Soehnlein echoed this worry: “One stray kiss or a moment of my husband and I holding hands runs the risk of someone saying something awful or being attacked.” The media outlet hasn’t been able to confirm the alleged lover’s claims.ĭoan added, though, that the discrepancy of why same-sex couples aren’t as encouraging of PDAs, may be “due to fears of crime or of attack.” One man claims to have been Mateen’s lover, and told Spanish-language outlet Univision that the shooter was jealous of those who could be open with their sexuality. (Investigators are looking into this point, but it has not been confirmed if Mateen was gay or bisexual). Some have claimed Mateen himself used gay hookup apps and visited Pulse nightclub on multiple occasions.
“If you grow up being socialized to believe same-sex couples are less loving or less-than in some way, it’s hard to escape that.” “Some of that is attributed to internalized homophobia, and how society socializes people,” he said. Gay male participants in the study were “significantly less approving of the gay couple kissing on the cheek and French kissing, compared to the heterosexual couple” doing the same things in public, the journal article reads.īut Long Doan, co-author of the American Sociological Review study, said there could be several reasons for that. Still, it’s not just straight people who balk when two men show their love. Not only were the lip-locked photos a sign of protest against the homophobia that may have inspired the shooting, but they were also a sign of love. Last week, photos flooded timelines aptly accompanied by the hashtags, # T wo M en K issing, and # T wo W omen K issing. Those kiss-ins reemerged in the wake of the attack through a new form of protest: social media. Soehnlein told the New York Times that he used to stage kiss-in protests in the 1980s to confront homophobia that fed into the lack of action on combating the HIV/AIDS epidemic. This sentiment isn’t new, of course, which is why kissing as a sign of protest is nothing new for gay activism. But when it comes to seeing same-sex couples kiss and hold hands in public, straight men (and to a lesser extent, straight women) think LGBTQ people should curb the public display of affection. Even with support for marriage equality reaching record highs at 55 percent, there’s still an “ick” factor that comes when seeing two people - specifically, two men - show affection.Ī study published in the American Sociological Review in 2014 showed heterosexual people are willing to support formal rights for same-sex couples, such as inheritance rights, hospital visitation access, and marriage equality. Mateen’s hostility toward seeing two men show affection played out in an extreme way, but in the US, it’s emblematic of a barrier the LGBTQ community faces. "And then we were in the men's bathroom and men were kissing each other.”
In front of my son they are doing that,'" Seddique Mateen recalled to NBC News last week. "They were kissing each other and touching each other and he said, 'Look at that. Though he said he did not understand why Omar Mateen would enter a gay club and open fire, killing 49 people and injuring dozens more, he pointed out Omar’s disgust. Seddique Mateen recalled his son getting upset after seeing two men kiss while with his family several months ago. Actually, we should give props to the entire footballing world because they’re really comfortable with this kind of public displays of affection.When Omar Mateen bombarded a gay nightclub in Orlando, Florida, with bullets earlier this month, his father quickly identified his son’s possible motive. Props to you for embracing your inner ghey. Duh! What kind of test audience did the producers get to watch the movie? Conservative “Christians” like Sarah Palin perhaps? Silly test audiences.įootballer David Beckham and a Random Dude: The football world’s king of metrosexuality David Beckham aka The Underwear Guy gets intimate with another man.
It is based from a novel of the same title written by Pulitzer Prize winner Michael Cunningham.Īccording to IMDB, some scenes in the movie featuring Irish hunk Colin in the buff were cut from the movie because “they were too distracting for test audiences”. came out of the closet.Ĭolin Farrell and Dallas Roberts: Actors Colin Farrell and Dallas Roberts go for a good old kiss in their movie, A Home at the End of the World. Smith (of Stargate Universe) and Benjamin Walker (of Clint Eastwood’s Flags of our Fathers) lock lips and do more in this scene from their 2009 indie movie, The War Boys.