re finally starting to get some details.
This week is going to be a big one for movie details, as CinemaCon—where studio executives, movie stars, and cinema owners from around the country descend on Las Vegas to offer details on Hollywood’s upcoming slate of movies—is taking place between March 31 and Thursday, April 3. And we’ve already received one great piece of MCU intel: the name of next year’s new Spider-Man movie.
Peter Parker himself (at least the latest incarnation) delivered some exciting news to CinemaCon goers on Monday evening. As The Hollywood Reporter shared, Holland was on hand—via video—to share the official title of the upcoming film with the crowd: Spider-Man: Brand New Day.
The upcoming MCU film, which will web-sling its way into theaters on July 31, 2026, is being directed by Destin Daniel Cretton, who was in Vegas to share a few very minor details about the project. (Those Marvel types like to keep things secretive.)
Cretton—who directed MCU stars Michael B. Jordan and Brie Larson in 2019’s Just Mercy, and also stood behind the camera on Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings (2021)—was clearly thrilled to be at the event, even after he admitted he had just lost $200 at a roulette table.
“To say that it’s an honor to be standing on this stage is a pretty big understatement,” Cretton said, before sharing his lifelong affinity for Peter Parker/Spider-Man character, due to the character’s “humor” and “messy humanity.”
While you’ve got more than a year to wait for the new Spider-Man movie, there should be plenty of Marvel fare to tide you over. Thunderbolts*, the final film in Phase Five of the MCU, will arrive in theaters on May 2, followed by The Fantastic Four: First Steps in on July 25.
After a disappointing loss to the Philadelphia Eagles in Super Bowl LIX in February, Kansas City Chiefs star tight end Travis Kelce decided to return for another season with the team, where he will once again be one of the faces of the franchise. Fittingly, a close-up photo of his face is now going viral on social media.
In February, Kelce announced that he would be returning for the 2025 season with the Chiefs as he made it clear that he still thinks he is capable of playing at a high level.
“I still feel like I can play at a high level and possibly at a higher level than I did last year,” Kelce said on the podcast back in February. “I don’t think it was my best outing, you know? I think I let my guys down in a lot more moments than I helped them, especially if you look at my track record and how I’ve been in years past. You know, I want to give it a good run. I got a bad taste in my mouth about how I ended the year and how well I was playing, and how accountable I was for the people around me.”
This week, the Kansas City Chiefs shared a series of photos on social media showing some close-up shots of several members of the team taken throughout the 2024 season. Kelce’s, in particular, turned heads from fans.
In the black-and-white photo shared on Instagram, Kelce stared directly into the camera with clear and bright eyes as his messy hair, mustache and stubble were all shown in great detail in the high-resolution image.
“Part of the inspiration of this menu, with the concept of cooking with fire and smoke, is to make Ceniza a restaurant with very Mexican touches. So all of the plates use technique from the Mexican kitchen,” Executive Chef Omar Barquera tells me as he serves up a black clay bowl popping with a bright orange mole. The climax plate of the seven-course tasting centers around a perfectly roasted seabass filet, oven baked over mesquite until edges are thinly crisp, yet succulently juicy within. Around it pools a fiery orange mole made of squash seeds, with crisp watercress and freshly rolled tortillas alongside.
Located in a round thatched-roof palapa, the Thompson Zihuatanejo hotel’s halo restaurant features a clean, minimal design with polished concrete floors and crafted wood furniture. Calm and relaxing, a young duo serenades the scene with live covers of your favorite beach jams. Between songs, you can hear the gentle lapping of waves only 50 yards away. Before the “pipián rojo robala,” Chef Omar shared a thinly sliced beef tartar, and Caesar salad with the entire stalk of romaine roasted black in the fire — its traditional croutons substituted with warm, pillowy Indian naan bread. Another plate featured trout cured gravlax style, cold smoked, plated with sliced avocado and dill, all soaked in coconut milk. As a side Focaccia loafs baked in the same mesquite ovens as the seabass are served toasty, alongside homemade butter blended with local sea salt and burnt tortilla dust to give it a smoky layer.
(Chef Omar sharing his plates / Thompson Zihuatanejo)
Named after the ash-rich cenizado style of Guerrero, where they cook fish sliced open over a fire in handheld wire baskets called zarandas, Ceniza manifests the culinary art of Zihuatanejo’s home state. But it is more than that. With the states of Oaxaca, Nayarit, Yucatan, Baja, Jalisco and Mexico City itself under my travel belt, it is evident a meal at Ceniza touches all of these culinary hotspots without anchoring to any one in specific. And while sometimes agnostic food explorations can result in unserious or frankly boring dishes, Chef Omar’s experience, talent and skill shine to create recipes that are both authentic and yet innovative. Credit Barquera’s six years in Mexico City and another six in Playa Del Carmen earning his bonafides before taking over Ceniza.
(Photo: Tadeu Brunelli/tbfoto.com.br)
Following the Thompson philosophy, the open air restaurant sources only from local producers: milk from a sustainable dairy farm in nearby Michoacán, salt dehydrated from the ocean in a nearby village (and available for purchase). Every day local fisherman bring their catch in two waves: one in the morning — with mahi mahi, tuna, swordfish, marlin and sea bass — and the second in the afternoon, nets loaded with red snapper, grouper, snapper and a local fish called palometa. Also all the lobster and shrimp are freshly caught; no frozen bags found here. If the Thompson excels it any one particular aspect, it is the food. Not just Chef Omar’s creations, but lunch and poolside snacks like oven-baked octopus and perfectly tempura-ed fish tacos. As regular travelers know, you can’t really get away with anything mediocre in Mexico these days. That’s how exceptional the food has become south of the border, so it’s little surprise the Thompson Zihuatanejoleaves no room for average.
LOCATION
(Thompson Zihuatanejo)
Located in the state of Guerrero, Zihuatanejo mostly remains a sleepy, charming fishing town. Unlike other coastal destinations there’s not much wild nightlife tempting you to misbehave — an ideal place for families and couples looking to unplug, making for an excellent recovery, relaxation and recharging destination. Blessed with bathwater calm waves, perhaps the warmest ocean water we’ve ever splashed around in, Zihuatanejo Bay makes the Caribbean feel like Iceland. We came here during the off-season, and even during the occasional thunderstorm locals would act if it nothing was happening; through the alarming flashes of lightning they’d swim and dig sandcastles without worry.
HISTORY
Hyatt’s lifestyle branch Thompson first broke ground in Mexico in June, 2015 with The Cape in Cabo San Lucas. One of the brand’s gems, The Cape made headlines with its stunning views of the famed El Arco rock formation and the entire bay. Then after Playa Del Carmen came the Thompson Zihuatanejo in 2019, establishing the country’s third Thompson but the first on Mexico’s Pacific Coast. Like the Hyatt’s Andaz branch, Thompson hotels prioritize design, culture, local art, nightlife and F&B, well represented by the Zihuatanejo branch.
THE ROOMS
(Photo: Tadeu Brunelli/tbfoto.com.br)
We stayed in a modest but well-appointed top floor Lagoon Suite with a king bed and view of the hotel’s lush gardens. Without question the suite’s highlight is the huge patio — almost a second room, with a small plunge pool for a quick cool off and sufficient space for a family soirée. The terrace is so big and private you might be tempted to wander around au naturale, dipping in the pool or tanning free on a lounger. No one would ever know. Not that any professional would ever do that.
DESIGN/ARCHITECTURE/LANDSCAPE
Aesthetically the Thompson is well designed and beautifully landscaped with towering palms, bright flowers and well-manicured lawns, all structured around a clear lagoon with crisscrossing bridges. 56 one-, two- and three-story beachfront rooms and suites are housed in white stucco buildings, all with ocean or garden views. It’s the paradise one would hope for on a margarita-fueled vacation. Running its entire 1,000 feet of private beachfront is the beach club where one can spend the day whiling away doing nada. A trio of pools compliment the ocean – a family option on the far side, the adult pool next to the bar, and In between a private pool for exclusive use of a mini-complex of 11 rooms designed for weddings, anniversaries, bachelor parties, small conventions, yoga retreats, etc.
FOOD & BEVERAGE
(Thompson Zihuatanejo)
Did we mention the food? Ceniza, Chef Omar, the beach club offerings and really the entire “F” in F&B are not only excellent but really the highlight of the Thompson Zihuatanejo. Its “B” however needs an upgrade — especially for a hotel so relatively close to both Oaxaca and Jalisco. Surprisingly the beach bar offers only a half-dozen different tequilas and about the same mezcals, with very little to surprise or amuse dedicated agave aficionados.
(Thompson Zihuatanejo)
For a hotel in a mezcal producing state that is a shame, missing at an opportunity to highlight one of Mexico’s greatest treasures. But as aforementioned the food is exceptional, matched by excellent and always friendly service at the bar. A nice touch is the club features handy flags on the beach umbrellas you can raise to notify the waiter you’ve got an itchy michelada finger, instead of having to scan the landscape to get someone’s attention.
CHECKING IN
Checking In was quick and painless, quickly accompanied by a cold glass of iced hibiscus tea to slake thirst from a long flight. No line, but we were there during low season.
SLEEP-IN-ABILITY
Fantastic. Even with two sets of floor-to-celling windows (one facing a balcony, the other to the expansive terrace), the blackout curtains kept the room cave dark as long as you want to indulge. The King bed was firm and comfortable, with potent AC chilling the room all night. No pillow or mattress options, but slept excellently.
BATHROOMS
Large bathroom with separate tiled rainshower with plenty of heat and pressure. Nice touch with the Bowmakers shampoo, conditioner, shower gel and lotion, crafted by Brooklyn husband-and-wife duo D.S. & Durga known for their immersive fragrances — in this case their signature blend of wood, moss, and leather. While outfitted with your standard bevy of toiletry kits (e.g. shower cap, cotton swabs/patches, shower and dental kits, etc.) we used the cotton swabs on the first day and they were never replaced. Same for the coffee pods, two small strikes that were easily remedied with a call to housekeeping.
GYM & SPA
(Thompson Zihuatanejo)
The gym gets its own dedicated building, medium sized and adequately outfitted with your standard offering of stationary bikes, treadmills, rowing, ellipses and pull-down machines — all by superb Italian firm TechnoGym. There’s also a rack of free weights and bench. Much better equipped than most hotel “gyms,” but lacking a couple pieces necessary for a full body workout. The thatched-roof palapa offered plenty of natural light with big windows, clean layout and plenty of water. It lacked AC, however, which turned the workout into a sauna session. If you like to sweat, this could be a boon. A nearby spa offers guests a variety of services including massages, facials, body treatments, manicures and pedicures. We did not indulge.
THINGS TO DO NEARBY
If you never step outside the Thompson you won’t miss a thing. However, the nearby pueblo of Zihuatanejo is only a five-dollar taxi ride away and worth investigating for a day or two if you get the itch to explore. The village is also home to several spirited bars with live music and a ton of local food options selling all sorts of Guerrero local specialties. If you look, you just might be able to find exotic dishes like (sadly endangered) venison, urchin and brain tacos.
WE HAVE NOTES
While the mezcal tasting we had (extra fee) highlighted a couple bottles we’d never seen, as we mentioned before the top shelf spirits and agave department could use a definite upgrade.
COST
Range of room prices:Low Season: $245 – $1,181; High Season: $456 – $1,392
FINAL JUDGEMENT
(View from the Lagoon Suite terrace plunge pool / Thompson Zihuatanejo)
For a lie-on-a-beachbed-sipping-piña-coladas vacation, the Thompson Zihuatanejo hits on all fronts. Beautiful architecture, lush landscaping, well-appointed rooms all with views. Perhaps most importantly the culinary options are top-tier without the ultra-luxe hotel premiums. There are infinite reasons to explore Mexico, but sometimes the priority is simply to rest, recharge and indulge. If that’s what you’re looking for in a Mexico beach vacation — but want to do it in a more unknown, less crowded destination than your Cancuns, Puerto Vallartas and Cabos — then the pueblo of Zihuatanejo delivers.With direct flights from Chicago, Houston, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Philadelphia, Seattle and Phoenix, the Thompson Zihuatanejo makes for an ideal destination to expand your Mexican experience.
Swiss cigar icon Davidoff is celebrating the anniversaries of two of their best contemporary lines of smokes, and both celebrations include a limited edition you’ll want to add to your humidor ASAP if you’re a fan of their modern portfolio.
First and most recently, Davidoff is celebrating a decade of its Escurio line with a bourbon barrel fermented limited edition cigar. The Escurio blend highlights Brazilian tobaccos along with traditional Davidoff leaf from the Dominican Republic. The line was first conceived of in 2013 after the launch of Davidoff Nicaragua. Escurio arrived in 2015, featuring what Davidoff calls a “salty-sweet” medium-bodied smoke in a number of quirky new formats.
For the tenth anniversary of the line, Davidoff’s limited edition showcases some unique tobacco aging. The cigarmaker claims that the tobacco in the new Davidoff Escurio 10th Anniversary Limited Edition is a combined 45 years old between the Dominican and Brazilian leaf. That claim leaves some interesting and unanswered questions, but as with whiskey, age can be quite relative anyway — what matters is flavor.
Speaking of whiskey, Davidoff fermented some of this selection of Brazilian tobaccos in bourbon barrels, which the distillery claims adds deep sweetness to the final cigar. Tasting notes describe a toasty, coffee-forward smoke, starting with flavors of cappuccino, vanilla bean, then spicier flavors of leather and licorice before a mild honey finish. The Davidoff Escurio 10th Anniversary Limited Edition Gran Toro measures 6 inches by 56 ring and comes in boxes of 12. The SRP is $37 per cigar plus any local taxes, for a box total around $450.
(Davidoff)
Davidoff also recently announced an anniversary LE for the Avo Syncro Nicaragua line. The Syncro line is very much a release of its time — it was one of the first times that Davidoff had used its increasingly popular Nicaraguan tobaccos in the Avo line. Davidoff launched Davidoff Nicaragua a few years earlier to raving reviews. Rather than release an “Avo Nicaragua” for the portfolio, though, they instead worked to thoughtfully implement Nicaraguan leaf in a blend that fit Avo.
Ten years later, it’s hard to argue that Nicaraguan leaf has been anything but world-changing for Davidoff’s entire portfolio, but particularly for the Syncro line. In fact, the Syncro line has since expanded to include several other featured blends. The Syncro South America line marries Ecuadoran wrapper and Mexican binder leaves with a multi-country mix of filler tobaccos from Brazil, Honduras, Nicaragua, Peru, and the Dominican Republic. Syncro Caribe, meanwhile, gets its wrapper from the Dominican Republic, its binder from Ecuador, and its fillers from Nicaragua and the Dominican Republic.
As for the anniversary release, it’s available in one size: a 6 5/8 inch by 50-ring box-pressed diadema. They’ll be sold in commemorative boxes of 20, with a $22 price tag per cigar. Tasting notes describe a creamy, full-bodied smoke, with warm spices, brown sugar, cedar, coffee, and developing notes of chocolate and leather as it smokes. Both cigars are available this month — Avo’s already on shelves and the Davidoff arrives April 10.
G. Clay Whittaker is a Maxim contributor covering lifestyle, whiskey, cannabis and travel. His work has also appeared in Bon Appetit, Men’s Journal, Cigar Aficionado, Playboy and Esquire. Subscribe to his newsletter Drinks & Stuff for perspectives on drinks, and stuff.