Gay boar
Bad Gays, good podcast
The Bad Gays podcast is hosted by Huw Lemmey and Ben Miller, who discuss ‘evil and complicated queers in history’. Each episode is about a particular individual and seems to be structured as a pre-prepared biography followed by more general discussion. Podcasts like this and Do Go On, and really any podcast that is trying to explore a topic people may not know about, invariably faces the issue that I’m probably just not that interested. I haven’t heard of Ronnie Kray. I haven’t heard of Andrew Sullivan. I haven’t heard of Ernst Röhm. They’re probably fascinating. I want to know about them. But can I actually bring myself to download and listen to an hour-long conversation about their lives? Absolutely not. So, I chose an episode about a name that was vaguely familiar – Jeffrey Dahmer.
I’m not a big true crime fan. I could pretend it’s some moral objection to its existence as a genre of entertainment, but really, it’s just not that interesting to me. Dahmer has very much been in the public zeitgeist over the past few years, in no small part
Bisexual boar head over squeals for breeding bull
“He became completely smitten with him and jumped the fence to the pasture and started to court him, or rather, tried to mount him” said farmer Magnus Nyman to The Local.
“The bull was very embarrassed.”
About a year ago, Kalle, the breeding boar at the Källunda farm near Käglinge in southern Sweden, spotted the farm's breeding bull, Sune Mangs, across the yard and fell deeply and desperately in care, or in lust, as the case may be.
“He is elegant, the most handsome bull around. The pig certainly has shown he has a great taste in bulls,” Nyman said.
However, the love is unrequited. Sune Mangs is not interested. His mind is firmly on the heifers next door.
But despite his obvious lack of interest, the persistent pig is not willing to let love's juvenile dream vanish. He courts the bull with fervour and every chance he gets, he runs after him, according to his owner.
“His eyes say everything. He is as bisexual as they come,” Nyman told local paper Skånskan.
“If there is anyone with a lonely gay boar in Skåne, they can
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Gay Club is an absolute triumph
With its vibrant rainbow cover, it is hard to miss Gay Club on the shelf; it is a noun that demands to be seen. However, this is not a situation where the cover is deceiving and the books content is just as bright. Entire of character, Gay Club is a charming novel that encapsulates the highs and lows of being a teenager. Packed complete of representation, this is such a necessary book for teens to have access to and brought me so much happiness. I cannot sing its praises enough.
Simon James Green has leisurely become a household name in the UKYA community, known for his LGBT+ novels. Following the success of his first novel Noah Can’t Even, he has gone from strength to ability. Where his debut novel dealt with the conflicted feelings of exploring your sexuality, many of the characters in Gay Club are much more sure of their sexual orientation. This allows Simon James Green a lot more freedom to explore adj, more complex, feelings, and really emphasises how his writing has flourished.
This lighthearted story touches upon