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Check out latest HEAVY R COM videos, submitted by gay people. Enjoy best HEAVY R COM movies of gay community on !. p Gay fuck This episode begins off super-fucking-hot and heavy, with 5 min Analgayfetish -. Harry Hay had a vision, and that vision led to the founding, in , of the first sustained gay rights organization in the United States—the Mattachine Society. Harry Hay was precocious. By the early s, Hay was out, had dropped out of Stanford University, and had moved to Los Angeles to work in the theater.

His lover, actor Will Geer who gained fame in the s in the role of Grandpa Walton on the popular television series The Waltons , recruited him into the Communist Party. Together they performed agitprop street theater meant to incite people to protest against Jim Crow, antisemitism, and other societal ills, and they demonstrated for the right to unionize.

Anti-communist sentiment at the time taught Hay much about guarding the anonymity of his fellow Reds—lessons he would carry to his other activist cause: gay rights and the establishment of the Mattachine Foundation in While the Mattachine Foundation later the Mattachine Society was not the first gay rights organization in the U. In , Hay—along with the other leaders of the Mattachine Society, including Chuck Rowland featured in this MGH episode —was ousted in part because his communist affiliation, which was deemed a liability by an insurgent group of more conservative members of the organization, including Hal Call featured in this MGH episode.

Radical Faerie sanctuaries and gatherings exist to this day. For a more in-depth look at the early days of the Mattachine Society, check out C. Here are part one and part two. Evelyn Hooker. Philippe Roques made a documentary short about the movement titled Faerie Tales. More on Gerber and SHR here. Another author mentioned in the episode is Dr. Alfred Kinsey, whose work provided talking points for some of the early Mattachine discussion groups.

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The Kinsey Institute at Indiana University offers extensive information and research on human sexuality and gender. The first sustained gay rights group in the U. Harry was the gay rights pioneer who paved the way for everything that came after. So if this fourth season of Making Gay History is an exploration of beginnings, Harry Hay was there at the inception of the movement in the U.

Although that definitely pissed me off. Nor is it because of his tut-tutting, which drove me nuts. We were out of time. And I can see now from reading my post-interview notes, I was also out of patience. Harry was a theorist. An activist philosopher. He was more interested in expounding on the arc of homosexual history starting with the ancient Greeks, than telling me the story of how he founded Mattachine, which is why I wanted to interview him in the first place.

One more thing you should know about Harry Hay is that he was something of a time traveler. He was born at the end of the Edwardian era in England in , but raised in California—where his mother dressed him as little Lord Fauntleroy. Think black velvet jacket and matching knee pants worn with a fancy blouse with a large ruffled collar and a floppy bow. But in , Harry greets me at the door of his broken-down Hollywood, California, bungalow dressed like an aging hippie.

Beaded necklace, ample sideburns, long gray hair, a single dangling earring.