As you might imagine, rugby player turned insanely hot model Nick Youngquest knows a thing or two about balls. In these briefs he lets your imagination have a break. We know it’s been working overtime, so really, you had it coming.
Parker Hurley is totally giving you the stare in this Daily Package, captured by photographer Jonathan Skow for Mr Turk. This shot gives a great view of all of Parker’s tattoos, as well as his trendy briefs. This model wears turquoise well, no?
Queen Latifah to the Grind host: "How much do they pay you to show your nipples?"
#68
Eric Nies
(1971—)
When this stud appeared on MTV's experimental-feeling Real World reality series, little did we know how persuasively adorable and annoying he would become, and how fully we would find ourselves inhabitating hopelessly smitten Julie's head as the two flirted up a storm to no great end. Nies was like a pre-"Joey Tribbiani," one of the ultimate '90's bodies in motion. He and his hot brother modeled, too.
The Real World (1992), The Grind (1992),
The Challenge (2002—2005), Confessions of a Teen Idol (2009)
Robert Scott Speedman (born September 1, 1975), better known as Scott Speedman, is a Canadian film and television actor. He is best known for playing Ben Covington in the coming-of-age drama television series Felicity and Lycan-Vampire hybrid Michael Corvin in the gothic horror-action Underworld films.
Richard played guitar in Nine Inch Nails until 1993, when he left to form Filter. Filter was an angry hard rock band with hits like "Hey Man Nice Shot," and then they put out that schmaltzy "Take a Picture" song. But by then Richard didn't have a shaved head and looked pretty cute.
Richard today
He has two young kids and looks hotter now than in the '90's. It seems, just like many of us, he was victim to some bad fashion and hair choices back then. Today, I give you god-tier DILF status, Mr. Patrick.
Watching the ladies of Gilligan's Island perform as The Honey Bees, a kind of all-girl Beatles, never gets old. And speaking of old, "Lovey" (Natalie Schafer) was 65 when this episode was filmed, even though she had fibbed to her cast mates and was assumed to be a good deal younger (she was 13 years older than "Thurston"/Jim Backus). Their take on The Beatles (or The Mosquitoes, as they were represented in the episode) is earnest and literal, but those lyrics are funnier and more creative than most of the (nonetheless eternally enchanting) series.