Most men are bisexual
So are more men becoming bisexual?
It seems at one point men where either straight or gay. I’ve noticed recently the youth of today are more so identifying as bisexual person (mostly women) but it seems men are now starting to be “fluid” or “mostly straight” or just flat out bi
| by Anonymous | reply | July 3, PM |
So I don’t know
| by Anonymous | reply 1 | September 14, AM |
FF
| by Anonymous | reply 2 | September 14, AM |
I assume no one is becoming bisexual, it's just that the society is getting less black and pale about sexuality so people discover and admit it more. Still very not many out bi men, because the society is more accepting towards this in women.
| by Anonymous | reply 3 | September 14, AM |
Bump
| by Anonymous | reply 4 | September 14, AM |
In behavior yes, in identity no.
| by Anonymous | reply 5 | September 14, AM |
If you made your headline "Hillary Clinton Says More Millennial Men Becoming Bisexual" you could have killed three birds with one stone OP
| by Anonymous | reply 6 | September 14, AM |
Straight men have no sexual interest in oth
How many men are bisexual?
There might be more than you think
Written by Abigail Swoap
A few weeks ago, I sat down with my roommates to maintain our nightly binge-watch of Schitt’s Creek. It was the episode where David (the family’s flamboyant son) describes his sexuality in an extended metaphor about wine.
David: I do sip red wine, but I also drink white wine. And I’ve been recognizable to sample the occasional rosé. And a couple of summers back I tried a Merlot that used to be Chardonnay. Which got a bit complicated.
Stevie: So really you’re just open to all wines.
David: I like the wine and not the label. Does that produce sense?
It was one of those television moments that will stay with me for a prolonged time. Not just because it’s a hilarious way to define pansexuality, but also because while we were watching it, I realized it was one of the only representations of a man with a bi+ identity I’d ever seen in mainstream media.
TV shows and movies have a history of bisexual erasure,1which GLAAD defines as “a pervasive problem in which the existence or legitimacy of bisexuality
Bi Men Are Not Considered Attractive, Modern Study Says
After three incredible dates with a straight-identified female, she ghosted me. I felt blindsided. Everything had been going well… or so I consideration. She seemed genuinely interested in me and our last date ended with an hour-long make-out session!
When I asked our mutual ally, who introduced us, what happened, she told me bluntly, “Yeah, she was freaked out by the fact that you were bi.” Apparently, she was also too cowardly to tell me herself (or to at least generate up a reason why she didn’t want to converse to me again).
I was shocked. On our multiple dates, she didn’t sound uncomfortable when I openly discussed my bisexuality. She even spoke about her time sexually exploring at Wellesley College, when she hooked up with other women.
In the weeks following the spend time, I thought to myself: if a woman who studied queer theory at one of the most progressive colleges in the Merged States couldn’t rendezvous me because of my bisexuality, then who the hell would ever dine me?
Sadly, the gal I briefly dated is not alone in her opinions.
Previous research has established that people can tell, more often than not, whether a man is gay or straight from his voice alone. This ability to identify gay men from their voice has been dubbed “gaydar”—that is, a kind of radar for detecting gayness.
Gaydar
The reason why the voices of gay men tend to be distinct from those of straight men has been widely debated. Since we know that sexual orientation is due to the way that the brain was formed during prenatal development, it may be the case that these intellect differences also lead to vocal patterns and behavioral mannerisms that are typically gay.
Other psychologists, though, contend that the “gay voice” comes from social learning. As men interact with the homosexual community, they pick up ways of speaking and acting that signal membership in the community. After all, we all study to adjust the way we talk and behave according to the standards of the various groups we belong to.
Whether the gay voice is due to nature or nurture, it’s also the case that gay men no longer have to cloak their identity. This is because society has becom