Beefcake, gay subtexts, and queer representation in mass media from the 1950s to the present
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Jun 1, 2019
"All-American": Beach Hunks Who Play Football
This Netflix icon is obviously meant to draw the attention of gay men to the tv series, with a shirtless hunk gazing at another shirtless hunk with homoromantic ardour. But I've been burned by Netflix bait-and-switch before, and besides, I don't know what an "all-American" is (some sort of hamburger?). So it's on to wikipedia.
All-American is based on the life of Spencer Paysinger, who I never heard of. Spencer James (Daniel Ezra, the black guy in the top photo) is "star wide receiver at Crenshaw High School who transfers to Beverly Hills High to play football, but is switched to playing Quarterback."
So he isn't playing football anymore, he is demoted to another game called Quarterback? But I always thought that Quarterback was a player type. And not a humiliating demotion, an honor: "He's the star quarterback, swoon."
The wikipedia page is all mixed up, but I think I got the basic plot: South Crenshaw is the Hood, and Beverly Hills is the ritzy neighborhood where Will goes to live with his Uncle Phil and Cousin Carlton on Fresh Prince of Bel Air.
This South Crenshaw, a portmanteau of South L.A. and Crenshaw, is a hotbed of gang violence. Spencer leaves behind:
1. His mother (Karimah Westbrook)
2. His father (Chad L. Coleman, left), the football coach at Crenshaw High.
3. His younger brother Dillon (Jalyn Hall), who wants to play football but is stuck with degrading basketball instead (now it's basketball that's degrading?)
4. His bff Coop (Bre-Z), a lesbian who gets kicked out of the house when she comes out to her homophobic Mom.
5. Some girlfriends of both Spencer and Coop
6. Some teammates (Spence Moore II, Mitchell Edwards, left)
7. Some gang members (Jay Reeves, Demetrius Shipp Jr., Kareem J. Grimes). Coop is interested in keeping out of the gang or something.
In Beverly Hills, Spencer gets:
1. His coach, Billy (Taye Diggs), who he moves in with. All is not what it seems: Coach Billy graduated from Crenshaw South High School, where he dated Spencer's Mom.
2. Coach Billy's son Jordan (Michael Evans Behling), who is conflicted because his mother is white, so he doesn't feel that he fits into black culture. He hates Spencer, both because of the football competition and because his girlfriend Layla is into the dangerous bad boy from the Hood.
3. Coach Billy's daughter Olivia (Samantha Logan), who is dating football player Asher (Cody Christian, left), but dumps him because she's into Spencer, too.
Is this guy, like made of pheremones, or something?
4. Billy's father (Brent Jennings), a former football coach, the only person in the family who is not trying to get into Spencer's pants.
5. 1980s hunk Casper Van Dien as Asher's father (Asher is the ex-boyfriend of Coach Billy's daughter Olivia, remember). Like all parents on this show, Casper is a former football player and coach.
6. Some other teammates, such as party boy JJ (Hunter Clowdus).
7. Some miscellaneous girls who fawn over Spencer. Apparently the show bible states that "all the girls are interested in Spencer," and the writers took it literally. Come on, he's not even hot.
All this teen dating intrigue and father-son baggage was too complicated for me, so I just fast-forwarded through a few episodes, looking for the homoromantic scene, or any buddy-bonding of any sort.
Gay Subtexts: I couldn't find any. Most male characters seem to be disagreeable jerks.
Sports: There's at least one football game in every episode.
Beefcake: There's a beach scene, hot tub scene, or strip poker scene in every episode, dozens of mega-hunks wandering around looking at girls. You want to yell "Open your eyes! There's a hot guy standing right next to you!"
Heterosexism: Yep. In spite of the lesbian bff back home.
spencer is cute
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