Day: 14 September 2016

  • Orlando shooting survivor dies at house party 3 months after the attack

    Orlando shooting survivor dies at house party 3 months after the attack

    A survivor from the Pulse massacre in June has died 3 months after the attack which left 49 people dead.

    CREDIT: Chris Brodman / Facebook

     

    Chris Brodman, was one of the survivors of the Pulse massacre, but three month on from the attack, which left 49 people dead, he was found “unresponsive” at a party in Tampa, Florida.

    The 34-year-old, who was currently on a leave of absence from his job as an insurance broker, was found in the garden of a friend’s house in Tampa. Paramedics were called in the early hours of Sunday morning but were unable to revive him.

    Media reports suggest that there was no evidence of assault or trauma.

    An autopsy has been completed but the cause of death has not been released until toxicology reports are made available.

    A week after the shooting, he wrote,

    “I look back and what stands out the most for me is how much support and love has been shown both here in Orlando and around the world.”

    He is survived by his boyfriend, Cord Skyla.

     

  • WATCH | Man catches a fish with his johnson

    WATCH | Man catches a fish with his johnson

    So there you are doing a bit of skinny dipping when… boom a fish launches itself to your penis.

    CREDIT: Pixabay
    CREDIT: Pixabay FILE PHOTO

     

    Question: what’s the perfect bait for fish – Well most fishermen will tell you that a nice juicy worm or maggot will do the trick, but this man just found out that his penis does the trick nicely.

    The video, which has gone viral (at the moment it stands at 22.5 million views) shows a naked man jumping into water – and quickly jumping back out again with a FISH yes a live fish attached to his privates.

    Hummm… Maggot alert?

  • COLUMN | I’m like Trump… When people probe me… I Lie

    In Gay We Trust: The Vulnerability Of Living Proud

    Lao Tzu once said that “he who doesn’t trust enough will not be trusted”. He focussed on the importance of a mutual trust, an understanding, that for people to be open to you, you must equally be as open to them. But when you spend your life lying, and eventually get burnt, how can you ever open up again?

    Being “in the closet” is how every not-out gay man is referred to. This metaphor that says you’re hiding secretly away, watching through the gap in the doors, waiting to see when it’s safe to come out. The reality is much more different. Not being out is like being trapped in your own mind. I remember it clearly; the fear that you’ll let slip, that you’ll say the wrong thing or something will give you away. I remember going shopping with my family, fearing the self-checkout will scream out “unexpected homo in the bagging area”. It was a lonely time, a time of isolation. I was out to all my friends in school but I lived in fear of word getting back to my parents. I’d place trust in “friends” who eventually would spread word until everyone knew I was gay.

    My parents would ask me leading questions. I think they’d always known I was gay. Instead, I learned to lie. I would tell people I wasn’t gay and, selfishly, would get girlfriends to prove I wasn’t. The problem is, the more often you have to lie, the better you get at it. The lies were helpful to me when I broke up with my first boyfriend. My entire world had torn apart. I would cry every night, I couldn’t concentrate in school. Seeing his face every day as he sat opposite me was like a dagger inside. I had nowhere to place my hurt, my aggression or my confusion. But I couldn’t turn to my parents because then they’d know the truth about it all. They’d know I was gay, they’d know I had a boyfriend and that I hid it from them.

    When I eventually came out to my parents, things weren’t easy at first. Although I believe they knew, they struggled with the revelation and what it meant for my future or at least, the future they’d always imaged for me. Eventually, they got over their hang ups and are now incredibly supportive. They now want me to be open to them, to tell them about my life but I’ve spent so many years hiding it from them, even now I struggle to open up. I’m constantly asked about my love life, who I’m dating or what I get up to but I find myself shrugging it off out of a reflex action. I grew up in a society where being gay was negative and that you should tell no-one. You don’t just get over that. The problem is, when you can’t tell your parents what is happening, you end up raising yourself when it comes to certainly subjects. I taught myself about flirting, falling in love, break-ups, sex and safety. The difficulty being I had to learn from my mistakes. It hardens you, it makes you closed off and invulnerable. So, when you’re 26 and people tell you to open up more, it’s difficult.

    I am honest about superficial things. I talk openly and, somewhat graphically, about sex. I joke on Facebook about my ‘sad’ life. But I’m very rarely vulnerable. At 26, I have had 3 real relationships. My trust and my heart has been broken each time. I’ve had friends betray me, even recently. With every betrayal I face, the higher I build my wall. I’m like an emotional Donald Trump. Instead, when people probe me about how I am, I lie. In March, I discovered I was a type 1 diabetic. I discovered this by being rushed to hospital and told I was two days away from dying. I have spent months learning to deal with injections and appointments, risks and dangers. Yet, if you ask me how I am, I’ll probably tell you I’m fine. I’ll smile, make a joke and let you get on with your day. Because that’s what I do. Because if I tell you the truth, if I make myself vulnerable, it’ll just be a case of ‘when’ and not ‘if’ you betray me.

    The close friends in my life have had to give so much of themselves to me before I could let them in. They’ve had to be patient and kind and so vulnerable themselves. I know everything about my close friends and sometimes it can seem like I’m trying to get ammunition on them. When I feel ready to get close to someone, I ask to hear their secrets. I probe them about their lives. Because the truth they speak and the vulnerability they show is the only thing that can thaw the ice inside me. For months, they are very patient and slowly, I can allow myself to be vulnerable.

    I want to think it’s not too late for me to learn to trust more but I fear ever being considered naive or to place my trust in people who don’t deserve it. My first boyfriend got himself a girlfriend. My second boyfriend told everyone I had made the whole relationship up and the third one ran away with the circus (a whole other article, I assure you). Each of these moments, so pivotal in my life, added another brick to the wall. I just hope that some day, as the scars of my past fade, I’ll learn to trust again.

    I am no longer the closeted gay boy fearing being outed. I am a grown man who needs to learn to open up. I believe that pride comes before the thaw, that to be vulnerable and honest, to be truly myself is not proof of my naivety nor any emotional stupidity but is simply what it is to be human.

    Opinions expressed in this article may not reflect those of THEGAYUK, its management or editorial teams. If you’d like to comment or write a comment, opinion or blog piece, please click here.

  • Do you really know how to measure your penis?

    Do you really know how to measure your penis?

    So apparently the average size of a man’s erect penis is 5.1 inches – and you might be surprised to know that erection size differs quite wildly across the globe – however is everybody measuring from the same place?

    CREDIT: Davey Wavey / YouTube

    So are you a tip to pubic bone or tip to ball bag man?  Each of those measurements will give off wildly different lengths… so topless internet sensation Davey Wavey has enlisted the help of adult star Jake Bass to help standardise the way in which men measure their junk…

    Davey suggested the following algorithm – for length you measure from the top of the pubic area to your knee – giving you a standard length of over 18 inches and for girth you times the actual length by 2.5.

    According to a survey released in 2015 only three per cent of men worldwide have a penis that’s larger than 8 inches.

    The correct way to measure is from the tip to bottom of pubic bone.

    Do you lie when your disclosing your penis length?

  • Gay Guys: Ten things not to say during sex

    Gay Guys: Ten things not to say during sex

    Talking during sex doesn’t often happen – but there are definitely some stay-clear subjects during the making of whoopee.

    Here are our Top 10 things not to say during sex.

    1) Are you done yet?

    It’s not a race – and there isn’t a prize for being first! Take your time and if you finish before your partner, don’t get all huffy. Nothing is more of a turn off that a huffy bed partner.

    2) I’m gonna fart…

    We know it’s just a natural part of life, trumps are not a good idea mid session. So if you know you’re getting lucky this evening stay clear from foods that’ll make you windy.

     

    3) My ex used to do this…

    We don’t care if your ex had a 9 incher that, stayed solid for hours on end and came on command. We are different and special in our own way. Love the way I make love or move on.

     

    4) Do you mind if my ____________ watches

    Cat, brother, neighbour, person on the other end of Face Time. It’s just weird and odd.

    5) I’m just going to tweet this

    CREDIT: monkeybusinessimages-bigstock
    CREDIT: monkeybusinessimages-bigstock

    Something’s should not be social network gossip. Unless of course you’re a Kardashian, in which case let the world know your business – even if they don’t care.

     

    6) What’s your name again?

    Try to keep up-to-date with the name of your current shag. If in doubt don’t check his underwear – his name is unlikely to be Calvin Klein.

    7) Start crying for no reason.

    This is self-explanatory and may look a little unhinged if you start crying mid hump.

    8) Wow that tastes terrible

    If you’re swallowing and his man mayo tastes fowl take a large slip of water and smile sweetly. If you’re going to see him again suggest a fruit filled diet to help make him taste sweet and good. Check out our tips on how to taste better.

    9) Ask if you look fat

    A total turn off and likely not to get a good reaction, often because there’s no right answer for the person who’s just asked the F-bomb. If you’re feeling self-conscience then turn the light down low.

    10) Take a phone call

    Now is not the time to answer that phone call, your stocks and shares will be there once you’re done!

  • THEATRE REVIEW | Party

    THEATRE REVIEW | Party

    ★★★★ | Party at Above The Stag

    CREDIT: PBGStudios
    CREDIT: PBGStudios

    There’s a party going on in Vauxhall and you’re all invited!

    Party, a play at the Above the Stag theatre, is about seven gay men who get together one evening to hang out, chat, be together, and basically talk about sex, as gay men do! And what a party it is! It involves alcohol, lots of alcohol, where seven handsome and hunky guys pretty much up for anything, play a game called Fact or Fantasy, a bit like Truth or Date, which involves, of course, male nudity – all taking place in a cozy living room.

    Party, written by David Dillon in 1992, originally ran in Chicago before moving to New York, and has even been produced internationally.

    For this version, directed by Gene David Kirk, the party, and action, takes place in a British man’s living room, with references to British culture, news, and the requisite British accents! It’s the home of Kevin (Nic Kyle), who is letting out his extra bedroom to Peter (Stefan Gough). In attendance at the party are dancer Brian (Jamie Firth), teacher Ray (Ben Kavanagh), Philip (Lucas Livesy), James (Sam Goodchild) and young and innocent Andy (Tom Leach). They’re all friends, good friends, but when they decide to play Fact or Fiction, a game where one man is to tell the truth, lie, or act out someone else’s fantasy, secrets are revealed, as well as skin, lots of skin, in a game where being shy is not an option! And it’s Ray who steals the show with best lines – he actually berates Andy for not knowing who ‘Barbra’ is or how to tell the difference between a cast album and a soundtrack. Peter reveals, during the game, that he’s got a secret crush with one of the men, while Brian is sexy and he knows it, and is the first to strip off. It’s a party in this intimate theatre where the audience feels like they’re right in the middle.

    Party is 100 minutes of very funny jokes, lively atmosphere, and laugh out loud comedy. It’s play which celebrates gay men who enjoy the company of other gay men, sexual attraction or not. And all the actors deserve praise, and courage, for baring it all – it’s exciting and done in good taste. This is one party you definitely don’t want to miss.

    Party plays at Above The Stag until October 30th