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!
Here's a question from the NBC game show that originally ran from 1966 to 1980: "According to an article in Coronet, there's one person you dream about more than anyone else. Who is it?" And Paul Lynde's answer: "I don't know but he wears a lumber jacket." This paperback features many more zingers from George Gobel, Rose Marie, Vincent Price, Joan Rivers, Karen Valentine, Jonathan Winters and others!
"Love Connection" debuted tonight on Fox
From: NewNowNext
Ahead of tonight’s premiere of the revamped version of Love Connection, host Andy Cohen opened up about some of the reboot’s biggest changes, including its inclusion of LGBT contestants.
Fox’s version of Love Connection borrows a lot from its predecessor, which ran from the early 1980s through the early ’90s under the charming lead of host Chuck Woolery. The premise was simple: singles would go on dates with potential suitors after watching their video-taped bios and then come on the show to discuss the dates with Woolery.
Though the new Love Connection will keep this basic structure, it’s modernizing the format with cash prizes, the option to have a romantic overnight and the casting of gay suitors.
It was Cohen’s idea to bring LGBT contestants onto the game show in order to increase queer visibility on network television.
“It’s 2017, and they should just be treated the exact same way as I’m treating everyone else,” Cohen told The Advocate of the gay and lesbian contestants. “I think it’s just kind of this post-gay world that we live in, where it’s just another part of this dating show.”
“The more visibility, the better,” he continued. “A network show where you have gay people dating? I think it’s great.”
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One of these gay contestants is Liz Baxter. While the 32-year-old said she didn’t sign up for the show to be a representative of the LGBT community, she’s since come around to the idea.
“I never thought that I would be in this position, but I’m super proud of being gay, so I’m happy to be an advocate in any way,” Baxter said.
“It’s a perfect time to say, ’We’re here. We’re a part of the mainstream community. We’re on TV. And we’re not going away,'” Baxter added. “It’s an important statement that we keep stepping up as gay individuals and saying, ’This is us. We’re normal. I feel more empowered now than ever.'”
Love Connection airs Thursdays on Fox at 9/8c. Watch the trailer below.
The sneak peek reveals a star-studded lineup of celebrity guests for the show's fifth season.
From: NewNowNext
Billy Eichner announced on Twitter that Billy on the Street would return for season five, and it looks like the hit show was packing in more celebrities than ever.
Jon Hamm, Jacob Tremblay, Andy Samberg, Lupita Nyong’o, Seth Rogen, John Oliver, Keegan-Michael Key and Aziz Ansari all pop up in this trailer.
Looks like Ellen’s getting her game on: NBC has ordered six episodes of a prime time game show based on silly segments from Ellen DeGeneres’s daytime series, Variety reports.
The hour long Ellen’s Game of Games, which DeGeneres will host and executive-produce, will riff off her regular audience-engaging bits like “What’s in the Box?” and “Know or Go?”
“We’re pulling out all the stops—gigantic sets, hilarious games,” says DeGeneres in a statement. “It’s going to be like a combination of American Ninja Warrior, RuPaul’s Drag Race, and a water park.”
“OK, it’s nothing like that,” she continues, “but you should still watch.”
Is the "Boy is a Bottom" singer a Tupperware queen?
From: NewNowNext
ABC has resurrected the classic game show To Tell The Truth, where celebrity panelists quiz three contestants to find out which one is telling the truth.
This week’s guest was a drag queen who’s also a top Tupperware saleslady, and Nene Leakes, Iliza Shlesinger, Jalen Rose and Betty White (who appeared on the original Tell the Truth) had to guess which of three queens made her mint in plastic.
Among the contestants: RuPaul’s Drag Race Season 4 queen Willam Belli!
Was the truth-teller? We’ll give you a hint: The only thing Willam’s uses Tupperware for is to carry her moonshine and false eyelashes.
On an episode in March 2015, “RuPaul’s Drag Race” was the answer to a $200 question in the category “TV Abbreviations.”
Astonishingly, none of the contestants got it right!
Jeopardy has made a few nods to gay culture in recent years, including this shady clue from 2014: “One term for talking trash about someone is ’throwing’ this, like a big elm tree might do.”
Last January, the show asked, “Some opponents of same-sex marriage say, ’hey, gay folks, how about these? Wouldn’t these be good enough?'”
The $800 answer, was, of course, “civil unions.” (And, no, they would not.)
In a legendary episode of 1970's The Newlywed Game, Bob Eubanks asked a new wife “Where is the weirdest place you’ve had the urge to make whoopie?”
Barely missing a beat, this classy lady declares “in the ass!” and heterosexual viewers were introduced to anal sex a generation before Dan Savage.
In 2009, the show actually welcomed its first same-sex couple: Star Trek star George Takei and his husband, Brad Altman, who actually won the game. The following year, Cameron and Garrett Jackson becameThe Newlywed Game’s first non-celebrity gay couple. (They won, too!)
Even Elizabeth Taylor didn’t generate as much of a hubbub on Line as the flamboyant pianist did. After the roar of applause from the audience subsided, a blindfolded Paul Anka said to Liberace, “I gather you are female?”
Last May, the gay YouTuber channeled In Living Color’s “Men on Film” and gave a serious snap after successfully answering a question about Arthur Miller’s The Crucible.
The clip went viral, eventually landing in the hands of House Republicans, who used it to promote their Snapchat coverage of Obama’s State of the Union address.
Virtel was understandably incensed that the Evil Empire had co-opted his moment. “Hey, GOP! Your candidates are horrifying garbage who’ve done nothing for LGBT rights,” he tweeted. The reason people liked my snap was because it defied regressive, homophobic, scary-ass losers like you.”
The Game Show Network airs an all-gay version of I’ve Got A Secret
Frank DeCaro, Suzanne Westenhoefer, Jermaine Taylor and Billy Bean acted as panelists who asked yes/no questions in order to discover a contestant’s secret. In the clip above, the surprise guest was none other than Martha Wash.
On an 1970s episode of Australian Family Feud, host Tony Barber meant to ask a young man if he had a girlfriend, but it came out “boyfriend.” But when he asked the right question—”do you have a girlfriend?”—the contestant replied “No, I’m gay.”
Good for you, fella!
Of course, that moment narrowly beat out this Family Feud moment.
A gay man tries to get a straight guy to climax on Japanese TV
On Orgasm Wars, gay men race against the clock to see who can bring a heterosexual to ecstasy first using only their mouths. (God bless Japanese game shows, #amiright?)
It’s essentially a 40-minute blow job contest with an oddly formal format, including bows, business cards and some courteous “trash talk.”
In the show’s most famous moment, bar owner Takuya, whose “conquests” number in the thousands, is certain he can make hetero porn star Ryou Sawai see stars, even with Sawai actively trying to stay… unenthusiastic.
A Contestant Totally Queens Out On The Price Is Right
Drew Carey looked genuinely uncomfortable when Steven Raff raced the stage and hugged him, sobbing “Oh my God!” for a good three minutes. Of course he didn’t know Steven was going to ratchet the enthusiasm even higher when he got to spin the wheel.
Raff, who moved to L.A. just two days earlier, is now actually a game-show producer—you can follow him on Twitter at @gameshowboy.
The Queer as Folk star appeared on the revived Pyramid, when Donny Osmond was host. It started out as sheer torture—with Paige stuck with a partner who knew NOTHING about Cher’s song catalog.
But he rebounded in the next round with a partner who successfully guessed the name of “the ugly sandals that lesbians wear.” (That’s Birkenstocks, not Crocs, FYI.)
A Scrabble Contestant Flirts Shamelessly With Chuck Woolery
After Woolery apologized for calling contestant Terry Ray’s name at the wrong time, Ray contestant replied, “Sometimes, Chuck, I call your name out, too—so it evens out. But you don’t give me the answer when I call!”
Ray went on to become a film and television producer, who wrote the 2002 short film Gaydar and the here! TV sitcom From Here on OUT.
Long before sassy gay men were a staple of mainstream television, Lynde was queering up the small screen on Bewitched and Hollywood Squares, where he could fling gay innuendo in front of millions of Americans.
Once, when asked “Why do the Hells Angels wear leather?” he replied “Because chiffon wrinkles too easily.”
Lynde’s queer game-show legacy was upheld when Squares was rebooted by Jim J Bullock and Bruce Vilanch.
Charles Nelson Reilly takes over as host of Match Game
Reilly was the show’s resident queen, and his chemistry with BFF Brett Somers was explosive.
One day in 1977, Reilly chided a tired Gene Rayburn for not coming over to him, and Rayburn ended up making Reilly host the rest of the segment. Charles Nelson Reilly chatting with Eva Gabor? Pure camp gold.