Male nudity, gay romance, and queer codes in movies and television, especially "The Righteous Gemstones"
"Waterloo Road," Episode 10.1 or 14.1, "What I did last summer," with a new headmaster, a side piece, dark secrets, and dicks.
Gemstones Season 1 Finale: Judy and Kelvin begin to heal, Scotty joins the family, and we say goodbye with some random dicks
Previous: Episode 1.9, Continued: Kelvin goes dark, Keefe goes down, and Captain America saves the day
Back in Freeman's Gap : Church. In his sermon, Eli describes his visit to Aimee-Leigh's childhood home, where he interacted with her spirit. Cut to a flashback of the siblings collecting the money that Baby Billy and Tiffany stole from Scotty's van.
Rev. Seasons is redeemed: Cut to a flashback of Rev. Seasons (Dermot Mulroney) working in a hardware store (Baptist churches are autonomous, so if one closes you don't automatically get placed elsewhere). Eli offers him a job as pastor of the satellite church that Baby Billy abandoned. Rev. Seasons was a secondary Big Bad, but Eli stole his flock, so we are not sure who needs forgiveness more.
"If you're not rooting for your enemy's salvation, you are not in line with what the Spirit wants." Shots of Dot Nancy and her parents, BJ, Keefe (working security again), Martin's wife, a couple I don't recognize, and Jesse's crew (Matthew, Gregory, and Levi). Notice that BJ and Keefe are linked, structurally presented as the partners of Judy and Kelvin. They won't begin sitting together until Season 3.
Scotty is redeemed: "Aimee-Leigh knew this. That's why she wanted to help, no matter what." Shot of the spirit of Aimee-Leigh sitting in the congregation, glowing in ethereal light, with Scotty beside her.
Maybe, in spite of his machinations, posturing, criticism, and threats, in spite of the hints of abuse, this is what Scotty wanted all along. After all, the goal of the two schemes was to draw Gideon away from his family so they could spend their lives together. Maybe he couldn't admit it to himself, so it came out in random bursts, like calling Gideon "cute," taking him out on dates, and finally admitting, just before his death, that "you broke my heart." Aimee Leigh helped him understand what he needed, what he wanted, and she has made him a Gemstone.
Baby Billy grifts: "For when you forgive other people when they sin against you, your Heavenly Father will forgive you." Cut to Baby Billy and Tiffany selling their new gimmick, pictures of his trip to heaven. I guess they haven't been redeemed yet.
Kelvin and Judy start to heal: "How we navigate this life, and each other, is what defines us, and what leads us on the path to healing." Cut to Judy and Kelvin in makeup, getting ready to perform, smiling.
Before this season, the siblings spend their lives crippled by the traumas of their past. Unable to believe that they were worthy of being loved, they sabotaged every potential relationship, Judy by defining herself soley as a sexual being, and Kelvin by denying that he was a sexual being at all. In this season they found partners who loved them in spite of their spitefulness, selfishness, and general craziness, in spite of Judy's obsession with the phallus and Kelvin's fear of it. Forgiven, redeemed, they have started on the road to healing.
The conclusion and cocks after the break
Victor Rivera: Summa cum laude theater arts grad, LARPer, D&D player, stunt cock. With bonus Jesse Eisenberg butt
"Splitting Adam": Tony Cavalero helps Jace Norman win the Girl of His Dreams. With the stars All Grown Up.
While looking through Tony Cavalero's work on the IMDB, I noticed that he had a major role in Nickelodeon's Splitting Adam (2015) -- which make sense, as he was a Nickelodeon staple, starring as the zany music teacher Dewey in School of Rock. The reviews say that Splitting Adam is awful. and it's not on any of my streaming services, so I'll have to pay for it. But first the trailer, to check for heterosexism and gay subtexts.
Scene 1: Jace Norman of Henry Danger dances with a girl, wakes up, delivers newspapers, gets yelled at by a gay-stereotype poof and his pocket dog, gets cheered on by a girl, and gets hit with a golf ball. The Narrator complains that he doesn't have enough time to do everything he needs to do.
Scene 2: Crash and Splash Amusement Park. A swimming pool Tootsie Roll, Jace getting yelled at by Jack Griffo and his girlfriend, Jace and his buddy Amar M. Wooten in a dunking booth. We see that hoary old cliche of the Girl of His Dreams walking in slow motion, waving her hair.
Top photo: the grown up Jack Griffo.
Scene 3: Amar advises Jace that he doesn't have enough prestige to impress The Girl. Shot of him holding a yellow barrel over his crotch in the swimming pool. Griffo agrees: "You can barely keep your shorts on." Is that a sexual double entendre?
Scene 4: Uncle Magic Mitch, a professional stage musician played by Tony Cavalero, arrives in his purple van and shows the guys his new -- tanning bed? That night Jace sees it glowing, investigates, and accidentally falls in. Zap!
In the morning, there's a clone in the house, fully self-aware: "I'm here to help you." He cooks breakfast.
Scene 5: Magic Mitch, not to be confused with Magic Mike, is happy with the clone because he made chocolate chip pancakes. Jace's two friends, Amar and Seth Isaac Johnson, hug each other in terror.
Scene 6: In the tree house, Jace's friends, whose sole reason for existing is to facilitate getting him laid, devise a plot to use the clones. They each have different personalities; the Girl is bound to like one of them. Zap! Zap!
Scene 7: Shot of Jace and two clones, in disguise, entering the amusement park. Magic Mitch performs. Jack Griffo snarls: "To get to her, you have to go through me!"
Scene 8: Jace's clones are: the Sensitive One; The Party Boy; Mr. Responsible; Mr. Perfect; and goofball Winston. Montage of several meeting or hanging out with The Girl, She complains: "Every time I see you, you seem like a different person."
Scene 9: Of course she prefers the original. Boy-girl hug. Uncle Magic Mitch tells him: "That's where the magic happens."
Moral: Be yourself.
Beefcake: These are all little kids, but there may be some hunkoids in the swimming pool scene.
Heterosexism: Of course. The whole plot arc is about winning the Girl of Your Dreams. We even get tips on how to do it.
Gay Stereotypes: The guy with the pocket dog. Sensitive Jace, although he's obviously heterosexual.
Magic Mitch Questions: Does he know that the tanning bed is a clone machine? Why is he the sort-of responsible adult -- where are Jace's parents? Does he get a girlfriend? The movie probably clarifies things.
Will I Watch: Heck, no.
Grown-up Jace after the break