ACT now has more than 50,000 followers and, since mid-August, a burgeoning OnlyFans account, where 110 posts have garnered more than 16,100 “likes.” The 24-year-old says the porn he makes is enough to pay the bills. To date, ACT’s video has been viewed over 110,000 times. ACT’s headless body, thighs that stretch into eight defined and divided abs and then into a well-muscled chest, presses up against an unnamed partner’s jock-strapped butt. You can see the fire alarm on the ceiling. The video in question is one minute and two seconds long. A popular account had retweeted one of his videos. He says that when he went to bed on July 17, his account was a fun side project with a couple dozen followers.Ī Considerate Top (ACT) woke the next day and found his 20 or so followers had ballooned to the thousands. (The app, unlike other social media platforms, doesn’t compress images, and quality matters: Penises are variable, but if given two identical pictures with the only difference being image quality, you’d be hard-pressed to find ardent admirers of manhood who prefer the grainy one.) He started using his handle - which, translated into heterosexual English, refers to a penetrating partner in gay sex who, against popular stereotype, has a caring nature - to post his nudes and sex dates because he ran out of space on his iPhone. The alt known as A Considerate Top (not safe for work) explained this to me while recounting his origin story. And some of Twitter’s sexiest alts have huge followings. They’re not that different from the urge to create “finstas” (fake Instagrams) or private Snapchat accounts, pseudonymous accounts where users can, paradoxically, really be themselves.
“Alt” can be read as alternative or alter ego, but the word has its own life as the term for secondary account.
And a faction of gay Twitter users have taken full advantage through their alts.
Anyone, if their heart desires, can post nudes, selfies, and homemade videos of up to two minutes and 20 seconds. (Twitter, reached for comment, directed Vox to said media policy.) It’s a sex-positive policy on an increasingly sex-wary internet. The platform may have banned a former president who helped stoke a deadly insurrection, but nonviolent, non-extremist, consensual nudes and sex videos are fair game, according to the site’s media policy. There aren’t enough surejan gifs in the world to properly respond to Paul Canon’s claims about being “hacked.” But on the bright side, we’ve learned something new about our bigoted little friend: Not only is Paul Canon a racist, he’s also a cowardly liar.Twitter, I’ve come to learn, is a fantastic place to find, store, and share homemade gay porn.
The tweets have since been deleted and now Canon has said in an email to Vocativ that he did not send the tweets in question and implied that he was hacked by someone “who wanted only to degrade our character.”
This summer, a matter-of-fact message was sent from Twitter account: “I am not sexually attracted to colored people.” A later tweet from his account explained the message as a show of support for his fiancé and fellow performer Damien Kyle after he refused to work with an actor of a “dark skin complexion.” (Kyle’s response to requests for comment was “lmfao” via a Facebook message, but he has publicly expressed a distaste for African-American men: He can be seen in a clip from a recent porn reality show, saying, “I am not racist, I’m not sexually attracted to black guys.”) As the tweet drew controversy, Canon’s Twitter account stood by the remarks, arguing that “sexual preference and racial discrimation are totally different things.” Pam, who seems to say that actors who refuse to work with black or Asian models should have their “personal preferences” respected-ugh), and look out for this part with unabashed racists Damien Kyle and Paul Canon, whom Clark-Flory attempted to interview for the article: Be sure to read the entire article here (which includes some disappointing quotes from mr. Pam, performers Diesel Washington, Sean Zevran, and Conner Habib, and me. Mainstream journalist Tracy Clark-Flory has just published an article on racism in the gay porn industry, featuring interviews with directors Chi Chi LaRue, Steve Cruz, and mr.