The reign of the groomed, stylish male dresser is over. Metrosexuals, a term first coined 20 years ago, is now on its way out, says the man who invented the phrase.

In the Daily Telegraph, Mark Simpson writes: "With their painstakingly pumped and chiselled bodies, muscle-enhancing tattoos, piercings, adorable beards and plunging necklines it's eye-catchingly clear that second-generation metrosexuality is less about clothes than it was for the first. Eagerly self-objectifying, second generation metrosexuality is totally tarty. Their own bodies (more than clobber and product) have become the ultimate accessories, fashioning them at the gym into a hot commodity -- one that they share and compare in an online marketplace."

According to Simpson, yesterday's metrosexuals have been replaced by today's "spornosexuals."

And we can all blame (or thank) David Beckham, who was referred to as a metrosexual in the 1990s. Although, spornosexuals are considered an offspring of his metrosexual days, Beckham has shifted from soccer player to H&M underwear model. He has been able to become "everything," especially "to himself." 

Simpson wrote about spornos in a 2006 piece for Out magazine, which described the term as a cross between porn and sports star. Basically meaning that athletes were fetishizing themselves.

He says this world is where "sport got into bed with porn while Mr. Armani took pictures." And they don't need to be enhanced in pictures because they actually looked Photoshopped.

In a world of social media and selfies, fitness has become a popular topic.

Women and men are constantly posting "fitspiration" pictures and showing off their chiseled bodies.

And because homosexuality continues to be destigmatized, the spornosexual has emerged as the latest portmanteau turned trendy zeitgeist. 

Metrosexual had a good run, and Simpson was completely correct about that trend, so get ready to see and hear the word "spornosexual" everywhere. You've definitely seen images of one in the past few years -- Cristiano Ronaldo's naked Vogue cover is a perfect example of this breed of man.

Other spornosexuals include David McIntosh, Thom Evans and Dan Osborne.