Oct 17, 2024

Oxford University: 15 Baliol boyfriends, Christ Church chums, and Magdalen muscle men


Link to the n*de photos

After reviewing two tv series set at Oxford, I got nostalgic.  I've only visited once, but Oxford University has the most memorable architecture of any university anywhere.  Harvard and Yale in the U.S. look positively shoddy by comparison.






Plus churches, bookstores, pubs full of rowdy students. 



















Hot rowdy students.  And faculty.  

1.-5. I think this is a cricket team posing.

6. A first year from Belfast.




The Bodleian Library, dating from the 12th century, with some of the rarest books in the world, like a Gutenberg Bible, as well as Tolkien's original illustrations for The Hobbit.












7. Oxford is divided into over 30 colleges; you apply to the college, not the university. Jesus College has the reputation of being the friendliest.

More after the break. 

Stephen Louis Grush: From Pericles to Peter's Militia, with shirtless shots and gay subtext roles in between

 


Link to the n*de photos

 Stephen Louis Grush grew up in New Orleans, and graduated from Roosevelt University in Chicago with a BFA in Theater. He has over 30 credits on the IMDB, often in projects that emphasize gay subtexts, or texts.









In Catch Hell (2014), two toughs (Stephen, Ian Barford) kidnap a Hollywood actor (Ryan Philippe) with the intent of torturing and killing him.  They do a lot of torturing, and a lot of n*de struggling, but Junior (Stephen) also falls in love with him.


In Gracepoint (2014), Stephen plays a plumber's apprentice who may be gay, accused of murdering a small boy.










In a 3-episode story arc on Rectify (2016), focus character Danny (Adan Young) is  living in a halfway house.  His roommate Manny (Stephen) walks around n*ked in front of him; this is particularly upsetting because he was repeatedly r*ped in prison.  But Manny won't stop.  Finally Danny tells the house leader about it, expecting the guy to be kicked out.  Instead, they give him a new roommate.

More after the break

"Unhinged": Road Rager pushing paranoia about societal decay, with some gay actors and teen idols


I try not to drive very much, due to a little road rage problem.  Other drivers absolutely cannot cut in front of me.  When they do, they are being disrespectful, like a slap in the face, and I feel compelled to "get even" by zooming around them.  Strangely, the police don't see it that way, and think that I am in the wrong.  

So I love movies and tv shows about road rage, like Deliverance and Beef.  When Unhinged, 2020, showed up on Netflix, I clicked "play" without doing any research.

Prologue: A montage of sensationalistic stories about an epidemic of violent crime, people going beserk, law and order decaying, a downward spiral of disorder.  The violent crime rate is the lowest it's been since the 1950s, one tenth the rate in 1990. 

Scene 1: Mom Rachel is sleeping on the couch when she is awakened by her lawyer, Andy. Her ex wants even more stuff in the divorce.  Plus she overslept, so now her son will get to school later, get another tardy on his record -- in the era of the school-to-prison pipeline, a possible arrest -- and she'll be late meeting with her client. 

Scene 2: At breakfast, a feminine man, who lives with them, is talking online with his mom about assisted living. Gay uncle?  Nope, a woman comes in, says that she loves him, and they kiss.  Had to heterosexualize him immediately, didn't you?  There's also a girl wandering around.  Son is watching tv news about a man who killed some people, then set the house on fire. Foreshadowing.  

Back story: It's Mom Rachel's Freddy and his wife, staying with her but not kicking in any rent., because he's into get-rich-quick schemes. 


Uncle Freddy is played by Austin P. McKenzie. whose first acting job was in the ASL-inclusive, gay-themed Spring Awakening.  He has also appeared in When We Rise and Speech and Debate.  He is in a relationship with Kevin McHale, formerly of Glee.

Scene 3: Mom Rachel and her Son rush out of the house, and run into the neighbor, also taking her kids to school.  So, carpool?  Neighbor is much more successful and snobbish.





The Son is played by Gabriel Bateman, no relation to Jason Bateman. More recently he had a starring role as Charlie Fox in Mosquito Coast, the role River Phoenix originated in the movie.

Uh-oh gridlock.  Should they take the freeway?  Son checks the traffic on his phone -- it looks clear.  So they cut down the shoulder onto the freeway. How far away is this kid's school?

Scene 4: Dad Richard calls to blow off whatever gender-polarized masculine thing he and his son have planned for tomorrow night.  Mom's client calls to fire her for being late so often.  And...more gridlock!   I've been trapped in gridlock a lot, in weird places like the middle of Illinois, nowhere near anywhere, and heading out of Cleveland during morning rush hour, when everyone should be going toward downtown.  We were parked in that one for 45 minutes. 

Son suggests getting off at the next exit and taking surface streets, so she drives into the shoulder, pushes her way through several lanes of traffic, getting honked at, and onto another shoulder to the surface street and a stop light.  

The light turns green, but the truck in front of her doesn't move.  She blares her horn, then zooms around him while making an obscene gesture.  Uh-oh, that's the worst thing you can do.  You've just signaled the other driver that you think he is worthless, so he'll have to zoom around you to prove that he is a valid human being. 

And more gridlock! 


Scene 5:
The Man in the Truck pulls up next to them, apologizes for "zoning out," and then asks Rachel to apologize for disrespecting him.  She refuses, saying that she has nothing to apologize for.  Are you kidding?  You've been acting like an entitled jerk the whole trip.  You've cut off like a dozen drivers.

He says that this is why the society is falling apart: "We have lost the ability to apologize to anyone for anything."  She tries to ignore him.  He promises that she's going to find out what a bad day is.

At that moment, the traffic opens up, and they drive away.  The Man zooms around, cuts them off, and slams on his brakes. Smiling at his triumph, he moves on. That must be what he means by "finding out what a bad day is."  It would certainly ruin my day. Wait -- there's still an hour left.

More after the break

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