WASHINGTON - Forget Barack Obama's staff making contact with a governor charged with corruption. What's got everyone talking is the president-elect's fine first form.
"FIT FOR OFFICE: Buff Bam is Hawaii hunk," the New York Post gushed on its cover Tuesday above a photo of the future president strolling without a shirt in Hawaii.
The Drudge Report called him "President Beefcake" while TMZ said the president-elect is "still humble enough to do laundry -- ON HIS ABS!"
The photos were distributed by Bauer-Griffin, a photo agency more typically found on the corners of Hollywood. Photographer Chris Behnke simply strolled along the beach to get the shot, said agency co-owner Frank Griffin.
Obama wasn't hiding.
"He was completely out in the open," Griffin said. "We didn't, by any stretch of the imagination, expect to get the images we got."
Griffin said Behnke had gone to the beach to get general views of the estate where Obama is vacationing, but instead found easy access to a view of the first family hitting the beach. "We use the expression, 'He gave it up,"' Griffin said.
Members of the media travelling with Obama have been careful to respect his privacy. A Obama spokesman did not have immediate comment.
Obama's physique has already been well-exposed; photographers snapped him body surfing in Hawaii during the campaign. He was on the November cover of Men's Health and detailed his workouts for the magazine: 45 minutes, six days a week, alternating between weights and cardio.
Griffin said he doesn't expect his agency to stake out Washington on a regular basis, but added that Obama is "now the world's biggest celebrity, just after Angelina and Brad. I guess they're neck and neck right now."
The celebrity description is apt, even if Obama faces a plummeting economy and two wars upon entering office. He's seen as often on "Access Hollywood" as on the nightly news, and appears in "Us Weekly" with the regularity of a Jennifer Aniston.
David Greenberg, a professor at Rutgers University who is working on a history of political spin, said no one should be surprised by the latest development.
When then-president John F. Kennedy was pictured shirtless, there were media accounts then fretting about the threshold Americns had crossed as a country, he said.
"There was John F. Kennedy by the beach, shirt off, this young, glamorous president," Greenberg said. "So in a way this is 48 years old now that we're having this."
Since then, Lyndon Johnson lifted his shirt to show reporters his surgery scar and there have been pictures of Ronald Reagan and Bill Clinton in swim trunks.
"It was kind of an erosion of what had been boundaries of formality between the president and the public," Greenberg said. "We've had 'boxers and briefs' and a real acquaintanceship with a personal side, an uninhibited side, an unclothed side of the president."
Combine that with an increasing hunger for celebrity photos and a chiselled presidential body, and Obama becomes an obvious target for paparazzi.
"Comments have been 95 per cent positive, everything from 'helllooo president' to a 65-year-old lady who said she had to wait this long to find a president who she finds attractive," Griffin said.
Earlier on his vacation, Obama was cranky as reporters snapped pictures through a chain-link fence and bushes, asking "OK, guys. Come on. ... How many shots do you need?"
But such personal shots -- dropping the girls off at school, hitting the gym, practising his golf swing -- also serve to humanize the president.
Greenberg can see why Obama might allow the beach photos to be taken. "I'm sure if he didn't do it on purpose, he's not exactly crying in his coffee about it," he said. "I don't see any downside."
And for anyone who thinks world leaders might take the president-elect less seriously, they only have to look abroad.
French President Nicolas Sarkozy beat Obama to it with stripped-down beach photos, and Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin was pictured shirtless on a fishing expedition.
Griffin has submitted his photo agency for credentials for Obama's inauguration on Jan. 20. He said it's too soon to estimate how much Bauer-Griffin will earn from the beach photos "within tens of thousands or hundreds of thousands."
"I have a feeling that the president-elect kind of accepts this, that it goes with the territory," Griffin said. "He's become a celebrity. I think the pictures humanize him and show that he's just like the rest of us."
Only with better abs.