Have you thought of your Halloween Costume yet? Here are some naughty "serving suggestions"
From: Speed o Rex
WHAT IS THIS BLOG ALL ABOUT?
On this blog you I am going to share my world with you. What can you expect to find here -- First of all lots of sexy men, off all shapes and types, something for everyone, as I can find beauty in most men. You are going to find that I have a special fondness for Vintage Beefcake and Porn of the 60's, 70's, and 80's. Also, I love the average guy, and if you want to see yourself on here, just let me know. Be as daring as you like, as long as you are of age, let me help you share it with the world! Also, you are going to find many of my points of views, on pop culture, politics and our changing world. Look to see posts about pop culture, politics, entertainment, sex, etc. There is not any subject that I find as something I won't discuss or offer my point of view. Most of all, I hope you are going to enjoy what I post. ENJOY!
Thursday, October 1, 2015
Cocktoons
Labels:
artistic,
briefs,
bulge,
drawing,
erotic,
Halloween,
holiday,
illustration,
spandex,
superhero
10 Sexiest Guys Who've Gone Naked for PETA
From: PETA
5.
Of course, the ever-popular Trace Cyrus is sporting more ink than ever thought possible.
DAVI
Photography by Gianfranco Briceño
BUTT’s cover man for the month of October is none other than blonde bomb Davi Sabbag of that Brazilian kiddie-technobrega band Banda Uó. He was photographed in São Paulo by BUTT buddy Gianfranco Briceño.
10 Queer Films That Will Teach You More LGBT History Than 'Stonewall'
From: Mic.com
4.
Philadelphia
(1993)
Inspired by the real-life case of Philadelphia lawyer Clarence B. Cain, Philadelphia is the story of Andrew Beckett, who is closeted about both his sexuality and his HIV-positive status. When Beckett, played by Tom Hanks, feels he is wrongly fired from his firm because his HIV-positive status is revealed to his bosses, he gets a low-rent lawyer (Denzel Washington) to represent him in court.
The movie was recognized as one of the first big-budget films to talk about HIV or AIDS, and Hanks' performance earned him the 1994 Academy Award for best actor.
9 LGBT Poets To Know And Love
From: NewNowNext
6.
Richard Blanco
(b. 1968)
Identifying openly not only as a gay man, but also as an immigrant and a Cuban-American, poet Richard Blanco’s work grapples with the tension that comes with assuming identities that often run in direct conflict with one another. His verse is straightforward and honest, relying on narrative over metaphor to comment on the complicated nature of identity politics.
It is perhaps because of this focus that Blanco was chosen to serve as the inaugural poet at President Barack Obama’s second inauguration in 2013. This made him the first Latino, the first immigrant and the first openly gay person to ever do so.
From “Since Unfinished”
I’ve been writing this sincethe woman I slept with the nightof my father’s wake, sincemy grandmother first called mea faggot and I said nothing, sinceI forgave her and my bodypressed hard against Michaelon the dance floor at Twist, sincethe years spent with a martiniand men I knew I couldn’t love.
Man Buns-Explained
From: Vox
John Belushi as a "samurai" (and with his hair in a bun) |
4)
What about historical sources? Didn't samurai have man buns?
Not exactly. This is certainly a widespread perception, likely influenced by John Belushi's portrayal of a samurai in Saturday Night Live skits.
But photographs and woodcuts of actual Japanese samurai show far more varied hairstyles. A few samurai wore a bun-like shape, but many others displayed the chonmage, which involved shaving the front of the head:
A samurai as photographed in 1866 |
In any case, today's man buns aren't really a throwback to samurai fashion. Most of today's man buns tend to be paired with a trendy shirt, a beard, cool pants, or some other fashionable accessory. A man bun is more than the bun itself — its part of a broader lifestyle statement.
Check In to This Scary Hotel With The Sexiest Guys Of American Horror Story
From: Queety
6.
Max Greenfield is Gabriel
The formerly-fat New Girl star plays a platinum blond Hollywood junkie, and apparently lost 30 more pounds for what Murphy describes as the series’ “most disturbing” scene yet.
Academy Award for Best Actress
1934
Claudette Colbert
as
Ellie Andrews
It Happened One Night
Claudette Colbert (/koʊlˈbɛər/; September 13, 1903 – July 30, 1996) was a French-born American actress, and a leading lady for two decades.
Colbert began her career in Broadway productions during the 1920s, progressing to film with the advent of talking pictures. Initially associated with Paramount Pictures, Colbert later gradually shifted to working as a freelance actor. She won the Academy Award for Best Actress in It Happened One Night (1934), the first woman born outside of North America to do so, and also received Academy Award nominations for Private Worlds (1935) and Since You Went Away (1944). With her round apple-face, Colbert was known as an expert screwball comedienne, but her dramatic range enabled her to easily encompass melodrama and to play characters ranging from vamps to housewives. During her career, Colbert starred in more than sixty movies. She was the industry's biggest box-office star in 1938 and 1942.
By the mid 1950s, she had largely retired from the screen in favor of television and stage work, earning a Tony Award nomination for The Marriage-Go-Round in 1959. Her career tapered off during the early 1960s, but in the late 1970s she experienced a career resurgence in theater, earning a Sarah Siddons Award for her Chicago theater work in 1980. For her television work in The Two Mrs. Grenvilles (1987) she won a Golden Globe Award and received an Emmy Award nomination.
In 1999, the American Film Institute voted Colbert the "12th Greatest Female American Screen Legend" in cinema.
Classic Television - Prime Time
Alias Smith and Jones
Original channel
ABC
Original run
January 5, 1971 – January 13, 1973
Starring
Pete Duel
Ben Murphy
Roger Davis
Alias Smith and Jones is an American Western series that originally aired on ABC from 1971 to 1973. It stars Pete Duel as Hannibal Heyes and Ben Murphy as Jedediah "Kid" Curry, a pair of cousin outlaws trying to reform. The governor offers them a conditional amnesty, as he wants to keep the pact under wraps for political reasons. The condition is that they will still be wanted— until the governor can claim they have reformed and warrant clemency.
Alias Smith and Jones began with a made-for-TV movie of the previous year called The Young Country, about con artists in the Old West. It was produced, written and directed by Roy Huggins, who served as executive producer of AS&J and, under the pseudonym of John Thomas James, at least shared the writing credit on most episodes.
Roger Davis starred as Stephen Foster Moody, and Pete Duel had the secondary but significant role of Honest John Smith, while Joan Hackett played a character called Clementine Hale, the same name as a part played on two AS&J episodes by Sally Field. This pilot was rejected, but Huggins was given a second chance and, by Glen A. Larson, developed Alias Smith and Jones. Both The Young Country and the series pilot movie originally aired as ABC Movie of the Week entries.
Alias Smith and Jones was made in the same spirit as many other American TV series, from Huggins' own The Fugitive to Renegade, about men on the run crisscrossing America and getting involved in the personal lives of the people they meet. One major difference was that Hannibal Heyes and Kid Curry were guilty of the crimes that they were accused of committing, but were trying to turn over a new leaf.
The series was inspired by the success of the 1969 film Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, starring Paul Newman and Robert Redford (Universal contract player Ben Murphy was handed to the producers because he was considered a Paul Newman lookalike.) There were a number of connecting themes: Murphy's co-lead character was named "Kid Curry" -- which was also the nickname of Harvey Logan, an associate of the real Butch Cassidy, played in that film by Ted Cassidy (no relation to Butch) . However, unlike the TV version, the real Kid Curry was a cold-blooded killer.
The series also featured a group of robbers called the Devil's Hole Gang which was based on the Hole in the Wall Gang from where Cassidy recruited most of his outlaws. However, in order to lend them an element of audience-sympathy, Hayes and Curry were thematically presented as men who avoided bloodshed (though Curry did once kill in self-defense) and were always attempting to reform and seek redemption for their "prior ways".
The names "Smith and Jones" originated from a comment in Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid when, prior to one of their final hold-ups, the characters are outside a bank in Bolivia and Sundance turns to Butch and says: "I'm Smith and you're Jones."
In the 1933 movie "Sagebrush Trail" John Wayne's character 'John Brant' takes the alias 'Smith' and pals around in the move with a character last name 'Jones'. This is the first cinematic reference I have found that matches Alias Smith and Jones.
Labels:
ABC,
classic,
Prime Time,
television,
western
Jirka Mendez & Vaclav Chovanec
Euro Twinks Work Up a Sweat
From: Jack Off Junkie
From: Jack Off Junkie
With chemistry & passion that ignite the screen at Bad Puppy, Jirka Mendez & Vaclav Chovanec kiss, rim, suck, & raw fuck their way to explosive orgasms
Classic Televison -- Weekdays
Somerset
Original channel
NBC
Original run
March 30, 1970 – December 31, 1976
Somerset (sometimes called Another World in Somerset) is an American television soap opera which ran on NBC from March 30, 1970 until December 31, 1976. The show was a spinoff of another NBC serial, Another World.
Initially, the show revolved around Missy Palmer Matthews (Carol Roux), Lahoma Vane Lucas (Ann Wedgeworth), and Sam Lucas (Jordan Charney). These were three popular characters who were first seen on Another World. They moved to the fictional town of Somerset, an area in the northern Detroit suburbs in Michigan and started their lives anew.
The first stories on the serial revolved around the trio's progress in starting new friendships and romantic entanglements. In Somerset, the other families of importance were the Davis family, the Buchanans, the Grants and the Delaneys, who ran Somerset's major employer, Delaney Brands. Within six months, Missy was gone and new characters were added, including a new family, the Kurtz family and several female characters to act as love interests for Dr. Stan Kurtz and Peter Delaney.
In early 1971, the show changed writers, with Robert Cenedella leaving the show in favor of Henry Slesar.
Further, Somerset slowly moved away from the traditional soap format, and started telling stories that dealt heavily with the Mafia and other types of crime, not unlike CBS' The Edge of Night. After the departure of Slesar, several other writers attempted to bring the show's ratings up with varying mixtures of the two previous formats, each of them slowly removing nearly all of the original characters. One of them, Roy Winsor, was the creator of Search for Tomorrow, Love of Life, and The Secret Storm.
The Somerset County Courthouse in Somerville, New Jersey was used for exteriors.
Labels:
CBS,
classic,
NBC,
soap opera,
television,
Weekdays
Another awesome pic..
..from hawtcherry, this time with my bulldog character dressed in my baseball player outfit.
From: Noodles and Beef
Labels:
artistic,
drawing,
erotic,
illustration
Men Over 50
Kyle Krieger is possessed
A photo posted by Kyle Krieger (@kylekriegerhair) on
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