"Is
that a gun in your pocket, or are you just glad to see me?" muscle
men, male celebrities, actors, movie stars, models, singers, athletes,
bodybuilders, - hot guys, hunks, jocks, studs, sexy sexiest men alive
- Mae picks all. "Uuuum...men men men up to the neck..I can never
get enough of men. They are all handsome, gorgeous, beautiful on scrumptious
and steamy flesh. Male muscle is
bigger and harder than a gun...uuuum. I shall update often everytime I
taste delicious muscle pies...uuumm"
John Gavin - suave and hard...........................................................................................
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John Gavin was
born on April 8, 1931 in Los Angeles, California, USA. He received a Bachelor
of Arts degree from Stanford University, where he did senior honors work
in Latin American economic history. Having been born to a Mexican mother,
he is fluent in Spanish. Before entering government full-time, Gavin served
with distinction in the U.S. Navy as an air intelligence officer from
1952-1955, pursued concurrent careers in business and the entertainment
field and accumulated considerable public service experience. After his
service in the Navy he was offered a screen test and signed with Universal
where he was hyped as the next Rock Hudson. Handsome and debonaire John
Gavin's first film was Behind the High Wall (1956) and his first major
lead was in the classic and much beloved weeper Imitation of Life (1959)
opposite Lana Turner. He portrayed Janet Leigh's lover in Psycho and Julius
Caesar in Spartacus. He's thought of fondly, especially by female fans,
for his role opposite Susan Hayward in the 1961 remake of Fannie Hurst's
Back Street. He signed on for the role of James Bond after George Lazenby,
but did not play the part. He starred as an agent in the French-Italian
co-production O.S.S. 117 Double Agent (1967), and later in Thoroughly
Modern Millie (1967), Pussycat, Pussycat I Love You (1970), and Heidi
(1979). He also starred in three TV series, "Destry" (1964), "Convoy"
(1965) and "Doctors' Private Lives" (1979) and made his Broadway debut
in 1973 in Seesaw before leaving show business for politics and to pursue
business interests. John Gavin was nominated to serve as U.S. Ambassador
to Mexico by President Ronald Reagan in March 1981. He was appointed on
May 7, 1981, received credentials on June 5, 1981 and served until June
10, 1986. As ambassador, he headed one of the largest American diplomatic
missions in the world, with more than 1,000 American and Mexican employees
representing more than a dozen U.S. government agencies in offices throughout
Mexico.
I am impressed with his political achievement, at the same time, little
disenchanted as I know how they climb the ladder in political arena on
dishonor and deception. I want to remember him as Sam in Psycho and Julius
Caesar in Spartacus because he comes out shirtless and shows off his hunka
body, very handsome, manly and extremely homo-erotic in Spartacus. An
ambassador can't be that sexy. It just does not fit unless he represents
a nation of Eros