Gemstones Episode 1.4: Keefe looks for love in a sports bar, and Kelvin meets a girl. Plus Blair Jackson and a random hunk.
Meet Me Next Christmas: A drag show, a queer cousin, Pentatonix, and a dancer's dick
I fast-forwarded through the first 20 of the Christmas movies streaming on Netflix, Amazon Prime, and Hulu, and found only one with probable gay characters: Meet Me Next Christmas. Plus there are two hot guys on the icon, so there's bound to be some beefcake.
While she is waiting in the VIP lounge, James (Kofi Siriboe, top photo), a hot guy with a cancelled flight, sits next to her. Her flirting bio: she runs a charity that gives scholarships to deserving youth to attend Historically Black Colleges and Universities. She shows him a photo of Derek, who graduated from Langston College in Oklahoma last year.
Named after Langston Hughes, the Westernmost HBCU is advertised as an "excellent value," with a lot of white students on its website. and no mention of LGBT people.
"Right now Tanner and I would be going to the Pentatonix Christmas Eve Show." You're flying on the same day as the show? Idjit!
James doesn't know what Pentatonix is, even though they've been singing all through the airport, so Layla tells him.
They decide that, if they're both single next year, they'll meet at next year's big Pentatonix Christmas Eve concert.
Scene 2: The next year, three days before Christmas, Layla is at work, busily placing students at HBCUs, when her bff calls -- not a gay guy, darn it, but she talks like a drag queen. Layla is going to pick up boyfriend Tanner's favorite dinner -- takeout Italian with a Christmas twist.
She arrives at her stunning Victorian -- in Poughkeepsie? Why not near a HBCU college? -- screams -- and a half-naked lady runs out, followed by a shirtless Tanner (Brendan Morgan, left). What idjit has a hookup when he knows his girlfriend will be home any minute?
Layla wants to know that too. He explains that this is the day the maid comes, so he couldn't hook up at his place. So she dumps the Italian food on his bare chest, slams the door, and looks out the window, miserable.
Scene 3: In New York, staying with her bff, Layla drinks wine and stares out onto the city. Girlfriend says that she always picks the wrong guys -- successful, muscular, well-hung -- but forgets to find out if he's into her. "Is he your ride or die?"
"Hey, maybe I can fall in love with my airport hookup from last year, James." They said they would meet at the big Pentatonix concert, but Tanner the idjit ordered Macklemore tickets this year!
No problem; they'll just go to the Rockefeller Center website and buy a ticket for Pentatonix. Sold out! "But you can go through a concierge service to get them." I thought a concierge worked in a hotel, but it's a general service that rich people use for help of all sorts, like getting sold-out tickets.
Scene 4: In New York, two days before Christmas, concierge Teddy (Devale Ellis) passes out Christmas fudge to his coworkers, and cioppino to the boss lady. I'll bet that Layla gets with him instead of James.
Layla has hired him, after sending a lot of emails and showing up at the office. His job is to get her Petatonix tickets by tomorrow night. "Your client reviews suck," Boss lady snarls,"So get this one done or you're fired."
In Teddy's office, Layla explains that she's freaking out because she's tried everything to get that ticket: Ticketmaster, Tickpick, Stubhub...none available. Girl, just text the guy and offer to meet him somewhere else.
Nothing in the company databases, but Teddy knows a guy who might have one. "He has a kiosk. I'll go get it. No, Layla wants to go with him, to make sure there are no screw-ups. And fall in love, of course.
Scene 5: Out onto the streets of Toronto masquerading as New York. The kiosk is closed, but Layla found a guy on Dave's Tickets who has a couple, and wants to meet in the Village. Tony resists -- he's the professional with the contacts, so this guy must be a scam -- but she drags him on. Squabbling- they'll be smooching in the last scene, 100 to 1
Gay characters after ther break
"Love is a Poison": High-power lawyer and cute con artist stalker in a post-gay Japan
Love is a Poison, a Japanese tv series on Netflix, has this description: "An elite lawyer with social anxiety takes in a genius con artist." Ok, if they're both men, there may be some gay subtexts.
The Episode 1 description: "After meeting a young man named Haruto, elite lawyer Shiba can't stop thinking about him. He goes camping to clear his mind, but runs into Haruto."
He goes camping. Shiba is a man, and "can't stop thinking about" a man. Either this is a gay romance, or world-class queerbaiting.
Scene 1: High-power lawyer Shiba's partner congratulates him on winning his case. "I've learned so much from working with you." Shiba is upset: "You've learned? If you're still learning, you're not fit to be my partner. You're fired." Jerk
Shiba tells us that he passed the bar with the highest score, and now, at age 27, works in in the most prestigious law firm in Japan. He wants to make the name Shiba a worldwide legal brand. "This is a serious legal drama."
Cut to a young man, sweating and crying, telling Shiba, "please don't leave me," and touching his face. "Or not. This is a legal drama and romantic thriller." This is a gay romance or a seriously excellent job of queerbaiting.
Scene 2: Shiba in a bar with colleage Kotaro Kozama, a caring human rights lawyer, his exact opposite, but he wins cases. Kotaro shows the bartender a photo of his new lover: "He's gay, but I don't care about other people's sexual preferences," har har.
In other news: the big boss won't give Shiba any more partners, since he's chased away 99. Not to worry, Shiba tells him: "I can handle the work load alone."
Scene 3: Shiba runs into the bar bathroom, and accidentally hits a young man, Haruto. He gives him his wallet so he won't sue. Kneeling on the floor, Haruto smiles serenely and says "You're very kind."
Back home, Shiba tends to and talks to his plants, but he can't stop thinking about the guy. "Ridiculous! I'm not interested in him!" The only way to clear his head is to go camping.
Scene 4: At the campsite, Shiba can't start a fire, so he eats an energy bar instead of the expensive beef he brought.
Suddenly Haruto appears. He explains that he's staying with a friend nearby, so it's just a coincidence that they ran into each other again. I'm not buying it.
After insulting Shiba's camping skill, he starts the fire and cooks the best beef that Shiba has ever eaten. Then he gets a call, says that he has to return to his friend's house, and leaves. Curioser and curioser.
Even more curious after the break
Gemstones Episode 1.3, Continued: Gideon acts like a woman, Kelvin acts like a man, and chubby guys show their d*cks
Previous: Episode 1.3: Kelvin outs himself, Scotty shoves a wiener into Gideon's face, and Jesse gets it all wrong.God offers one thing: Eli and Baby Billy attend a service at Locust Grove Baptist Church. where Rev. Seasons preaches. The sermon: when people pray, they're really asking God to give them stuff. But God only offers one thing: His love. Yawn -- Baby Billy is bored. His church offers razzle-dazzle.
The Family Dinner: Next, Gideon goes to work for Martin, ostensibly to learn church operations, but really looking for a new way to steal a million dollars. Jesse disapproves, hurt that they decided on this new job without consulting him.
Gideon is discussing his stunt work: because of his slim frame, he stunt-doubles for women a lot: it's called "wigging." Jesse disapproves of him "pretending to be a woman." Amber defends him: it's just for the stunt, because "he's very manly," not feminine, not gay. Notice Kelvin's reaction: he does not like this conversation at all. He keeps his head down, worried that someone will apply it to him.
But the industry is moving toward having women stunting for women, so no more wigging. Jesse mocks him: my son is sad "cause he can't pretend to be a woman for money anymore." He's really pushing the hegemonic masculinity here: behavior that men are expected to engage in, and punished if they fail: being important/ in charge, aggressive, stoic, politically and socially powerful, muscular, and heterosexual.
BJ thinks that "representation of marginalized peoples is a big deal," so if a script calls for a woman to fall off a building, a woman should do the stunting. Amber disagrees, promoting stereotypic gender polarization: "only men should jump off buildings."
Finally Kelvin has had enough, and changes the subject: "Wasn't Baby Billy supposed to be here tonight?"
The party devolves into a fight between Jesse and his son Pontius. He blames Pontius's bad behavior on Gideon leaving: "Actions have consequences."
Kelvin's Basketball: After things calm down, Judy and Kelvin find Jesse in the back yard, crying, the super-masculine guy exhibiting "feminine" emotion. He asks if they have come to make fun of him. Judy: "Well, Kelvin has."
Notice that Kelvin is carrying a basketball. Where did he get it? Did he bring it with him, as a "welcome home" gift for his adult nephew? Did he pick it up from an off-camera basketball court?
This is the only time in the series that Kelvin exhibits an interest in any team sport, or any athletic activity other than acrobatics and bodybuilding. I wonder if he is trying to project a stereotypic masculine image in response to the talk about "acting like a woman."
Dicks after the break
"Proper Gym Etiquette": Robert Oberst punishes the jerks you see at the gym
"Human Discoveries" Episode 1.1: Paleolithic hunks invent underwear. With nude Zac Efron and Milo Ventimiglia
Human Discoveries (2019) is an animated series (available on Facebook) about a group of Paleolithic humans who discover things like fire, relationships, and underwear. Zac Efron stars as Gary, a loveable nebbish looking for love, community, and a way to avoid getting his butt bitten. Adam Devine appears in Episode 1 as the leader of an elk community. I reviewed the first episode, to check for gay characters or subtexts.
Scene 1: Ugg (Paul Scheer), a bare-chested caveman, comes running out of some bushes. I'm a fan already.
He and several other muscle guys run through the jungle, chased by a giant sabre-toothed tiger. They reach a cliff, and have to jungle-vine over it. Bart, doesn't make it; the tiger starts eating him. The guys make excuses to not save him.
Scene 2: Jane complains about the gender-inequality of their society: the women have to weave baskets and gather fruit, while the men get to fight the tiger that's been preying on them.
At a community meeting, Ugh admits that the tiger is still out there. Jane raises her concerns about gender equality; Gary (Zac Efron) agrees -- why not have everyone do the job they're best at? His roommate Trog (Lamorne Morris, left) thinks that he just wants to impress Jane.
Meanwhile, the elk are discussing their predicament as prey to the humans. Leader Elk (Adam Devine) complains: "Why are they cared of the tiger but not us? We weigh a thousand pounds, and have spears growing out of our heads."
Scene 3: Night. Gary and Jane flirt, and almost kiss, but they are interrupted by the camp guard being eaten ("Why is it starting with my feet?).
Back in the cave, Gary disapproves of the skirts they wear while hunting -- too easy for his dick to be injured -- so he sews in some nuderwear (nice butt shot) Trog disapproves: how can they poop with that thing on?
I know this isn't supposed to be historically accurate, but I can't help pointing out that no one in the Paleolithic Era actually lived in caves. They lived in tents, and in some regions huts made of mammoth bones.
Scene 4: The men go off to fight the tiger, and the women are assigned to weave baskets. Jane starts a rebellion: they're going to fight, too. But who's going to weave the baskets? Jane appoints an old guy who is a closet basket-weaver. "No more hiding!" he exclaims, displaying the baskets he has hiding in "the closet."
In the wild, Gary brags about the comfort and support his new genital hammock offers. Two of the hunters, Tristain and Bog (James Adomian, Sam Richardson) are a canonical couple: later, when the group discovers "relationships," they point out that they've been together for years. But here they just display some enthusiasm for each other's accomplishments.
Scene 5: The women dig holes and build scarecrows with spikes in the head, hoping that the tiger will attack and impale itself. But when the tiger arrives, chasing the men, it is not impaled. It approaches Gary -- who poops his pants, distracting the tiger long enough for Ugg-- to spear it.
Unfortunately, the women were so busy building the scarecrows and digging holes that they forgot to gather any fruit to eat. So Ugg decrees that the gender-polarized work assignments will remain.
More after the break
"Christmas on Cherry Lane": Three families, including a gay couple, with a big plot twist that you won't see coming
Christmas on Cherry Lane (2023) stars Vincent Rodriguez III, the muscular, bulging actor who specializes in family-friendly gay guys. I figured I would watch in the background while doing other things on my laptop, but no, it requires you to pay attention. There's a major plot twist. I'm giving only the character names, not the actors' names.
There are three families on Cherry Lane on Christmas Eve
Family 1: John and Lizzie, who is due in two weeks, just moved into the house, and are planning a quiet Christmas alone. They put up the tree and sing "Oh Come, All Ye Faithful," with a Hallmark Tree Trimmer ornament. This will become important later.
Suddenly Lizzie's Mom and Dad arrive, and announce that they invited her brother and his family! But Johnand Lizzie haven't even unpacked. Where will they put all those people?
Left: Dad Frank
Family 2: Regina and her friend Daisy, not shown, unpack Christmas decorations. Her back story: she's a widow with adult children, and a boyfriend named Nelson.
The adult kids, Winnie and Conrad, arrive in a horrible car. Why does he keep it, now that he's making a ton of money? Because his Uncle Ham gave it to him after Dad died. This will be important later.
Sister Winnie doesn't have a job, except singing at open-mike nights for tips, but she'll be a famous singer one day, she says. Mom wants her to try business school.
Mom announces that she's getting married to her Boyfriend, and she's selling the house and moving to Florida. The adult children do not like this at all, and plot to break them up.
Family #3: Zian, left, and Mike, who works as a chef at a restaurant called Repair. They just moved into their house, too, and they're planning a Christmas Eve party tonight with twelve people. Except contractor Quinn and his crew haven't finished remodeling the kitchen yet. He brings them a plate of Christmas cookies, complements them on what a cute couple they are, and asks if "that famous singer" is coming to the party. This will be important later.
Mike is freaking out. Maybe they could move the party to the restaurant? No, this is the first Christmas in their new house, where they're going to raise their family, so it's important to hold it here. They walk outside and sit on lawn chairs in the cold and sing "Silent Night." All of it.
Speaking of starting a family, the lady from the adoption agency tells them that the foster family they were placing a girl with backed out, so they're getting a child tonight -- on Christmas Eve. With twelve people coming for a party. Hopefully a family-friendly party. How are they going to get a bedroom ready?
More plot complications after the break. Spoiler alert: it's a big plot twist.