Wednesday, January 28, 2009

If I were to remake Brokeback Mountain...




Admit it. Wouldn't it had been way more shocking if they had cast two masculine straight Black bears in the cowboy love drama? Truth be told, I don't believe Ice Cube would have played the part. Although Anthony probably would be open to it, let's give him some time.

Both actors are doing well for themselves in the Hollywood game, I wish them both the best.

I would just die if Ice Cube muttered the words "I can't quit you." Haha, it would make a lot of men happy, especially the more closeted aficionados of Black bears out there. I know you're out there. haha




Lebron James on cover of GQ magazine


It looks like they (let's keep it ambiguous) have finally got it right this time. Months after the train wreck that was the Vogue cover, the folks at GQ decided to capture basketball superstar, Lebron James in a way more flattering light. It is nice to see that Black men can actually be photographed without having to emulate some tired stereotype or snarling in a monstrous fashion. Kudos to GQ for keeping it classy. Lebron does look rather dashing. Mmm Hmm.

For comparative purposes, the infamous Vogue Cover below...

I got the Scoop (Fatman Scoop)




This guy seriously tries too hard sometimes. I guess it's just his persona, loud and crass. Nevertheless, he is a sexy guy and not afraid to take his shirt off. I find it assuming that the shirtless swagger that dominates live hip-hop performances even extends to larger framed gents.



He had a dating/sex advice show on Mtv for a quick second, and I mean quick. I knew watching the first episode that it wouldn't catch on. The exchanges between his wife and himself were horribly scripted, and Fatman looked like he could have used at least one more rehearsal. Anyway, to keep things on a positive note, Fatman is very successful on the radio. He is also the go-to guy for a random shouting east coast voice in any hip-hop track.

Thursday, January 15, 2009

Bailiff Bear

Judge Jeanine Pirro has a hidden gem on her TV court show: a sexy thickems of a bear. I petition to the court that this man has MORE CLOSEUPS! I couldn't find any good pics nor any info. But I just wanted to share.






Friday, January 9, 2009

Some Random sexy...


Brian Pumper

Just add me to the growing list of men who drool over this straight porn star... I gotta say, you gotta to be pretty damn hot for me to watch a straight porno just to see your parts gyrating. I believe that I am a sucker for short, stocky, muscular dudes (don't get me wrong I love my big boys just the same).

He is handsome, hung (ahem), and likes receive analingus. What more could you ask for? Maybe some homosexual orientation? If only...

Wednesday, January 7, 2009

Study Suggests that Blacks did NOT support Prop 8 as strongly as previously thought...

When the whole prop 8 media BS came out, I was so tempted to write an angry blog criticizing the media's depiction of African American voters. Also, I was pissed off by how a few upset White gays treated some of their fellow gays who happened to be African-Americans (Some Black Gay and Lesbians reported being called the N-word by their White gay brothers and sisters). I was also baffled by the whole notion that "blacks were supposed to know better than this, because they know discrimination." Anybody who has taken a Race and Ethnicity course would know better. Now it seems that I do not need to say a single word about the situation. A new study suggests that the media greatly exaggerated the Black and Latino support for Proposition 8, basically when political ideology and religious affiliation were controlled, there was no real difference between Blacks and other groups concerning support for Proposition 8. Check out the article below...

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January 6, 2009
New study challenges black support for Proposition 8

A new study of voting patterns on Proposition 8, the November ballot measure that would outlaw same-sex marriage, concludes that African American support, reported by exit pollsters at 70 percent, was at least 10 percentage points lower.

The high reported support levels among black and Latino voters for the measure, which won voter approval but is now being challenged in court, led to post-election controversy and conclusions that non-white voters provided the margin of victory for Proposition 8.

The new study, commissioned by the San Francisco-based Evelyn and Walter Hass Jr. Fund and released by a consortium of gay rights groups, was conducted by two New York college researchers. It concludes that party affiliation, political ideology, frequency of attending church and age "were the driving forces behind the measure's passage" rather than ethnicity.

When voting results were adjusted for those factors, the researchers concluded, "support for Proposition 8 among African Americanss and Latinos was not significantly different than other groups." They put overall black support for Proposition 8 at "no more than 59 percent" rather than the 70 percent found in exist polls of voters.


"These figures point the way to winning marriage equality for same-sex couples sooner rather than later," said Jaime Grant, Ph.D., director of the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force Policy Institute. "Convincing the Republican Party that continued gay bashing will cripple its future is one; another is accelerating the already strong surge in support among young voters."

Source: http://www.sacbee.com/static/weblogs/capitolalertlatest/018318.html