Given fashion’s current obsession with the 1990s, the Gaultier revival is not surprising – the designer Glenn Martens has also dipped into the French fashion veteran’s archives for his Y/Project collection, as worn by Bella Hadid.
Given that Instagram is so uptight about female nipples, I think Kylie had to be being a little cheeky.”Īs always, fashion has been here before, first with Vivienne Westwood’s rebellious “Tits” T-shirt in the 1970s (which is worn in the new Pistol TV series), and in 1996 with Gaultier shaking the establishment with dresses overprinted with lifesize nudes. “These women have a better sense of humour than I thought,” says Jessica Morgan of the celebrity fashion website Go Fug Yourself. And as long as You Can’t Ask That asks these questions, we’ll be watching.Kylie Jenner’s selfie in a Gaultier bikini. But others are happy to help those who maybe aren’t ready to identify as gay yet.Īs long as there are straight men, there will be stories like these. It doesn’t usually feel good to be used as an experiment. For some, sleeping with straight men can be more of a chore. These men bring up some good points, though.
“He’s just like, ‘Oh it’s just I finally did it, I finally had sex with a guy and it’s everything I’ve ever…’ and I’m like, ‘I just want to be f*cked!’ Like, girl! Full boner killer, I’m like, ‘Would you like some water? Do you want a paracetamol?’ That was the worst, probably.”
And he’s like, ‘Yep all right, I’m all right,’ (popping sound) you can hear that, like that’s loud, I’m like, and then I just sat down, and I’m like, my lubey *ss, I’m just like, ‘What’s wrong?’” “And this guy fully starts crying! I’m like, ‘Oh my god!!!’ I’m like, ‘Are you okay?’ as I’m still attached to this man. “So I was having sex with this guy…” our favorite storyteller starts.
“They know we know how to suck d*ck good, that’s why they come to us,” one man answers.
Then, halfway through, the dam bursts, and the real answers come out. “If I get in a discussion with them and find out they're married, I always try to share my story with them.” “You know, for a straight guy, I’ve seen him in some funny places,” he says. “It’s just something that I can’t reconcile in my head with, is having sex with someone who if they see me on the street might call me f*ggot.”Īn older gay man adds that he likes to help out straight guys who are exploring. “I don’t like having sex with straight guys,” another adds. “Mostly because I don’t find straight guys attractive.” “Ugh, I hate this question,” one man says. If you’re not familiar, You Can’t Ask That is a miniseries on the Australian Broadcasting Corporation's (ABC) iview service where they ask “outrageous, uncomfortable, and shocking questions to uncover the truth behind some of the most marginalized and misunderstood Australians.” And this isn’t the series’ first foray into asking the LGBTQ+ community questions, but it might be our favorite.Īt first, the answers are mostly pretty serious. Have you ever slept with a straight guy? That’s the question Australian news show You Can’t Ask That posed to gay men in its latest expose.