Sunday, February 18, 2024

Andrew Matarazzo: Gay icon, geographer, werewolf hunter, wacky model. Even his butt pics are a little wacky.

 


I've had some beefcake and nude photos of Andrew Matarazzo in my files for a long time, without knowing who he is or what he's been in.  







When you're hung, what's the difference?

Finally I got around to checking him out on the IMDB: 27 acting credits, including the gay themed Geography Club and West Hollywood Motel, plus guest spots on Girls, Royal Pains, Speechless, Jane the Virgin, and Solar Opposites. 







 He had a seven episode story arc on Teen Wolf as Gabe, a student at Beacon Hills who plays on the lacrosse team and turns out to be a Hunter. His character didn't have much time for relationships, but he did have a gay-subtext buddy bond with Nolan, played by Froy Guttierez.


Andrew appears to be gay in real life, although there weren't any shot of boyfriends on his social media.









Just some nudes and fashion modeling.







More nudes and fashions after the break




Modeling for Gucci, Prada, and...Louscious.  A man in a mesh top with a corset?










"I don't want to be relatable!"  You got it, Babe.











Come on, that's just weird.









I'm out.  Let's go back to his dick and butt








Dude, we've already seen it.  No need to hide...wait, the dick scans, but the physique is off.  Are you sure that's you, and not a boyfriend?









"She could always throw her legs up in the air  higher than any of us -- and wider."  -- Arlene Castle, Evil under the Sun

See also: Arthur Napiontek: Model, geographer, man candy

Tony Cavalero's Hot/Hung Photos: A leather jockstrap, an isolation tank, a boner pill,  and honeymoon with the hubby

Braxton Alexander, Model

2 comments:

  1. The quotation about the dancer isn't from "Auntie Mame". Maggie Smith's character says approximately that about Diana Rigg's character in "Evil Under the Sun".

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    1. That's funny, I have a distinct memory of Mame saying it to Vera Charles, who responds with a witherling glare. But it explains why I couldn't find the quote in "Auntie Mame."

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