Are You Finally Ready To Embrace The Idea Of ‘Inclusive Masculinity?’

Are You Finally Ready To Embrace The Idea Of ‘Inclusive Masculinity?’

modern-masculinity

Attention, men of Earth: Good news!

Notions of “masculinity” are changing for the better in the 21st century. (In the Western world, anyway.)

Related: Watch Straight Men React To Being Touched Seductively By Gay Men On An Escalator

According to The Good Men Project, researchers have been poking around and examining men’s social mores in various countries, and what they’ve found is that men are “becoming softer and more inclusive” in their gender roles.

The findings have led Professor Eric Anderson to coin a phase: “Inclusive Masculinity,” which include touchstones like an affinity for male-on-male affection (“hugging,” “cuddling,” kissing); a penchant for “metrosexuality” (the embrace of a softer, more fluid interpretation of manhood, a la David Beckham); social fluidity (being able to hobnob, carry on and kiki in ways previous generations would have deemed “feminine” or “gay”); and “multiplicity” (an acceptance of the fact that there are many different types of masculinity and they should all be accepted and appreciated.)

Related: Are Gay Guys More Masculine Than Straight Guys?

Anderson suggests this new model is slowly but surely replacing “orthodox masculinity,” a demonstrably darker and more rigid set of traits that include homophobia (regularly excluding “other” types of men); “compulsory heterosexuality,” where men anxiously define themselves based on what they aren’t (i.e., gay); sexism (women are objects and sexual conquests, nothing more); and stoicism (enduring unbearable physical and emotional pain without complaining.)

What does “orthodox masculinity” boil down to exactly? A term that, at the very least, makes for a superior band name: HOMOHYSTERIA.

Anderson defines homohysteria as “the fear of being homosexualized”.

It’s a feeling of terror (for a man) that if you do anything at all which isn’t “orthodox masculine”, other people will think you are homosexual.

Homohysteria takes over a society when three things are in place:

1. Widespread awareness that male homosexuality commonly exists.
2. High levels of homophobia.
3. A belief that anything not “masculine” must be a sign of homosexuality.
Anderson argues that Western homohysteria peaked in the 1980s, following the HIV/AIDS epidemic amongst gay men.

Related: Straight Men Are A Lot More Bisexual Than You Might Think

Anderson claims the costs of traditional notions of “orthodox masculinity” (i.e. guys who play competitive sports, call each other “dude,” drink lots of beer and wouldn’t be caught dead wearing the color pink) are dire: Men are expected to sacrifice their bodies “for the good of the family.” They’re encouraged to put emotional distance between themselves and everyone else, leading to intense isolation and loneliness. The violent instincts they’ve honed playing sports leads them to apply that violence to everyday life — both against themselves and others. They become locked in a sort of “gender straightjacket” that forces them to conceal their feelings, deny ever needing help, and be relegated to highly limited options in work, play, and life.

Well, that’s no good — so how do we make sure inclusive masculinities continue to spread?

Easy. Anderson says all is takes is these four simple steps:

  1. Peer Influence. As younger men demonstrate a more open idea of masculinity, they begin to influence and inspire their friends.
  2. Institutional Changes. New laws and guidelines that protect against discrimination wield huge influence, indicating that it’s okay to express yourself outside the confines of more traditional models of masculinity.
  3. Media Portrayals. The more television programs and films that feature men in various roles — and not just the role of the traditional manly man — will subsequently influence viewers for the better.
  4. Easy Access To Online Porn. Yes. Yes. One of the most surprising findings of the study is that the incredible surplus of of free gay porn online has been “instrumental in exposing the forbidden fruit of homosexual sex, comodifying it and normalizing it in the process.” This explains why more straight-identifying men are happily experimenting with gay sex than ever before.

Related: Welcome To A World Where Straight People Talk Like Gay Men

In conclusion: Younger generations of men are altogether “nicer” and more comfortable in their skin, feeling far less confined to stifling gender roles and showing less willingness to engage in homophobic taunts. If Anderson’s findings are accurate, it means that quality of life is continuing to improve for young men, which ultimately will lead to a more accepting and civil society.

What do you think? Do you buy this idea of a burgeoning “inclusive masculinity,” or do you think it’s a considerable reach — psychobabble poppycock that should be relegated to a Gender Theory course at Bard College?

 

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Davey Wavey and 13 Queer YouTubers Share Why They Love Being Gay – WATCH

Davey Wavey and 13 Queer YouTubers Share Why They Love Being Gay – WATCH

being gay

Just in time for Pride, Davey Wavey has shared a new video in which he talks to other YouTubers about why they love being gay. That is, beyond the cursory, “A bunch of d*cks, a lot of d*cks, and all the d*cks.”

“Being gay is being us, being true to who we are,” said OliviaHas2MomsLateef Thynative added, “I love the fact that we have our own culture.” These YouTube stars cover a lot of territory, from having our own language, to being celebrated for who you are, to having the freedom to express yourself and dress however you want, and much more. RyannMinajj said of the impact being gay has had on him,”Not being accepted by everyone has made me accepting of everyone.”

Watch the video, below.

What do you love about being gay? Sound off in the comments.

[image via Twitter]

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Captain America and the Winter Soldier Made Out in Front of Chris Evans and Sebastian Stan – LOOK

Captain America and the Winter Soldier Made Out in Front of Chris Evans and Sebastian Stan – LOOK

kiss

If you have been fantasizing about what would happen if Marvel decided to #GiveCaptainAmericaABoyfriend, then you will likely appreciate the entrepreneurial spirt of two cosplay fans who recently posed for a picture with Chris Evans and Sebastian Stan.

Evans and Stan of course play Captain America and Bucky/The Winter Soldier in the Marvel superhero movies. And many fans have pointed out that the relationship these two share is stronger than any heterosexual relationship in the Cap’s movies.

To give the world a glimpse of what Captain America/Winter Solider slash fiction would look like come to life, two as yet unidentified fans posed for a picture with the actors at Wizard World Philadelphia this past weekend and made out right in front of them.

Via Design&Trend, 

Stan and Evans were greeted by two fans dressed as Bucky and Steve. The duo quickly engaged in a steamy lip-lock. While the move certainly stunned Stan, it looks like Evans approves of this unlikely pairing since he’s sporting a mischievous grin in the photo. Social media users have applauded the gesture.

Nothing to add here. (Thx @MajorSpoilers) pic.twitter.com/bttGIOM8b0

— Scott Johnson (@scottjohnson) June 4, 2016

Another fan tweeted the above image writing, “F****CK.”

Evans’ hand on cosplay Bucky’s arm as the pair kiss combined with that ‘mischievous grin’ is perfection.

Now, if we could just get Marvel on board with the big screen adaptation…

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Bob The Drag Queen Wants To Ensure You are ‘PrEP’-ared: WATCH

Bob The Drag Queen Wants To Ensure You are ‘PrEP’-ared: WATCH

Bob the Drag Queen PrEP
Fresh off a sickening season of RuPaul’s Drag Race, America’s reigning drag superstar Bob the Drag Queen is already hard at work. And she’s now serving fierce PSA realness.

greaterthan_logoIn “Oh Hey, Prepare Yourself!”, a video released Sunday, Bob the Drag Queen (not to be confused with Bob the Chiropractor) urges people to take the anti-HIV medication PrEP, short for pre-exposure prophylaxis. “Oh hey! Prepare yourself! There is a once-a-day pill called PrEP,” she starts. “And it’s been shown to lower the risk of getting HIV by more than 90 percent” she says, even making “pre-exposure prophylaxis” sound sexy.

The minute-long video has a ’90s C+C Music Factory feel and shows Bob talking to the camera and dancing around seven other dancers, all dressed in white. There is even a little voguing thrown in for good measure.

The video is part of #HIVBEATS a campaign from Greater than AIDS, a non-profit launched in 2009 by the Kaiser Family Foundation with the Black AIDS Institute, whose goal is to bring information and inspire action to combat the HIV/AIDS epidemic.

bobvideo
The “Purse First” legend reminds us how easy it is to be on PrEP: “Any doctor can prescribe PrEP, but not all doctors know about PrEP, darling. You can find a PrEP-friendly doctor in your neighborhood by going to getprep.greaterthan.org.”

“Are you PREPared?”, Bob asked on Twitter.

t.co/qwF8MMpLWx
Are you PREPared? Collab with @endhiv & @GreaterThanAIDS #endhiv #hivbeats #greaterthanaids

— Bob The Drag Queen (@thatonequeen) June 5, 2016

Five other artists also released a video for #HIVBEATS this week: Gay for Play’s Todrick Hall, transgender artist Zachary Drucker and YouTube stars Catrific, Amber’s Closet, and Davey Wavey.

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HRC Partners with American Apparel to “Make America Gay Again” and “Make America LGBTQ Again”

HRC Partners with American Apparel to “Make America Gay Again” and “Make America LGBTQ Again”

Today, HRC, The Ally Coalition (TAC) and American Apparel have launched the “Make America Gay Again” and “Make America LGBTQ Again” campaign to raise awareness for LGBTQ equality. The campaign features a limited-edition tank top and t-shirt, which includes the phrases “Make America Gay Again” and “Make America LGBTQ Again”. Thirty percent of American Apparel’s sales and 100 percent of sales from hrc.org/shop will support the effort to pass the Equality Act and the fight to end LGBTQ discrimination.  The Equality Act is a comprehensive federal non-discrimination bill that was introduced in Congress last year.

While the Equality Act, which provides basic protections against discrimination based on sexual orientation or gender identity in employment, access to public spaces, housing, education, jury service, credit and federal funding, awaits action on Capitol Hill, the patchwork of current LGBTQ legal protections leaves millions subject to uncertainty and potential discrimination. Just this year, over 200 anti-LGBT bills have been introduced in 31 states.

Notable musician Jack Antonoff co-founded The Ally Coalition with his sister, fashion designer Rachel Antonoff.

“Rachel and I founded The Ally Coalition to inspire fans to take action for LGBTQ Equality,” Antonoff said in a statement. “During a year where LGBTQ rights are being threatened all over the states, everyone is responsible for coming together and challenging these injustices. I’m proud that The Ally Coalition is joining with American Apparel and The Human Rights Campaign to #MakeAmericaGayAgain.”

Inspired by Donald Trump’s own “Make America Great Again” hat, HRC continues to push for full LGBTQ equality and inclusion, noting that our country should be a place of equality, liberty and justice for all.

“Today, LGBTQ people remain at risk of being fired, evicted or denied services in a majority of states simply because of who they are. That’s why we are fighting to pass the Equality Act — legislation that will protect LGBTQ people under our federal civil rights laws,” said HRC Senior Vice President of Communications and Marketing Olivia Alair Dalton. “We are excited about our partnership with the Ally Coalition and American Apparel, which empowers people to subvert the politics of hate and division by creatively speaking out for the equal rights and dignity of LGBTQ people.”

American Apparel received a 100 on HRC Foundation’s 2016 Corporate Equality Index, which is the national benchmarking tool on corporate policies and practices pertinent to LGBTQ employees.

#MakeAmericaGayAgain/#MakeAmericaLGBTQAgain campaign will share personal stories and videos to educate audiences about LGBTQ equality and work to increase acceptance. The videos will be featured on social media and on American Apparel’s website.

The campaign will also include in-store events in Los Angeles and New York City, featuring top talent from the LGBTQ and allied community. Event dates are as follows:

  • June 8: Hollywood at Junior High Gallery presented by Funny Or Die
  • June 11: West Hollywood with Carmen Carrera
  • June 26: New York City with Jack and Rachel Antonoff

Individuals are encouraged to join the #MakeAmericaGayAgain/#MakeAmericaLGBTQAgain movement in a variety of way.

  • Through purchasing product – 30 percent of sales from the campaign will support the Equality Act and the fight to end LGBTQ discrimination
  • Participating via social media by using the hashtags #MakeAmericaGayAgain and #MakeAmericaLGBTQAgain.
  • Listening to the Make America Gay Again mixtape, curated by Jack Antonoff and inspired by songs that stand for equality – available exclusively on Pandora.com beginning on June 14.

www.hrc.org/blog/hrc-partners-with-american-apparel-to-make-america-gay-again?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss-feed

AT&T Launches Fourth Annual Campaign to Celebrate LGBTQ Pride

AT&T Launches Fourth Annual Campaign to Celebrate LGBTQ Pride

This month, AT&T kicked off their fourth annual AT&T Live Proud campaign to celebrate LGBTQ Pride Month.

“June is LGBT Pride Month and AT&T is joining the movement with our 4th annual AT&T Live Proud campaign,” AT&T posted on their website. “FromJune 1 to Aug. 14, friends, allies and members of the LGBT community are invited to participate in Live Proud as we celebrate awareness, empowerment, and most importantly pride for the LGBT community.”

There are several ways to join the campaign, including going to att.com/liveproud and completing the Live Proud personality quiz, visiting the AT&T Live Proud activation tents and sharing their unique photos on social media using #ATTLiveProud.

Each year pride events are held nationwide in cities large and small, and for some Americans, it is the only occasion where they can be out and proud in their community. Pride festivals and parades are a celebration of the progress the LGBTQ community has made, but also a time to recognize the distance we still have to go to achieve full equality.

AT&T has been a longtime advocate for the LGBTQ community. In 2014, AT&T was the first major U.S. corporation to make a public statement condemning the anti-LGBTQ Russian law outlawing “homosexual propaganda.” Earlier this year, AT&T spoke out against Mississippi’s H.B.1523, an outrageous law that allows individuals, religious organizations and private associations to use religion to discriminate against LGBTQ Mississippians in some of the most important aspects of their lives, including at work, at schools, in their family life and more. AT&T also presented at HRC Foundation’s Time to THRIVE 2016 conference, speaking about the importance of LGBTQ visibility and sharing why AT&T is committed to LGBTQ youth.

AT&T received a 100 on HRC Foundation’s 2016 Corporate Equality Index, a national benchmarking tool on corporate policies and practices pertinent to LGBTQ employees. HRC also rated AT&T as one of the “Best Places to Work for LGBTQ Equality.” 

www.hrc.org/blog/att-launches-fourth-annual-campaign-to-celebrate-lgbtq-pride?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss-feed

While Camping, This Guy Hooked Up With His Friend. Now? Radio Silence.

While Camping, This Guy Hooked Up With His Friend. Now? Radio Silence.

Lumbersexual-Pictures

It happens all the time — well, in porn films. And on Reddit.

User HKML000 shares a tale of considerable woe; a tawdry anecdote that involves gay sex, a camping trip, and then — because life is hard — a gale of static followed by radio silence.

Related: Straight Guy Wishes He Were Gay So People Wouldn’t Be Put Off By His Queerness

The story so far: this self-professed “straight-acting” gay guy is part of a Boy Scouts group that regularly takes weekend camping trips, and he and his pal Cory took several of those jaunts together.

Think long poles, tent flaps, and vain remorse once the campfire sputtered out and died…

Take it away, HKML000:

Cory and I were sharing a tent. Obviously, as guys do, we ended up talking about girls. He was bragging about everything he had already done because he was a year older and I (obviously lying) told him I had done some things too…

Me being a gay guy, [I] got a boner. And then the weirdest but most exhilarating thing happened to me: I’ll save you the gory details, but we did some oral stuff and used our hands a lot. This set-up may seem unnecessary but I’m stating it to show you that he came on to me. I’m sure I gave him no reason to believe that he owed it to me or that I was coming on to him. Anyway we did this for the first night and then one final time in the evening when we were “taking a nap”.

Now this is where I get confused. After we did it for the second time, he just completely changes and shuts down. He acts as if I don’t exist but when he had to take notice of me he treated me like a child…. When It came time to go home we had to car share but the whole journey back he didn’t speak to me, not once, whereas when we were first driving down he had been talking to me the whole time.

Bummer. And it gets bummier.

In the end, this young man stopped going to his Scouts group:

I had had enough of being spoken about behind my back (And by the end I was openly being called “Gay” and “Gayboy” in a derogatory way) and I was afraid that I was slowly falling in love with someone who hated me for something I had thought we both enjoyed.

Now, an entire year has gone by, and judging by the reams of purple prose he’s written on Reddit, he’s clearly not over the emotionally unavailable candy-sadist he once called a friend:

In a way the entire experience has helped me metamorphosize into who I was really supposed to be, but even a year later I still have the doubt in my mind. Why does he now dislike me? We have messaged each other since but when we have they have been fleeting conversations with him refusing to talk about it and pretending as if it never happened. He pretends as if we are fine but I can tell he is still wary of me.

Related: Given The Chance, Would You Hook Up With A Married Heterosexual Guy?

He’s asking readers what exactly he did in order to earn his ex-friend’s wrath –“Did I do something wrong?” — and he’s wondering if he can do anything to patch things up and restore the relationship.

Readers have been to offer their two cents.

“The problem might be that he feels guilty about what happened,” responds one Misstress of the Obvious, “and rather than addressing the source of that guilt, he has decided to repress it and cut you out because you’re a reminder of what happened.”

“He hates himself,” says another. “This has nothing to do with you and is his lesson to figure out.”

Related: Straight Man Deeply Concerned Over Number Of Gay Men Hitting On Him, Fears He “Repels” Women

A third reader posits a different theory: “Experimenting with you has ultimately led him to the conclusion that he’s straight and now he doesn’t know what to think and how to feel about the things you did…”

So — short of waiting another year and then building a fire out of his ex-friend’s property like a good Boy Scout — what should he do?

Sound off in the comments below.

burning-house-o

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