Best gay videos 90s movie#
So I suppose as a little gay, in the closet kid, I had a choice to make listen to the Hollywood movie making machine, who was telling me I was invisible or a pariah, or listen to the music world, which told me to embrace who I was and show off and be proud. That little faggot got his own jet airplane
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See the little faggot with the earring and the makeup?
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Dire Straits had a huge hit song with Money For Nothing with lyrics that epitomized what regular straight-middle-America thought of all these homos selling millions of albums: They couldn’t say they were gay, and in truth most of them weren’t, but the implication was there and it was enough. Half the men in the music industry (be it pop or metal) wore make-up and had more hair product than your mom. People like David Bowie were telling the world they were bisexual, even if they were really straight and were married to supermodels. Annie Lennox of the Eurythmics was all dyked out in a buzz cut and wearing a man’s business suit singing Sweet Dreams Are Made Of This. Boy George, long before he was imprisoning male escorts in his private dungeon, was a drag queen pop star who sold millions of records. For those of you reading this who are too young to remember, the M in MTV once stood for Music, and the whole appeal of MTV was that they played music videos 24/7 and not just reality shows about vapid rich kids. On the flip side of movies and television, though, there was the music world of the 80’s, as defined by MTV. It was like a warning to all gay kids: better go kill yourself now, or learn to hide your sexuality as well as you can, because life from high school on is going to be a living hell for you. But my eleven year old brain absorbed those particular moments like a sponge, and it taught me that in this world, It’s okay if I end up being some kind of monster, but I had better not be a fag, because that would simply be unacceptable. I remember almost nothing else about these movies, and have not seen them in decades. We’re homos! We’re rump-rangers!” As if being gay was something you could become if just enough other people called you it. After the little debacle, one of Jim Carrey’s friends says “ Oh my god… That means we liked it! That’s it. In once scene, Jim Carrey’s buddies are trying to check his inner thigh for bite marks in the high school shower, and when it appears to the other showering jocks that some gay shit is going down, someone yells “Fags in the showers! Fag Alert! Fags in the showers!” and everyone runs out in a panic like someone yelled fire in a crowded theater. Then there was Once Bitten, a movie about a teenage virgin played by Jim Carrey, who gets seduced by a female vampire (Lauren Hutton) who needs virgin’s blood to stay young. Fox’s character responds “ No, no…I’m not a fag….I’m a werewolf” Of course his friend accepts him, after all…he can’t help being a werewolf, but of course he has total say over whether he’s a fag or not. His friend turns to him and says “You aren’t gonna tell me you’re a fag are you? Because I don’t think I can handle that” to which Michael J. Fox is trying desperately to find a way to tell his best friend that he is really a werewolf. Fox, and Once Bitten, starring a then unknown Jim Carrey. I distinctly remember two movies that came out the summer that I turned eleven: Teen Wolf starring Michael J.
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In the cinematic world, the teen movie comedies were the worst offenders technically I was no where near old enough to see them, but having HBO (and parents who worked late) took care of that particular problem.
Best gay videos 90s tv#
If TV shows mentioned gay people at all, it was almost always as the butt of a joke on a stupid sitcom. On the negative side, there was movies and TV. And needless to say, in the 80’s it was a serious assortment of mixed messages. Growing up in the 80’s and 90’s, everything I knew about being gay came from popular culture. I’m more than sure that you’ll find a connection. Don’t think so? We all like to think we are above it, but just look at your old high school yearbooks and see your horrible hair style and fashion choices, and then think about who was wearing the exact same thing on TV at the time. It’s logical that they should, then, inform everything we are supposed to know about ourselves and everything about how we are supposed to function with our peers. In our culture, movies, television and music (and for some of us, comic books and video games as well) inform almost everything we know about our world.
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Gayscape #10: Growing Up Gay in the 80’s and 90’s | Geekscape by Eric Diaz Tuesday 20th January 2009 Gayscape #10: Growing Up Gay in the 80’s and 90’s