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View Full Version : Gay man wins One Man Army Discovery Channel Contest




Andrew-Austin
07-15-2011, 07:48 PM
I was reminded of this after seeing the subject of gay stereotypes come up in the threads about Bachman's allegedly gay husband.

I stumbled across this show a couple nights ago on TV. While watching I had no idea he was gay, and I wouldn't have ever guessed it. I only found out at the end when he told the story of him not being allowed to join the Marines after winning.

Show wasn't half bad, better than anything else on at the time. Checkout it out if you see a re-run.

Link to story:

http://www.afterelton.com/tv/2011/07/one-man-army-review


The testosterone is running thick in The Discovery Channel's new reality show One Man Army, which claims to pit "four of the deadliest men on the planet" in rigorous competition for the title of "One Man Army."

They're making it sound a little like that Arnold Schwarzenegger movie The Running Man, aren't they? But the men aren't in competition directly against each other here — not hand-to-hand anyway. Yes, they do variations on the usual reality show tests, but these tasks rely more on brute strength and gun skills.

The "operatives" are a weapons instructor, an army force para-rescue member, a S.W.A.T. team member, and a U.S. Military Marshall. It's all hosted by a man named Mykel Hawke, which sounds like a porn star name, but he's actually U.S. Army Special Forces veteran and former Green Beret. He couldn't be more somber and campy and wonderful.

So who will win in the premiere episode? Will it be the grizzled veteran? The gun nut? The cocky, but green upstart?

Here's what I can say: there's a twist at the end that pretty much rivals the twist at the end of The Sixth Sense. And it's gay.

"I've been asked why didn't I join the military?" the winner says at the very end. "And the truth is, when I wanted to go in, they said they didn't want gays. I'm a rule-follower, and I wasn't going to be able to lie. I've spent a lot of my life battling that. I hope that I've changed people's minds. Maybe there's more than meets the eye."

Not all of the article was quoted above, click link to see more plus a quick interview of the winner. The winner is the guy on the far left in the pic.

This story just reminds us of the limitations of stereotypes and of issuing judgments upon a labeled collective.

Rael
07-15-2011, 08:20 PM
There are always exceptions, but many stereotypes are correct, which is why they become stereotypes.

trey4sports
07-15-2011, 08:23 PM
i bet its the 2nd from the left

/stereotyping

UWDude
07-15-2011, 09:07 PM
agenda TV. They are making it a wedge issue. Obama could have overturned the ban on gays in the military with the stroke of a pen, just like Bush had six years to make abortion illegal. But that would have left little reason for people to vociferously vote one way or the other in elections, as it is one of the few things that is debated between the two parties, because no matter how the debate goes, or which way opinion swings, it is harmless to our country's owners agenda.

Revolution9
07-15-2011, 09:51 PM
Saw the pics. What a bunch of hosers. Granny of The Beverly Hillbillies could smoke their collective ass.



Rev9

iluv2viddyfilms
07-16-2011, 03:07 AM
There are always exceptions, but many stereotypes are correct, which is why they become stereotypes.

Well I in part agree with you though stereotypes are an exaggeration of things that are true for a portion of the population. I also think many people, whether its gays, blacks, college students, or upper middle class suburbanites play into perceived stereotypes as a way of belonging to a group. Very sad I know.