So, what's a “bro-job”? That’s when a straight guy giv another straight guy a blow job, not a meangful sexual way but a iendly, "here-you-go-du" way. (Huh?) Dr. Jane Ward wr about this phenomenon her book, Not Gay: Sex Between Straight Whe Men, published by NYU Prs last month. (Why gotta
Contents:
- #NOTGAY: SO, IS GIVG A “BRO-JOB” REALLY A THG WH STRAIGHT GUYS?
- THREAD: IS GAY TO GIVE UR IEND A BROJOB?
- IS MY BROTHER GAY? QUIZ (BOYS ONLY)
#NOTGAY: SO, IS GIVG A “BRO-JOB” REALLY A THG WH STRAIGHT GUYS?
* don't gay bro *
You are here: Home / Misc / #NotGay: So, Is Givg a “Bro-Job” Really a Thg wh Straight Guys? Jane Ward wr about this phenomenon her book, Not Gay: Sex Between Straight Whe Men, published by NYU Prs last month.
But n straight whe guys experience the same easy sexual fluidy, or would kissg a guy jt mean that they are really gay? Ward exam the fascatg world of “straight guy-on-guy actn, ” which she believ isn’t nearly as gay as people might thk. In other words: They do to prove they’re NOT gay.
“By unrstandg their same-sex sexual practice as meangls, accintal, or even necsary, straight whe men n perform homosexual ntact heterosexual ways. The sex acts are not slippag to a queer way of beg or exprsns of a sired but unarticulated gay inty. Other studi have shown that gay bashg is often done by men who are reprsg homosexual sir.
THREAD: IS GAY TO GIVE UR IEND A BROJOB?
Could gay guys be the ultimate wg men for their straight, male iends? * don't gay bro *
Do Ward’s theory make sense, or do a guy givg another guy a “bro-job” make him gay, or at least bi? For a long time, iendships between gay men and straight men – what some now ll “bromosexual” iendships – were unmon.
Homophobia was likely one reason; another was that straight men probably assumed they didn’t have much mon wh gay men. Specifilly, we’re terted lookg at the reasons gay men and straight men bee iends (or rema iends after the gay iend out).
IS MY BROTHER GAY? QUIZ (BOYS ONLY)
We currently have a survey vtigatn unrway that explor some of the posive out of “bromosexual” iendships, cludg our theory that gay men and straight men n be optimal wg men for one another.
Friendships between gay and straight men have always existed.
Many straight men hated to beiend gay men, fearg harassment, rejectn om their straight iends or beg lled gay. The growg acceptance of homosexualy, however, has allayed some of the fears. Gay men – particularly those nservative and ral environments – rema wary about tryg to beiend straight men, fearg prejudice-fueled rejectn.