Thursday 19 April 2007

Gay by Design, or a Lifestyle Choice?

Originally Published: April 12, 2007 NYTimes.com

RON GEREN, an actor in Los Angeles, commutes to auditions and jobs throughout Southern California in a sleek black Mazda MX-5 Miata convertible. But for a recent date with a woman, he rented a Cadillac Escalade because he was so used to friends saying his Miata is “gay.

Martina Navratilova in a 2001 ad for Subaru, known to some as “Lesbaru.”

“Guys say, ‘Hey, that’s cute,’ ” Mr. Geren, 40, said, adding that the comments come from gay as well as straight men. “You have to fend off that perception.”

A few years ago, Meghan Daum, an op-ed contributor to The Los Angeles Times, wrote about a promising first date with a man that never led to a second one because, she later learned, the guy saw that she drove a Subaru Outback station wagon and concluded she must be a lesbian.

And when Joe LaMuraglia, the founder of Gaywheels.com, an informational site modeled on the likes of Autoweb.com, told his partner he wanted to buy a Mini Cooper convertible, the boyfriend joked that he would not be seen in it because the couple “would look like such a gay cliché,” Mr. LaMuraglia said.

Cars are no more straight or gay than cellphones, office chairs or weed whackers. But in recent years that truism has not stopped a perception among some motorists that certain cars can, in the right context, be statements about a driver’s sexual orientation.

At a time when car makers are marketing aggressively to gay consumers and mainstream culture has become more literate about stereotypically gay tastes through television shows like “Will & Grace” and “The L Word” (on which one of the main characters, Alice, drove a Mini Cooper), it may not be surprising that some people make such assumptions about motorists based on their cars.

Indeed, the extravagant displays of muscle car machismo and sensuous, high-design femininity on display this week at the New York International Auto Show at the Javits Center would seem to cry out for deconstruction along gender- and sexual-identity lines.

But to some people, such stereotyping is homophobia, pure and simple. A poll seeking to determine the most gay automobiles, conducted by a South African Web site, was a topic of heated interest last December on Gizmodo, the New York-based technology blog, where one reader wrote: “Since when are cars gay or straight? We’re really polling people’s prejudices here.”

Others, though, including gay theorists, say many gay motorists happily embrace certain cars as reflections of identity.

“People presume you want to throw off a stereotype,” said Judith Halberstam, a lesbian who is a professor of gender studies at the University of Southern California. She drives a black Mazda 3 hatchback that she considers “butch.” But, she said, “If you are a masculine woman, you might not feel bad about it, so you might become excited about knowing how to fix your pickup, or driving a ’68 Mustang.”

“Not all gays want to present an image that is normative,” she said.

Ramone Johnson is a gay journalist and former Saturn engineer who compiles an annual “Top 10 Gay Cars” list for About.com, which is owned by The New York Times Company. Mr. Johnson said that “traditionally we are used to being defined by others.” Driving a stylish car can be a way of “taking control back” and saying “this is who I am,” he said.

Mr. Johnson maintains that “soft lines” and a “vibrant personality” — say like those on a Volkswagen New Beetle — are typical attributes of a gay man’s car, and fashion-forward red gauges and other styling cues, for example, make the Pontiac G6 more of a gay car than its sibling, the Grand Am, because the features express a taste for freedom and fun.

Neither automobile manufacturers nor dealers compile statistics on the sexual orientation of buyers.

Frank Markus, who is gay and the technical director for Motor Trend magazine, said auto companies tend to associate gay consumers with higher disposable incomes since fewer have children (one reason many are free to opt for less practical cars, like two-seaters or convertibles, as well). Tellingly, when the American Family Association, a conservative Christian group, pressured the Ford Motor Company to pull advertising from gay publications like The Advocate in 2005, the ads were for Land Rover and Jaguar, two high-end brands owned by Ford.

Subaru has been the most prominent company to embrace the gay market. As long ago as 2000, the automaker created advertising campaigns around Martina Navratilova, the gay tennis star, and also used a sales slogan that was a subtle gay-rights message: “It’s not a choice. It’s the way we’re built.” Little wonder that many lesbians refer to their Outbacks as “Lesbarus.”

Even General Motors recently began to include questions about sexual orientation on some internal market surveys, although data are not yet compiled, said Adam Bernard, who tracks the product strategies of G.M.’s competitors and who also coordinates an advocacy group for gay employees at the company called GM Plus. Since 2003, he said, the group has consulted with marketing executives at the company about increasing sales to gay consumers.

Lacking a precise portrait of its gay car buyers, the company still has taken increasing strides to break into this market, Mr. Bernard said, advertising its Cadillac, Saturn and Saab divisions in gay publications and Web sites like PlanetOut.com.

Company executives, he said, do not seem to feel skittish about losing market share among straight consumers if gay buyers suddenly seize on a particular model. “I don’t think internally we ever asked the question, ‘If we put Cadillac in The Advocate, are we going to lose straight Cadillac buyers?’ ”

“Frankly,” he added, “the money’s all the same color.”

Mr. Markus of Motor Trend said clichés about gay drivers tend to collapse on close inspection, like the gay man who is a “gym bunny” and gravitates toward Jeeps and convertibles “to show off his hot body.” But, he added, “If you could actually push a button and see what every gay person drives, it’s probably not too different from what the average person drives, but it might skew higher in price.”

On Gaywheels.com, one indicator of actual gay buying trends is the list of vehicles most frequently researched. As of last October, the Toyota Yaris, a $12,000 economy car, led that list, followed by the Toyota Camry, which was the No. 3-selling car in America last year.

It would be hard to find a more conventional automobile.

By ALEX WILLIAMS

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Thursday 5 April 2007

Television MotorQR: Entourage's Lloyd

If you're as much of a TV fan as I am, you're probably looking forward to the start of the new series of Entourage this weekend. It's a Hollywood show that pokes fun at Hollywood life. It's full of hot boys and girls, incredibly hot cars and bikes, and Lloyd, one of my original inspirations for MotorQR...

Lloyd is a gay hero. His ethnicity and sexual orientation are targets for his boss Ari Gold's constant verbal assaults, yet Lloyd remains unfazed. What's more, Lloyd's loyalty and support is what ultimately keeps Ari sane. Details about Lloyd's character are scarce - we learn he IS NOT Japanese, IS a top, and is definitely a motorqueer. When Ari loses his job and had his Mercedes confiscated, he needs a lift home. "I drove to work in an $80,000 Mercedes," Gold replied. "I'm driving home in a prop car from The Fast and the Furious."

ForbesAutos discusses Lloyd's 2003 Hyundai Tiburon:

For the great majority of recurring Entourage characters, the vehicles they drive serve as confirmations or outward projections of their one-in-the-same personal and professional demeanor and industry station.

Enter Lloyd's tuner car. "It instantaneously told you something about him that you didn't expect," said series creator Doug Ellin.

Indeed. Black with red stripes, a red roof and sporting a rear wing, Sparco seats and Veilside and Street Concepts decals, this vehicle stands far out amidst the monotony of monochrome — and conservative, luxurious conformity — that the rest of the cast steer.
We love you Lloyd!

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Tuesday 3 April 2007

KITT, Knight Rider's Gay Car for Sale

from Towleroad 03/04/2007

KITT, the talking car from the 80's show Knight Rider (starring 'The Hoff' of course), is for sale, but fans expecting magic from the vehicle may be disappointed:Knight_rider_poster_2

"Although it cannot achieve the 300 mph speeds that KITT reached, soar 50 feet in the air or throw smoke bombs, key features of the star car are intact. Perhaps most important, the red scanner light on the nose glows and makes a humming noise. The car has two working video screens on the dashboard, and the cockpit features buttons that light up in green, yellow and red: ski mode, rocket boost, micro jam, silent mode, oil slick and eject. Most of the buttons don't do anything..Nor can the car hold a conversation or drive itself."

Hasselhoff outed the car last year at Trinity College in Dublin, telling a crowd there that KITT was gay: "We have some fairly X-rated outtakes on 'Knight Rider.' Kitt was constantly asking, 'Do you want me to take you home Michael?' in that very camp voice of his."

Knight Rider is currently in development as a feature film. You can buy the car for $149,995 at an auto dealership in Dublin.

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Scooter Queers Across the Nation

Scooters were practically invented for fags. Enrico Piaggio, the mastermind of the Vespa, specifically wanted a gas-efficient motorbike that one could ride in one’s most stylish clothes...
The first edition of e-zine ScooterFag goes on:
Mod style is a natural for scooter fags. I’m especially amused by the Euro Mod look, which features tight shirts with bold prints, tight pants, pointy shoes, and, best of all—ascots, those fluttering bandanas of 70’s faggotry. Having been a teenager in the 70’s, I can tell you that no straight kid would be caught dead wearing an ascot, lest they be immediately ripped to shreds as a bun-fucking faggot. It was THE sign of flaming queerness.
I don't know how many Mod fags are still out there, but there are definitely quite a few scooter queers. In fact, a network of queer scooter clubs has sprung up across the United States.

SQREAM stands for for "Scooter Queers Riding Everywhere and More". The club was started by David Westman in Denver, Colorado in July 2004. There are now chapters in Buffalo, Cleveland, New England, Phoenix, San Diego, Seattle and Wichita (Kansas!). The club is open gay, lesbian and friendly scooter riders and gets together at least once a month to ride. As with most MotorQR activities, SQREAMers (or sQReamers) like to start with a good coffee. If you are a ScooterQR and know a great coffee place you can follow this link to find out how to start a SQREAM chapter in your city.

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Saturday 31 March 2007

BiQR Links - Resources for queer bikers

I've been collecting good links since before MotorQR was launched. I'll work on putting them together in a useful format. I've started today with links to BiQR clubs:

Canada

Canada / US
United States
Australia
Europe
Belgium
Denmark
France
Germany
Italy
Netherlands
Spain
Sweden
Switzerland
United Kingdom

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Sunday 25 March 2007

Gay Trucker Culture

This summary is not available. Please click here to view the post.

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Wednesday 21 March 2007

So Long To Gay Sex With Straight Truckers Day!

- Thursday September 21, 2006 -

You live in a really boring town where the only sex you've ever had has been gay sex with straight truckers who have been on the road so long they don't care what they have sex with, just as long as he or she or it is tender and will listen when they whisper their dreams and secrets in the back of cab. It keeps the loneliness at bay, but you can't help but think there has to be more.

"Is this all there is?" you'll say to Buzz, a Portland man sporting a wedding ring who's driving a couple hundred radios down to Tennessee. You and he will be laying together in the back of his cab on a blanket he bought in Mexico. Buzz will be absently running his fingers through the hair on your chest.

"No offense," you'll say. "But all you straight truckers are all the same. You buy me some pie. You put your thing in my mouth. Then you chase me around the parking lot with a tire iron. I want romance."

"Who says I'm straight?" Buzz will say with a smile.

You'll look at his ring. "Commitment ceremony," Buzz will say. "Stephen's a pharmacist, and he understands that I get lonely on the road."

Your heart will do a little dance. "So I just had gay sex with a gay trucker?" you'll almost sing.

Buzz will say, "I'm gonna be driving a couple hundred thousand Pokemon cards out to New Mexico next month. You gonna be in town?"

"I'll be here," you'll say through a big smile.

"It's a date then," Buzz will say.

A date. A real date. With a real gay trucker. There've been so many empty experiences over so many weekends, but you knew that if you kept wearing a half shirt to the truck stop parking lot, one day your prince would come along, and he would cheat on his husband with you. Anyone who thinks romance is dead has never had a slice of pie at the The Rachel Rose Diner & Gas off of I-81.

-----

This story is from the Girls Are Pretty website and is meant to be darkly humorous. I have, however, recently discovered that there are a lot of gay truckers out there and that they are definitely finding each other. Stay tuned for more...

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Thursday 15 March 2007

MotorQueer Shop

I have just set up a shop for items that are discussed here on MotorQueer. Items like the GinchGonch underwear discussed a few days ago can easily be found by scrolling down to the sidebar on the right. Follow the link to find items from older posts.

You can also grab the hardcover photobook Real Men from Ray Dragon. From what i can tell, the MotorQueer theme doesn't run through the whole book. But if it's sitting on your coffee table most of the time, what does it matter?..

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Wednesday 14 March 2007

Meet NASCAR’s Own Soap Opera Family: The Earnhardt's

By Dylan Vox

NASCAR is one of the most watched sports in the United States, and if there is anyone who knows that it is a serious business, it's the Earnhardt family. It may not be exactly gay but for the Earnhardt's, NASCAR is definitely all in the family. Just like any good Aaron Spelling production, there has been tragedy, triumph, business deals, and rocky relationships that all occur under the watchful eye of the media. At each turn, however, the Earnhardt's have proven that they are forever the Royal Family of America's favorite pastime.

As a young boy watching his father Ralph race, and win in Stock car events throughout the Southeast, Dale Earnhardt, Sr., developed a love for the sport that would ultimately fuel one of the most successful careers in the history of motorsports.

In his late teens, Dale began racing Hobby-class cars in and around his native Kannapolis, NC, working full-time by day, welding and mounting tires, and either racing or working on his cars by night. In 1973, Ralph Earnhardt died of heart failure while working on his race car. Crushed by the loss, Dale eventually learned to cope, by becoming more determined than ever to be successful as a driver, and made his Winston Cup Debut two years later.

Over the next 20 years Earnhardt created an empire with and one of the most successful racing teams in history winning the Winston cup a record total of seven times with his # 3 car. He also started a family which would eventually follow in his footsteps. Dale had four children and three marriages before finally settling down with Teresa Earnhardt.

In February 1998 after 20 attempts, Dale Earnhardt Senior captured the only major victory that had eluded him throughout his career, the Daytona 500. The win was the 71st of his career and came in his 575th Winston Cup start, placing him sixth on the all-time wins list. Earnhardt added to his legacy when NASCAR honored both him and his father Ralph as two of the 50 Greatest Drivers in NASCAR history. Two years later, Earnhardt's son, Dale, Jr., followed in his father's tire tracks, joining his dad on the Winston Cup circuit. Dale Earnhardt Junior was the second child from his second marriage to Brenda. Unlike Dale Senior, Junior was an outgoing personality who enjoyed the media attention. He started racing with his half brother Kerry Earnhardt and joined Dale Earnhardt Inc. (DEI) as one of their successful drivers.

Junior was creating a successful career on his own. Dale Jr.'s name has helped his media presence and he has even expressed interest in pursuing an acting career. Dale Jr. has appeared in print advertisements for Drakkar Noir Cologne, and in the video for Sheryl Crow's song Steve McQueen, which pays tribute to the late film star famous for his car chase scenes. He was also featured in several commercials for Wrangler jeans.

Junior was hot, and in 2005 even beat out heartthrob Jeff Gordon for NASCAR's Sexiest Driver. But his public persona had always been a source of concern for his step-mother Teresa who was very involved with the image of the DEI. "Teresa is my stepmother, and I have a mother at home that I have a very good relationship with," Junior once explained to the associated press. "Mine and Teresa's relationship has always been very black and white, very strict and in your face ... it ain't a bed of roses."

By 2001 father and son were competing against each other in event after event proving they were more than just stock car drivers. The major event of the season, however, occurred in the final corner of the final lap of the 2001 Daytona 500. As Junior finished second, his father had crashed in turn four. Dale Earnhardt, Sr. did not survive the wreck.

Several press conferences were held in the days following Earnhardt's death. At one point, fans were threatening to kill Sterling Marlin, who had bumped into Earnhardt's car before the wreck, for causing his death. It was Dale Jr., who absolved Marlin of responsibility and asked everyone who loved his father to stop assigning blame for his death.

After much consideration Junior decided to race at Rockingham the following weekend, but finished in 43rd-place after a wreck that looked eerily similar to his father's which occurred just one week earlier.

Many believe Dale Earnhardt started the team as something his children would someday run, but after his tragic death, the controlling interest in the company did not in fact go to his children, but instead was retained by Teresa Earnhardt who quickly earned a reputation as an owner in absentia, making very few appearances at the race track and granting even fewer interviews. Teresa has controlled everything since the accident, including the rights to Earnhardt Jr.'s name, which she only relinquished to him last summer. But Junior wants more than just his name back, and just like any good soap opera, is prepared to walk away from the team if he doesn't get it.

Junior, who has competed for the DEI team for several years, recently has made insinuations that he will leave his family's name sake. Teresa commented this year to The Wall Street Journal, "Right now the ball's in his court to decide on whether he wants to be a NASCAR driver or whether he wants to be a public personality." The cold comments were just an ongoing example of the rocky relationship between owner and driver.

"The relationship that we have today is the same relationship we had when I was 6 years old when I moved into that house with Dad and her. It's always been the same. It hasn't gotten worse over the last couple years or last couple months. The way I felt about her then is the way I feel about her now. " Junior responded to allegations that his problems with Teresa may force him to leave DEI.

"I just want to drive races and win championships and hang it up one day and not have to worry about whether I have enough money in my retirement fund," Junior told AOL. "Just give me a good race car and make it run fast and give me guys I can enjoy working with, and I'll go to the racetrack and I'll do whatever you need me to do with the sponsors and everything else."

The battle over DEI has shaped up to be as interesting as the war over Denver/Carrington, and everything but Joan Collins is included in the drama. The Earnhardt's have titillated fans with there story for three generations and undoubtedly will continue to do so in the future. Through all the marriages and children and wrecks and recoveries it is clear that NASCAR is a mainstay in the public eye, and the Earhardt's have always been a catalyst for that success.

© 2007 GaySports.com; All Rights Reserved.

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Ford: It wasn't pushed to drop gay ties

Automaker says not sponsoring GLAAD event has nothing to do with Christian group.

by David Shepardson

WASHINGTON -- Ford Motor Co. acknowledged Friday it had dropped its sponsorship of a gay advocacy group's annual event, but denied it was the result of pressure from a conservative group.

The American Family Association, a Tupelo, Miss.-based Christian group, has waged a two-year campaign to boycott and pressure Ford to halt its support of gay organizations and events and stop advertising in outlets that cater to gays and lesbians.

"It appears that Ford Motor Company, in response to AFA's boycott, is silently dropping public support for the homosexual agenda," the group said in a statement posted Thursday on its Web site.

The site noted that Ford wasn't sponsoring the Gay & Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation (GLAAD) Media Awards -- a decision Ford and GLAAD confirmed. Ford's Jaguar brand had sponsored the event in recent years, including last year. The awards are a series of ceremonies that begin in New York later this month.

But Ford denied it dropped the sponsorship because of the AFA. The automaker also said it continues to advertise in gay and lesbian publications.

"We have elected to forgo sponsoring that program this year," Ford spokeswoman Kristen Kinley said, adding that "advertising and sponsorship decisions for all our brands are strictly driven by business considerations.

"We buy advertising to put Ford's message in front of as many customers as possible and includes customers of all walks of life -- customers who have a lot of other options given the competitive marketplace."

Kinley said the company hadn't ruled out sponsoring the event in the future.

In May 2005, the American Family Association called for a boycott of Ford, claiming the automaker supported homosexual groups. Shortly after, the group suspended the boycott after meeting with Ford executives and dealers.

But early last year, after claiming Ford hadn't maintained its "neutrality," the group registered a Web site, boycottford.com, and reinstated its effort.

The group has gone to great lengths to influence Ford, encouraging members to send a message to CEO and President Alan Mulally. It offers writers the option to click a box when e-mailing that reads: "I will pray for Alan Mulally." It urges people to print out its boycott Ford petition and distribute it at Sunday school and church.

Ford's advertising is similar to efforts by other large corporations and automakers.

Ford, General Motors Corp., Nissan Motor Co. and DaimlerChrysler were among 138 companies to get a perfect score in a September report by another gay advocacy group, the Human Rights Campaign, which gives companies a "corporate equality score" on the basis of their positions on gay issues and whether a company "engages in appropriate or respectful advertising, marketing or sponsorship."

Despite Ford's decision, "we still have a very nice relationship with Jaguar," said Mark McCarthy, senior director of communications for GLAAD.

Companies realize the gay and lesbian consumer base is a very attractive demographic, McCarthy said. "The demographic certainly drives very positively for business."

More than 100 companies -- including IBM, Absolut, Budweiser, Motorola, Starbucks, Allstate and TimeWarner -- sponsor the awards.

The 18th annual awards begin March 27 in New York. Ceremonies will follow in Los Angeles, San Francisco and south Florida.

The awards honor "mainstream media for their fair, accurate and inclusive representations of the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender community and the issues that affect their lives," GLAAD says.

The events have featured celebrities, including Michael Douglas and Billy Crystal.

Source: Detroit News Washington Bureau

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Sunday 11 March 2007

Ford Loves Queers a little less

GLAAD (the Gay & Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation) once applauded Ford's commitment to supporting the gay community, but they've been mysteriously silent about the company's dissociation from their media awards.

The car company had been slated to sponsor the March 26, event, but the American Family Association-sponsored website, One News Now reports that they've backed out. Not surprisingly, AFA founder Don Wildmon takes some of the credit:

...Wildmon says he believes Ford's cancellation of its sponsorship of the Annual GLAAD Media Awards is another direct result of the boycott by AFA, other pro-family groups, and many Americans in response to the automaker's institutional support of homosexual causes and ideology. AFA also announced last week that Ford would no longer support homosexual publications with advertising.
Source: Queerty (follow the link to see other comments)

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Friday 9 March 2007

Motorcycle and Firetruck Underwear

What could be more fun than Underoos for adults? (Ok, not actual Underoos because of trademarks, etc...) GinchGonch produces a range of very fun underwear for both boys and girls, including these motorcycle briefs and a pair with FireTrucks. I would even venture to say that they are targeting gay men in particular. Check out their web site if you're not familiar with their ads. I like these so much that we have a couple pair here at home (yes, the ones pictured). I can't say much about durability, but they are definitely comfortable... and fun... and sexy.

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Monday 5 March 2007

Biker Erotica

Let me start by saying that this blog is intended not only to appeal to MotorFags like me, but also to all those MotorDykes out there. So I'm happy to be able to feature two anthologies of biker erotica, one gay, one lesbian.

What's sexier than a hot woman, clad in form-fitting leather, fiercely in control of the Iron Horse between her legs?

The sex is intense, joyful, liberating. The writing is hot, edgy, and uninhibited. The stories, while wildly different, are all sex-positive, adventurous, and sensual.

In Hard Road, Easy Riding editors Sacchi Green and Rakelle Valencia focus on the interaction between lesbian sex and the lifestyles of lesbian bikers. Follow the link to read more reviews, excerpts or to buy.

The Wildest Ones: Hot Biker Tales is editor M. Christian’s collection of 29 mean, nasty, dirty, diverse and definitely HOT stories.
Be warned, while these tales are wonderfully written by some of the top erotica writers in gay literature, featuring well-realized characters in mesmerizing locations, this is a nevertheless a surly, kick-ass, high-octane, burn-rubber book.
In The Road Killers, A.F. Waddell creates an urban legend of the
Interior Design Chainsaw Killer who hates plaid and doilies… In Dionysus Redux, Jeff Mann depicts the frustrated desire of an professor for his rough biker student. Follow the link to STARbooks Press to buy this book - it's on sale right now.

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Speaking of Design...

Design and aesthetic are definitely important to MotorQueers. Well, at least to us MotorFags. And so I refer you to the results of the annual Peugeot Design Contest. Pictured below is the Flux, the winning design by 20-year old Mihai Panaitescu, a design student at the Instituto Europeo di Design in Turin, Italy. Visit the contest website to see more of the Flux and of the other concept designs chosen as finalists.

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Sunday 4 March 2007

Celebrity MotorQueer: Bryan Thompson

Celebrity may be somewhat relative, but coverage in newspapers across the world, magazines including GQ, Wallpaper and Architectural Digest, and television networks including Fox, ABC and MTV, an ongoing design blog on BravoTV.com and the occasional feature on Gaywheels.com probably constitute a good start.

Bryan is an automotoive and freelance designer. He is most renowned for developing a relationship between Nissan and Airstream that lead to the creation of the BaseCamp Trailer, manufactured by Airstream. Thompson created production and concept car designs for Nissan, including the Armada interior and the Actic interior and Airstream Trailer Concept revealed at the 2004 Detroit International Auto Show.

Bryan is a man after my own heart. Not only has he done freelance design work for a coffee house (check out his website), but his blog exhibits the requisite amount of hipster attitude:

Japanese cars from the 70s and 80s are the best. They are horrendously ugly, gorgeous and cool at the same time...... There's something strangely sexy about a chrome bumper, all that metal and glass and not a single air bag. The radios and steering wheels are works of art. I lust after them. The day a neighbor I didn't know rolled up in a 1978 Subaru was the day I became a stalker. I walked my dog Lou two blocks out of our way to see it. I took photos of it in the middle of the night and I searched until I found one just like it.

If you've been reading my posts you'll know how much i appreciate kitsch and Japanese imagery. And i love coffee! Thanks Bryan.

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Wednesday 28 February 2007

Truckers: True Gay Erotica

Hard-driving truckers climb out of their big rigs and get down to business in this raw, lusty collection.

Truckers have long been ingrained in the American popular imagination, celebrated in movies like Smokey and the Bandit and many a country-western ballad. They’re also a favorite queer sexual icon, joining such types as sailors, cops, firemen, and other guys who "service society." For some gay men, life on the road conjures up images of hairy, sweaty, blue-collar joes traveling from town to town in their big 18-wheelers, pulling into all-night diners, gas stations, cheap motels, and highway rest stops for food, rest, companionship — and sex. These erotic encounters are the subject of this collection of trucker tales.

Editor Johnny Hansen has assembled 19 true stories of men who deliver much more than what’s back in the trailer. In one story, a four-way pileup in a highway men’s room gives new meaning to the word “convoy.” In another, a 19-year-old experiences first love — and lust — on a cross-country tour with a strapping Mack driver. In this one-of-a-kind collection, “good buddies” from across the U.S. reveal their hottest experiences on — and on the side of — the road.

That was the publisher's synopsis (just so you don't think I wrote it). You can pick this book up from a number of places online, but i recommend heading to Amazon to read an excerpt.

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What makes a MotorQueer Brand? part 3

Finally, the end of this tirade - the gist of which is that Being, Loving and Being Loved by MotorQueers makes a MotorQueer Brand. In the first post I discussed Being MotorQueer, in the second I discussed Loving MotorQueers (figuratively, that is) and in this post I will talk about Being Loved by MotorQueers.

This last criterion is pretty straightforward - a MotorQueer brand is a brand that is loved by MotorQueers. Interestingly, many brands that meet the second criterion meet the third. Studies have shown that all other things being equal, gays and lesbians prefer brands that advertise in gay and lesbian media and even better that provide support to queer community organizations.

Consider the tidbits in my previous post and the fact that 13% of respondents of the 2006 Gay/Lesbian Consumer Online Study own a Ford vehicle, while 11% own a Toyota (PDF here).

The final question remains, what does it all mean? To be considered MotorQueer, does a brand have to meet all three criteria? Frankly, there are no facts here, only ideas. I propose that a brand that meets two of the criteria should be considered a MotorQueer brand. What do you think? I think that i am MotorQueer and if i love something it's because it appeals to me on some level and thus it Loves and is Loved by MotorQueer...

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Friday 23 February 2007

Audio Snacks 3 to 5

Crazy food is ideal for the road. It's also what Cibo Matto means. This super-cool band was originally formed in 1994 NY by Japanese-born Yuka Honda and Miho Hatori. They carried the food to a number of song titles, including "Know Your Chicken," "Apple," and "Birthday Cake." They also do an AMAZING cover of "Candy Man" which i recommend if you can find it. Unfortunately, they had few videos, one of which is "Sugar Water":
Teriyaki Boyz are a j-hop band from Yokohama, Japan. Their "Tokyo Drift (Fast and the Furious)" provided strong beats in the movie of the same name. This movie thrust the sport of drifting into mainstream Western consciousness. Need I mention that I also loved the movie (and read the required sub-text into it where possible)...? I LOVE this song!
Gwen Stefani provides the last song for today, as well as the most tenuous thread of relevance with her so-called Harajuku girls the lyrics: "Like a cat in heat stuck in a moving car, A scary conversations, Shut my eyes, can't find the brake..." Damn, Gwen! You do have wicked style.

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Thursday 22 February 2007

What makes a MotorQueer Brand? part 2

Being, Loving and Being Loved by MotorQueers. That's the theory I proposed a few days ago in the first post of this series. It is a simple way to assess the success of a brand towards MotorQueers.

Last time I discussed the first criterion - Being MotorQueer. Today i'll address the second - Loving MotorQueers. I cast a wide net with the term "loving" and in this context it is an active verb. A company has to actually DO things to be considered as loving us.

Let's start with the most obvious, targeting the queer consumer.
Some companies offer products and services that are specifically tailored to the queer market;
Gaywheels for example. Motor companies generally haven't tried this approach yet, but they have tried advertising specifically to the queer community. Take the series of commercials that Subaru custom-designed for Viacom's 24-hour gay channel, LOGO.

I would suggest that companies can (even inadvertently) appeal to the MotorQueer without obviously targeting them as a market. Using gay subtext in a film is one way (i.e. The Fast and The Furious). Appealing to a certain MotorQueer esthetic or sense of cool is another (see the photography of David Perry for example). This may be a bit vague, but think about the appeal of good "retro" or "camp" to the queer consumer.

The other aspect of Loving MotorQueers is actually supporting them. Whether it is through the implementation of gay-friendly employment policies (DaimlerChrysler, Ford, GM & Volkswagen rate highly on the HRC's Corporate Equality Index), recruiting gay MBAs like Toyota at last year's Reaching Out conference or providing support to queer community causes (e.g. Ford donating a quarter million dollars to the construction of a new Affirmations Lesbian and Gay Community Center in Ferndale, Michigan.)

Whatever shape it takes, Loving MotorQueers is the way a company takes action to reach out to MotorQueers. However, this alone isn't quite enough to consider a brand to be a MotorQueer Brand. I would suggest that for that, a brand must meet at least one of the other two criteria, Being or Being Loved...

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Wednesday 21 February 2007

Ghost Rider: Decidedly NOT MotorQueer!

We went to see Ghost Rider this weekend and were thoroughly disappointed. It was just bad. The special effects were weak and the story was boring. Plus, i couldn't even try to pretend it was MotorQueer worthy. It may have been all about the motorcycle, but the gayest moment during the movie was when my boyfriend leaned over to point out that Eva Mendes' face was lopsided. Please, don't waste your money going to see this.

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Monday 19 February 2007

What makes a MotorQueer Brand?

Being, Loving and Being Loved By Motorqueers - That's What!

Every time I post something here, I have to ask myself if it fits into the MotorQueer mold. And generally, I think I have good reason. Before going on though, I thought I should explore criteria for making that determination.

The first of the criteria is "Being" MotorQueer. What is Queer? Frankly, I don't want to lose my way in that debate (see Wikipedia & Wikiquote), so I will quote Karl Knapper, San Francisco Queer Nation activist:

To me, queerness is about acknowledging and celebrating difference, embracing what sets you apart. A straight person can't be gay, but a straight person can be queer.
A MotorQueer is someone who identifies themselves as Queer (including those of us in the LGBT community) and who has an interest that relates to cars, trucks, motorcycles or any other motor vehicles.

That makes it easy for you and I - we just decide if we're MotorQueer. Either we are or we aren't. I am.

But what about companies, products or services. We still get to decide, but we decide as a group, and we talk about the brand. By "brand" I mean the symbol to which we attribute an identity. That identity is a result of all the contact and communication we've had with it, our relationship if you will.

Back to the criteria: Being, Loving and Being Loved. I would suggest that a MotorQueer brand needs to meet at least two of the criteria. I don't want to put limits on how it does that, but rather suggest the criteria as a basis for discussion.

#1 Being MotorQueer

To meet this criterion a brand must be motor-related. It must also BE Queer. It could be owned or managed by queers or be inherently queer itself.

Sounds simple enough. I will leave you to ponder this and return to the other two criteria in later posts. Let me know what you think.

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Thursday 15 February 2007

Motorsport: Superbike Driver

This is Michael Hill of Taboo Motorsport. Michael rides a Honda RS 125cc bike in the British Superbike Championship, is about to turn 28, lives in North London, is blond, blue-eyed, single and has been voted the UK's "Best Gay Male Sports Personality" several years in a row. That's right, a professional MotorQueer athlete!

It has been written that Michael was one of the bright young stars of the motorbike racing circuit. He had two North-East titles under his belt by the age of 20 and finished 13th in his first appearance in the National Championship. In an article
published a few years ago, Micheal tells how he left racing in the midst of his coming out in 2001.

He returned to racing two years later, forming his own team under the Taboo Motorsport banner. In recent years he has reestablished himself at British Championship level and has managed to become a regular in the commentary circuit. He has even found his way onto British television as a commentator, had a spot on the popular Bravo docu-soap "Natural Born Racers" and was involved with the film "And Still I Rise". Check Michael's Taboo Motorsport webpage for more info!

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Monday 5 February 2007

Highway Playlist: (2) Le Tigre



Jem & the Holograms were the title characters of their ultra-glam cartoon that ran from 1985-1988. Le Tigre is an American feminist post-punk electro-pop/dance band originally formed in 1998. Their punchy hit song "Deceptacon" is (I suggest) named after the Decepticons, adversaries of the Autobots, robots that transform into other objects including cars, trucks and motorcycles, from the Transformers cartoon series that originally aired in North America in 1984. I am excited to say that later this year Michael Bay's Transformers movie will be launched. Bay is well-known for his extreme high-speed car chase scenes. Fashion, Music, Camp, Cars, Action = MotorQueer Enjoyment!

p.s. Thanks to the guys over at Queerty for finding this one!

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Sunday 4 February 2007

Film Study: KL Menjerit

It turns out that I'm not the first person to publish a discourse on MotorQueer culture. David Lim published a paper titled "Cruising Mat Motor: Malay biker masculinity and queer desire in/through KL Menjerit" last March in Inter-Asia Cultural Studies. This paper was first presented (I believe) at the 1st International Conference of Asian Queer Studies in Bangkok in July 2005 (the next one takes place later this month in Sydney, Australia). Below is a summary of the content of Lim's paper, as taken from the journal and conference abstracts:

KL Menjerit is a 2002 film by director Badarudin Azmi; the title literally translated means "Kuala Lumpur Screams". This is a biker film produced to appeal to a largely male Malay audience and mainly to Malay youths interested in “rough activities” such as illegal street racing. Everything about the film – from the biker subculture it portrays to the Mat Motor lead character – exudes the unmistakably aura of working-class kejantanan (masculinity). Everything that is, except for a supporting character who develops a subtextually homoerotic relationship with the male biker protagonist, whose masculinity he eroticises and obsesses over, literally to his death. Lim’s argument is that the film's representation of the Mat Motor protagonist as unbendingly straight and heterosexually jantan – while imaginably gratifying to the core audience of Mat Motors – actually belies the opposite reality of Kuala Lumbur’s (KL’s) “forgotten” underside, where gender and sexuality are much more fluid and malleable than is sanctioned by society and the state.

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Television MotorQueers: Edd & Mike

Mike Brewer (on the right) and his "mechanic" Edd China star in the Discovery Real Time (a European network) series Wheeler Dealers. In the show, Mike uses his years of experience buying and selling to find an uncared-for classic to Edd for a full makeover. That's when the real excitement starts. Edd is a mechanic-superhero! He manages to take the car from old rusting heap to its former shiny, humming glory in just one week. Plus he has a sort of awkward but cute, nice-guy appeal to him. You can clearly understand what Mike sees in Edd.

Their budget for purchase and repair has grown from £1000 in the first series to £3000 in the current series. At the end of each episode Mike attempts to sell the refurbished cars for a net profit. In the last two series, they've worked on timeless design icons like the Mini Cooper, Saab 900 Turbo and the Porsche 911 2.7S Targa.

So I don't know anything about Edd or Mike's personal life, and it doesn't really matter. It's still a show I'd recommend to the rest of you motorqueers. Whether fictional or real, there are many other TV shows, characters and personalities that I believe appeal to the MotorQueer audience. You'll definitely hear more from me on the subject. I'd also like to hear from you. What are your favourite MotorQueer shows, movies, actors, athletes. This discussion could be a lot more interesting with more voices... Hope to hear from you soon! john

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Friday 2 February 2007

Highway Playlist: (1) Christina Aguilera

Great song, an idol, a motorcycle, some leathers, dirty boys and girls. What more do you need?

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Fuel for the Canadian Highway

In mid-January we took a trip down the highway into Northern Ontario. On the way out we stopped for fuel - Tim Horton's coffee and an unbelievably delicious Breakfast Sandwich with Sausage. Tim's is definitely the food of choice if you're on the road in Canada! As you can see, Canadian Armed Forces crews from two armoured vehicles agree. That is, a bunch of guys crammed into a small space hurtling down the highway agree...

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The very first time...

I can think of few occasions in my…life when body and mind have been so saturated by sensation, tugged in so many directions by conflicting emotions. Excitement reaches a fever pitch of butterflies and knotted muscles in my belly, anticipation has left my mouth dry and nerves are revealed by clammy hands, wobbly steps and erratic breathing.

This is the first thing I read after opening the January 2007 issue of Britain’s Bike magazine. I myself can think of very few occasions when I’ve been so excited and so nervous…

The reason I’m overdosing on adrenaline, fear and tension cracks into life and for a moment the world goes into slow motion – my heartbeat booming like a bass drum inside my head is the only sound as I slowly hook a limb over the exotic seat unit and lean forward toward the bars. This is it… I’m now the first person outside Ducati to ride the new 1098 superbike.

So maybe it's not the same excitement I hinted at, but it's definitely a hot bike! Some might say "the most beautiful bike at the show." Touted as the new benchmark in superbikes, the 1098 combines characteristic Ducati design, performance and performance. Love it.

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Wednesday 24 January 2007

MotorQueer Photography (continued)

I've just discovered the photography of David Perry and couldn't wait to talk about it. Perry is widely known for his pinup girls, evoking '50s pin-up artists like Gil Elvgren.

David Perry's work has been exhibited, featured in magazines and published in books. He lives in Vallejo, California, with his wife Mary and son August. He drives a flathead-powered 1928 Ford hot rod. If you like hot rods, classic cars, pin-up girls and rockabilly, I recommend you check him out.

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Tuesday 23 January 2007

Motorqueer Photography

Before I started this blog I had the naive idea that it would be easy to find MotorQueer imagery. The criteria seem easy enough, homoerotic or gay-themed imagery that is also car or motorcycle-themed... Not so easy it turns out.

However, there are a couple images that we might all have seen and remembered. These are images that have been sold for years as posters or fridge magnets. They may or may not be considered art, but who cares. I've seen them in enough people's homes to know that the images have impact.

The photo on the right is called Fred with Tyres and is part of a series. It is from the late Herb Ritts, renowned fashion photographer. Remember Olivia Newton-John's Physical album cover? What about Madonna's True Blue? Both by Herb Ritts. Check out the Herb Ritts entry on Wikipedia to learn more about the role he played in shaping popular culture.

The photo on the left is titled Omigawd, Lesbians! and was taken by Sunny Bak. While not as famous as Ritts, Sunny Bak has had her hand in the music industry. The Beastie Boys video for Fight for Your Right to Party was shot in her old Manhattan studio and all the stuff in the video is hers. You will also find one of her photos on the inner cover of the License to Ill album.

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Friday 19 January 2007

MotorSport: gays and auto racing...

I'm definitely not the biggest motorsport fan myself. However, after doing some searching around I've found that some of you definitely are. The most vocal of you on the web are talking about NASCAR. While the 2007 season hasn't started yet, you can check out a discussion of last year's season in the Outsports Discussion Boards. You can also surf to Gaytona.com for a fun gay perspective on NASCAR from Betty Jack.

If you're like me and not quite up to speed, look for an overview on Wikipedia or for an older intro article from GaySports. If racing isn't your thing, maybe drivers are. Join the seemingly endless discussion about whether NASCAR driver Jeff Gordon is gay.

From NASCAR cutie to gay NASCAR movie character. In Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby, Will Ferrell plays the title character. Ricky's reign as top driver comes to a sudden halt when the gay French driver Jean Girard defects from Formula One. Ricky and Jean Girard even kiss at the end of the movie.

Are you a fan of NASCAR? Other motorsports? Other drivers? Let me know what resources you recommend. What's your favourite MotorQueer movie? Fictional character? Real-life character?...

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