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Meet the straight men that make a lucrative living pretending to be gay and the women they date. Straight men who are in relationships and even have children will talk about being gay for pay. Then, one of the most popular gay porn star duos reveal how they got involved in the gay sex industry even though they're straight men.


NEXT: Should You Snoop on Your Teen?

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Well I for one think thats pretty crazy, but if thats what they wanna do and their just fine with it then all I gotta say to them is, GO FOR IT! As long as their like you know livin on their own and not affecting anyone who lives with them like kids and stuff. If they live with a friend or somethin then it's whatever.
 
Perhaps I should wait until seeing the show to leave this comment, but the very fact that Tyra is having a show on "gay for pay" males warrants mentioning -- women who perform sexual acts with women for money (in porn, as strippers, in da club, whatever) are RARELY accused of homosexuality. Girl-on-girl action is such a daily part of our lives that you would never see a talk show about "are women in porn gay?" You don't expect women performing in porn to ALWAYS LEGITIMATELY be turned on by their "partner" -- male or female -- but they are paid to ACT turned on. Why is it different for the men who get paid to ACT turned on by men? Usually Tyra has progressive, pro-feminist views, but by simply hosting this show, she is exacerbating society's male homophobia and unnecessary fear of emasculation. I am very disappointed that a forward-thinking woman like Tyra is contributing to societal stereotypes about male and female sexuality.
 
I watched the show on 7-8 regarding mothers who snoop. I use to snoop to when my kids were teenagers but not to the extent these mothers did. I never read my daughters diary if she had one. I tried to keep abreast of what they were doing, but not to the extend that I did not trust them. Never listened under the door like the one mother did. I think she went to extremes. They did not have cell phones or computer then so you had to either follow them, or make sure they phoned you.
 
I just watched the show referring to snooping mothers. I was a proud member of the "snooper's" club. I was a single mother with a son. Yes, I snooped. I told my son I was snooping. If everything went well I never mentioned it again. I knew where my son was (I took him or went with him) and who he was with. I did this when he was young (birth to high school). I kept close tabs on him. I didn't want any "baby daddy" situations. As he grew I was still "The Momma" but we could be friends also. My snooping wasn't a matter of trust but more a matter of protection and to find out what we needed to discuss.



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