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WHERE THE BEARS ARE/ SEASON TWO/ EPISODE 17: WINE & BEAR

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Where The Bears Are – Season 2: Episode 17 WINE AND BEAR from Where the Bears Are on Vimeo.

Reggie (Rick Copp) finally agrees to a dinner date with the handsome Jeremy Richards (Mark Rowe), who has made no secret of the fact he would like more than just sex, but the home-cooked meal at Jeremy’s apartment is just a ruse so Reggie can rifle through his personal belongings to uncover evidence connecting him to the Elliot Butler murder after the Bears discover he had a fight with the victim right before he was shot.

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Two Men Kiss For 84 Minutes… And It’s Art.

“First Kiss is a 84 minute kiss video between the artists Idan Bitton and Alfredo Calle Ferran. While the camera is still, the kiss is in motion provoking the viewer to stay and watch. Idan and Alfredo do not interact with the viewer, but offer a peek into their intimate moments of commitment. This long lasting, present and unapologetic kiss defines our current gay rights momentum. We are here, we love each other, and this is what it looks like.” Idan Bitton

Directed: Idan Bitton
Performed: Idan Bitton & Alfredo Calle Ferran
Video: Runn Shayo

WHERE THE BEARS ARE/ SEASON TWO/ EPISODE 16: RUGBY BEARS

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Where The Bears Are – Season 2: Episode 16 RUGBY BEARS from Where the Bears Are on Vimeo.

While investigating an old rugby teammate of Todd’s at a local gym, the Bears cross paths with disgraced former county coroner Susie Collins (Loretta Fox), who has been fired from her job for sexual harrasment and is now coaching a gay men’s rugby team.
Nelson: Ben Zook. Todd: Ian Parks. Wood: Joe Dietl. Reggie: Rick Copp. Luke: Alex De La Cruz. Jason: David LaFlamme. Rugby Player #1: James Sloan. Rugby Player #2: Paul Baker. Rugby Player #3: Dominick Munafo. Rugby Player #4: Stephen Wallage.

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MODEL OF THE DAY: JOEY SANTANA

RANDY BLUE: Joey has these thick eye lashes that frame his piercing hazel eyes. He is a go go dancer from SoCal, and with one smile I was ready for a lap dance. I asked him if he had any signature moves when he danced. He said he just waves guys over and they come. Nice and direct. I asked him if he was ready to come. Joey was. He started out against the glass sliding doors where he showed off his muscles.

Then he pulled down his underwear to show off his hard cock. He then moved over to a chair and began to jerk off his hard pud some more. We followed him again over to the couch. He got on his stomach and pumped into the couch. He then crouched up and showed off his hot hairy hole. After showing off his hole for a bit, he fell back down on his back. He started jerking off faster. He was getting close. Finally he busted a nut all over himself and smiled into the camera. I think we are going to like this little discovery.

MORE pics @ RANDY BLUE!

BLOCKED ON GRINDR: In the world of dating apps, race is a major factor By Kaj Hasselriis for DAILYXtra

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By Kaj Hasselriis for DAILYXtra

Neil Chaudhury wants to stop doing it. But like so many other gay guys in Toronto, the recent George Brown grad desires a boyfriend, or at least the chance to meet someone new. So Chaudhury goes on Grindr, the notorious hook-up app, even though it means risking another hit to his self-esteem.

He thumbs through other guys’ profiles and sees warnings like “No Asians.” Fellow users sometimes ask him, “Do you smell like curry?” Almost always, guys ask, “Where are you from?” When he responds, “India,” the conversation often ends there.

“I feel like there is a lot of stigma attached to being a gay person of colour in Toronto,” Chaudhury says. “I start doubting my own identity. I internalize it and think maybe there’s something wrong with me. Over time, I start believing these negative things. I think, I’m South Asian and it’s not a good thing.”

Chaudhury has lived in Canada for almost three years, and, in that time, he’s never been turned down face-to-face because of his race. But the online dating world is an alternate universe where people express things they wouldn’t in real life — and it’s not just gay men.

Muna Mire, a recent University of Toronto grad, was excited when she first joined the dating website OkCupid. She advertised herself to men and women and started sending messages to both. What Mire got in response surprised her: a few curt responses saying, “Sorry, I’m not that into black girls.” Then she noticed people pointing out the same thing in their profiles, too, right next to preferences like “Must love dogs” and “No smokers, please.”

“It’s jarring that someone would write you off as a person without even getting to know you,” Mire says. “Black women look all different kinds of ways. It’s a matter of the door being closed to you as a human being based on something completely arbitrary. And I’ve experienced this from both men and queer women, so it’s not really a gendered thing.”

Jaime Woo, author of the book Meet Grindr: How One App Changed the Way We Connect, says he never realized how much race matters in the dating world until he started advertising himself online. “I never really thought of race as a first step in terms of who I am,” he says. Then he discovered that his white friends get two to three times more responses on Grindr than he does. One day, Woo switched his profile photo from a face picture to a headless torso shot (not uncommon on Grindr) and his response rate spiked. But when guys asked for a corresponding face pic and discovered Woo is Asian, he got blocked, meaning the exchange was over.

Nowadays, it’s common for apps and websites like Grindr and OkCupid to ask users to identify themselves by race — and many do. It gives the impression that race is, indeed, just another preference, like enjoying long walks on the beach. But is it? “It’s not just a matter of preference; it really isn’t,” Mire says, and for evidence, she points to statistics from OkCupid.

READ THE REST OF THE STORY HERE @ DAILY XTRA