Speaking of buddy-bonding tv, Route 66 (1960-64) was before my time and never rerun, so I've only seen a few clips on youtube, but older Boomers tell me that it was one of the gay-friendly lights of the early 1960s.
It starred clean-cut Yale undergrad Tod (29 year old Martin Milner, who had just appeared in a loincloth in the risque Private Lives of Adam and Eve). Tod -- not Todd -- and his boyfriend traveled around in a blue 1960 Chevy Corvette "in search of America," like Jack Kerouac before them.
His first boyfriend, Buz (not Buzz -- evidently the producers didn't care for last letters), was a streetwise former juvenile delinquent from Hell's Kitchen, played by 32-year old George Maharis. A 1973 Playgirl centerfold, Maharis was gay in real life.
After 2 1/2 seasons, Maharis dropped out, citing the grueling schedule and a bout of hepatitis, Tod quickly found a new boyfriend, haunted ex-GI Lincoln (30-year old Glenn Corbett, recently of It's a Man's World). A former Physique Pictorial model, Corbett was bisexual in real life.
They didn't stick to Route 66; they crossed the U.S. and Canada several times, surfing in Southern California, working on a lobster boat in Maine and a ranch in Wyoming, going to Mardi Gras in New Orleans, vacationing in Toronto. As usual in road series, they got involved in the private dramas of people they met along the way.
The buddy-bonding seems rather intense, and virtually none of the episodes involved getting girlfriends. However, there were little else for gay kids to watch:
1. Very few rescues (usually they were taken hostage together).
2. Insufficient beefcake, considering the number of bodybuilders in the cast (these pictures are from other projects).
3. And the series ended with Tod getting married, his youthful spirit -- and his same-sex romance -- giving way to heterosexual destiny.
But sometimes just an intense friendship is enough.
After Route 66, Martin Milner starred in the beefcake-heavy Gidget, Adam-12 and Swiss Family Robinson (with Willie Aames). Glenn Corbett starred in The Secret of Boyne Castle and a few Westerns before moving behind the scenes. George Maharis had guest spots on many tv programs, performed in nightclubs, and pursued a second career as a painter.
Beefcake, gay subtexts, and queer representation in mass media from the 1950s to the present
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Dec 16, 2015
Jason Gedrick
Born in 1965, Jason Gedrick broke into show business with The Heavenly Kid (1985), a comedy in which the nerd (Jason) wins The Girl with a little help from a dead teenager from the 1950s (Lewis Smith). In the process, he bonds with the teen angel (and exhibits the usual 1980s homophobia), and shows off an implausibly buffed physique.
The actioner Iron Eagle followed (1986): avid video-gamer Doug (Jason) rescues his dad from Islamic terrorists, with a little help from an older pilot (Louis Gossett Jr.), who is distraught over the many kids that he has seen die over the years, and isn't about to watch Doug die, too. More buddy bonding.
Promised Land (1987): Davey (Jason) and Danny (Kiefer Sutherland) pursue an elite-working class friendship through high school and failed marriages.
Teen magazines paid some attention to him, displaying his dark, sultry pout and lean muscles.
Gay teens in the 1980s saw a pattern developing: his characters always had girlfriends but found meaning with guys.
The pattern continued in Rooftops (1989): a homeless teen named T, who lives on rooftops, has a girlfriend, but is also in love with a boy. When his boyfriend is killed by drug dealers, T vows to use his dance-combat skills to clean up the neighborhood.
The pattern continued in Backdraft (1991), with Kurt Russell, and Crossing the Bridge (1992), with Josh Charles.
And we saw more of Jason's body in the nude shower scene.
I lost track of Jason in the 1990s. He apparently moved into television, playing a college boy in Class of 96 (1993), a Hollywood star accused of killing a teenage girl in Murder One (1995-96), and an ex-con trying to go straight in EZ Streets (1996-97), plus significant roles Desperate Housewives, Luck, Necessary Roughness, and Dexter. I haven't seen any of them.
But in 2007, for old time's sake, I saw Jason in Kings of South Beach (2007). He plays Chris Troiano, a New Yorker who moves to Miami to escape the Mafia and start a new life. He opens a nightclub and takes bouncer Andy (Donnie Wahlberg) under his wing.
Andy is actually an undercover cop who must choose between his love for Chris and his job.
There is a palpable chemistry between Andy and Chris which almost moves from subtext to text.