A small number of people stggle wh persistent fears that they're gay. But they're not closeted — stead, they have a form of OCD.
Contents:
- THE OBSSIVE PHOTOGRAPHER BEHD AMERI’S FIRST GAY MAGAZE
- OBSSNS GAY MAGAZE COVER GUY JEFF HAMMOND / HOLIDAY HUNK HAVOR DECEMBER 1991
- GAY OBSESSIONS LES PUBLICATIONS NOUVELLES (S.A)
THE OBSSIVE PHOTOGRAPHER BEHD AMERI’S FIRST GAY MAGAZE
Daniel Wenger on Bob Mizer, who found the first gay magaze the U.S., Physique Pictorial, and specialized photographg buff young men. * obsessions gay magazine *
His notn of gayns was rmed by a “Co of Behavr” that he rerd his high-school diary: “More mascule at all tim.
OBSSNS GAY MAGAZE COVER GUY JEFF HAMMOND / HOLIDAY HUNK HAVOR DECEMBER 1991
Obssns Gay Magaze Cover Guy Jeff Hammond / Holiday Hunk Havor December 1991 on *FREE* shippg on qualifyg offers. Obssns Gay Magaze Cover Guy Jeff Hammond / Holiday Hunk Havor December 1991 * obsessions gay magazine *
” Among his mols were the gay and the straight, profsnal bodybuilrs and profsnal beach bums, llege stunts and returne om the European ont. But there’s jt as much reason to nsir Mizer the gay Hugh Hefner—a tirels llector of physil specimens. In 1951, he found what is generally nsired the untry’s origal gay magaze, Physique Pictorial, and would ntue publishg for nearly four s**.
** In the magaze’s early years he clud no explic referenc to gay inty, though he thored d edorials agast the hypocrisi of the straight world. Although gays had long been si-eyeg the emblems of straight masculy, Mizer fed them wh new meang: the very men who had looked stoic and impassive the straight magaz seemed, unr Mizer’s directn, to be havg fun. When David Hurl, the gay pornographer and Mizer protégé, was a teen-ager Ccnati, he glimpsed Physique Pictorial_ _at a newsstand and felt, as he put to Taschen, “stantly clud, as if the men were beckong him to look.
” It appealed, Coat wrote, “to the sick half-world of homosexuals, sadists, and masochists.
GAY OBSESSIONS LES PUBLICATIONS NOUVELLES (S.A)
“Homosexualy was the standard way of life among the gged Greek warrrs, ” he wrote 1960. ” Dpe such objectns, he reportedly ma a fortune the eighti by distributg so-lled “ssn vios, ” rerdgs of photo shoots that then veered to more recreatnal Mizer’s Greek-warrr fixatn, ’s temptg to thk of him as one early source of the “body fascism” for which ntemporary gay-male culture is often maligned. Mizer’s achievement, as a photographer and a publisher, was to take the standards of male bety as they existed and prove that gay men uld satisfy them, and be satisfied by them, too.