@DomNoxy You’re using the same guy in every video. You’re obviously staging different scenes with the same guy to make it look like you have loads of subs.
By the 1970’s, Gay Pride focused on greater visibility and rejecting effeminate stereotypes.
The Clone Look was an era-defining, masculine aesthetic of urban gay males. Originating in the Castro, it quickly spread to New York and across the U.S.
Gay men crafted a powerful new image inspired by straight working-class male icons: cowboys, bikers, lumberjacks, construction workers, and the Marlboro Man. Colt Studios played a major role in popularizing and idealizing the look.
Signature elements included:
• Thick, bushy mustaches and well-trimmed beards
• Gym-built bodies and a bare, defined chest
• Tight, button-fly 501s, leather jackets
• Motorcycle boots
This instantly recognizable “uniform” turned entire streets into cruising grounds. It projected unapologetic confidence and sexual availability while playfully subverting traditional straight masculinity—tight clothing and deliberate grooming highlighted the male body in ways most straight working-class men never did.
The Clone era represented a peak of post-liberation hedonism and self-assured gay machismo, forever tied to the pre-AIDS golden age of the 1970s. I know. I was there. #Pridemonth #GayPride