So Paxton Booth is interested in cock sparring? If that means what I 'm imagining, get me a ticket, too.
Circle j*rks, live on stage? Looks like Paxton and I share several interests.
Actually, those are both hardcore streetpunk bands from the 1970s. I don't know if Pax is a fan or just expressing an interest in the names, but it's worth a closer look.
Ok biceps for a beginner, and the duck lips are rather femme.
Paxton Booth was born in Pomona, California in 2010, and started acting at age three, in a series of national commercials. His on-screen work begins with the short Greener Grass in 2015, and continues with guest shots on Hack My Life, Teachers, Brooklyn Nine-Nine, The Romanoffs, and Adam Ruins Everything.
He played Young Kenny on a 2016 episode of The Real O'Neals. Kenny is the gay son in a conservative Irish-Catholic family, played as a teen by gay actor Noah Galvin (butt here, cock after the break).
A promising start, buddy.
Paxton's most significant role to date is on the Disney Channel's Coop and Cam Ask the World (2018-20). The titular siblings (Dakota Lotus, right, and Ruby Rose Turner) host an internet show, Would You Wrather, in which fans vote on which prank they should do, or later which solution to a problem they should choose.
Younger brother Ollie (Paxton, left) has a gay-subtext buddy (Fred Tsai), and non-heterosexist plotlines: he pours garbage into a classmates desk in order to impress him (say what?); gets lost in the mall while his siblings are babysitting him; is bullied by a boy at the ice rink; is trapped by a rock slide on a camping trip...gets a crush on a girl...
Dang, I knew it couldn't last. First rule of teencoms: every boy, regardless of his age, must demonstrate that he is heterosexual.
A 2020 article in Jejune Magazine tells us that Paxton is "seriously woke" for a nine-year old. He notes that he buys from girls' and guys' sections of the clothing store,and prefers pink, which results in a lot of bullying. He wants to start a gender-neutral clothing line that will fight bullying and "give other youngsters a chance to fully embrace who they are."
He says "who they are" as a closeted term for "gay," but later he (along with other Disney kids) wears purple to note that he opposes LGBTQ bullying.
More after the break
After Coop and Cam, Paxton appeared in four episodes of The Patient (2022). Steve Carrell as a therapist with a dead wife (of course) is held captive by a patient (Domnhall Gleeson, left) seeking relief from his homicidal urges. So maybe just make an appointment?
His son Ezra (Andrew Leeds) became estranged from the family when he converted to Orthodox Judaism. Paxton plays Ezra's son, Dov.
I Believe in Santa (2022) stars John Ducey as a man whose belief in Santa Claus jeopardizes his relationship with The Girl. He has a gay Muslim buddy (Sachin Bhatt), and a 10-year old "sworn enemy" (Paxton), who wears a rainbow puffer jacket to signify that he is also gay.
Wait -- a grown man has a 10 year old enemy? Something is off here, but the point is, Paxton is playing a gay-vague character.
Paxton's last acting role listed on the IMDB is a 2024 episode of Young Sheldon. He plays a member of the Baptist church attended by Sheldon's mother.
Next question: I know that Paxton likes buying from the boys' and girls' sections of the clothing store, he has played a few gay-vague characters, and here he is surfing on a unicorn, but is he actually gay?
In his social media posts, he's surrounded by girls all the time. LOTS of girls. Pairs and trios. Three on each side. Next to him at every social event. A long line of girls, with Paxton at the end.
But you almost never see him with a guy.
And he wishes "Happy Birthday to 'Merica" while standing in the bed of a red pickup truck. A more heterosexual pose than pointing out a lady's bosom.
Left: This profile was a little light on cocks, so here's Noah Galvin's
See also: Dakota Lotus: The Disney Channel's Coop sings, shows his pitts, brings on Christmas depression.
Noah Galvin: 7 gay characters, a husband, a Pride cake, lots of dick pics
Frank of Ireland: More than Friends, Less Than Gay. With Domnhall Gleeson












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