Alan Thicke, who died on December 13th, was best known as the conservative psychiatrist dad on the Reagan Era warmedy Growing Pains (1985-1992), but he was most at ease as a mc.
He got his start as a talk show host, with The Alan Thicke Show (1980-82), renamed Thicke of the Night (1983-84), and through his career he hosted many specials, from the Emmies and the Golden Globes to The Barry Gibb Love and Hope Festival, and narrated many documentaries, from When Mom and Dad Break Up to How Canada Invented Hollywood.
Most recently he starred in a family reality series, Unusually Thicke (2014-2015), along with his wife, his sons and their spouses, and celebrity guest stars like David Hasselhof, Bill Maher, John Stamos, Lance Bass....
And his nephew Creighton Thicke-Rattray (second from left), a college swimming star.
Handsome but not muscular, Alan was a more of a lady's man than a gay fave rave. He did get a photo shoot in Playgirl. No nude shots.
And you could see a bulge here and there, leading to lots of jokes about just how thick Alan was.
Today we might make the same speculation about his sons.
Brennan (born 1974) briefly followed his father into show biz. As a child star, he voiced Scott Tracker in the cartoon MASK (1985-85) and Dennis in Dennis the Menace (1986-88). He now runs a nonprofit marijuana dispensary in California and works for his wife's wedding dress business, Dolly Couture.
Robin (born 1977) is a singer/songwriter who has written and produced several R&B hits, such as "Sex Therapy." He is best friends with gay singer Usher.
He has obviously inherited his father's looks and...um...other things.
Carter (born 1997) has appeared with his father in Celebrity Wife Swap, Celebrity Family Feud, Unusually Thicke, and the movie It's Not My Fault and I Don' Care Anymore (2015).
He is active in social media, where he has expressed strong support of the LGBT community.
See also: Growing Pains
Beefcake, gay subtexts, and queer representation in mass media from the 1950s to the present
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Dec 13, 2016
10 Things You Should Know about Dating Teenagers
Teenagers are everywhere. They're delivering your pizzas, mowing your lawn, working out next to you at the gym, reading depressing poetry at the coffee house, texting furiously while sitting six-to-a-booth at the diner.
They are generally attractive, with fresh, eager faces, and tight smooth bodies that haven't yet gone to fat, even if they aren't particularly buffed.
And they're available. I estimate that about 75% of gay and bi teenage boys are into older guys (a category that includes everyone from age 25 to death), and the others aren't usually, but they'll make an exception if you know your way around a gym.
They are drawn to five things that their peers lack, but daddies have in abundance: an apartment, a car, a college degree, a hairy chest, and sexual experience.
But before you make a date with that cute guy who is cruising you, there are 10 things you should know:
1. You will have to card him. Adolescent development occurs at different rates, so the guy who looks like an adult, with hard muscles and hair on his chest, might be only 14 or 15. Don't take his word for it -- check his id to make sure he's of legal age.
2. He may bring a friend. Teenagers don't actually "date" anymore: they hang out. They may pair off later for sexual activity, but the social part of the evening takes place in a group. He won't understand your desire for one-on-one conversation.
Of course, that may work out to your advantage, if the friend wants to share your bed, too.
3. He will be texting constantly. In his world, it's not rude. His friends expect him to be constantly narrating his life events, and commenting on theirs, no matter what he's doing.
The full list is on Tales of Wet Hollywood.
They are generally attractive, with fresh, eager faces, and tight smooth bodies that haven't yet gone to fat, even if they aren't particularly buffed.
And they're available. I estimate that about 75% of gay and bi teenage boys are into older guys (a category that includes everyone from age 25 to death), and the others aren't usually, but they'll make an exception if you know your way around a gym.
They are drawn to five things that their peers lack, but daddies have in abundance: an apartment, a car, a college degree, a hairy chest, and sexual experience.
But before you make a date with that cute guy who is cruising you, there are 10 things you should know:
1. You will have to card him. Adolescent development occurs at different rates, so the guy who looks like an adult, with hard muscles and hair on his chest, might be only 14 or 15. Don't take his word for it -- check his id to make sure he's of legal age.
2. He may bring a friend. Teenagers don't actually "date" anymore: they hang out. They may pair off later for sexual activity, but the social part of the evening takes place in a group. He won't understand your desire for one-on-one conversation.
Of course, that may work out to your advantage, if the friend wants to share your bed, too.
3. He will be texting constantly. In his world, it's not rude. His friends expect him to be constantly narrating his life events, and commenting on theirs, no matter what he's doing.
The full list is on Tales of Wet Hollywood.
Jay R. Ferguson, Teen Idol
Jay redeemed himself with The Price of Love (1995): he plays a gay hustler who shows the ropes to the "gay for pay" Bret (Peter Facinelli).
His dreaminess quotient decreased when he got a reputation as a hard partier. Even tearing off his shirt during a party at Fox didn't help. Kids like their teen idols wholesome and innocent.
During the late 1990s, Jay did a few buddy-bonding movies.
Blue Ridge Falls (1999), about four friends bonding over a murder. His Shane buddy-bonds with Danny (Peter Facinelli).
Hollywood Palms (2000), about the interconnected lives of residents in the Hollywood Palms apartment complex. Jay plays rocker Riley, who buddy bonds with Dexter (Jeff Russo). Together they try to prevent a murder.
But when he graduated to adult romantic leads, the buddy bonding dried up. All I could find was a 2005 episode of Medium: Jay plays Tommy Lehane, best buddy of the medium's brother Michael (Ryan Hurst), who might be a murderer.
More recently Jay has played Stan Rizzo, the homophobic art director at the 1960s ad agency on Mad Men (2010-2012), the non-homophobic dad of a gay teen on The Real O'Neals (2016-), and a guy who tries to "Live Biblically."
He's still quite muscular, and not averse to stripping down to his underwear, in spite of his huge bulge.
See also: Living Biblically
Dec 11, 2016
Kirk Douglas and his Show Biz Dynasty
Hollywood legend Kirk Douglas celebrated his 100th birthday on December 9th. He's had a career that spanned six decades. In the 1950s and 1960s he often starred in beefcake-heavy movies as Ulysses (1954), 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea (1954), The Vikings (1958), and Spartacus (1960).
His four sons and grandsons have followed in his footsteps.
Michael (born 1944) was a New Sensitive Man of the 1970s, starring in The Streets of San Francisco (1972-77), Romancing the Stone (1984), and The Jewel of the Nile (1985) before moving on to roles as middle-aged businessmen, cops, and lawyers. He's played gay characters several times, notably as Liberace (2013).
Joel (born 1947) is a film producer, mostly working on productions with his father and brother.
Peter (left, born 1955) is a tv producer with credits such as The Final Countdown (1980) and Something Wicked This Way Comes (1983)
Eric (1958-2004) was an actor and comedian. He died of an accidental drug overdose.
Michael's son Cameron (born 1978) has appeared in four films, including It Runs in the Family (2003). He spent five years in prison for drug dealing. Released in 2016, he is anxious to continue his acting career.
Here are two more Douglases. I don't know if they fit into the family or not.
Ryan
Jason
His four sons and grandsons have followed in his footsteps.
Michael (born 1944) was a New Sensitive Man of the 1970s, starring in The Streets of San Francisco (1972-77), Romancing the Stone (1984), and The Jewel of the Nile (1985) before moving on to roles as middle-aged businessmen, cops, and lawyers. He's played gay characters several times, notably as Liberace (2013).
Joel (born 1947) is a film producer, mostly working on productions with his father and brother.
Peter (left, born 1955) is a tv producer with credits such as The Final Countdown (1980) and Something Wicked This Way Comes (1983)
Eric (1958-2004) was an actor and comedian. He died of an accidental drug overdose.
Michael's son Cameron (born 1978) has appeared in four films, including It Runs in the Family (2003). He spent five years in prison for drug dealing. Released in 2016, he is anxious to continue his acting career.
Here are two more Douglases. I don't know if they fit into the family or not.
Ryan
Jason