Gay guy picks up young boy in public gay porn video

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Although such marketing activities perpetuate inequalities that favor gay men with erotic capital, it also provides a feasible pathway to gay visibility in China’s otherwise heavily censored cyberspace.

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I argue that Blued and Aloha invest in the production of gay celebrities to make financial returns. Whereas some gay streamers attempt to downplay the stigma associated with online fame, others strategize stigmatized behavior, both to enhance their sexual desirability and to defy China’s heterosexual-patriarchal norms as articulated through sexual censorship. Drawing on interviews with 13 gay men who livestream on two Chinese apps, Blued and Aloha, I investigate how gay streamers negotiate their online fame in the face of slut/feminine-shaming while seeking monetary rewards. These practices invite censorship, with homosexuality classified as pornographic, obscene, and vulgar content in state regulations enforced since 1988. By performing their sexual desirability to viewers, Chinese gay streamers generate erotic reputations that mix attraction with stigma (promiscuity and perceived femininity in that they become financially dependent on viewers). In online discourse, such men have come to be known as wanghong (internet celebrity) or mingyuan (socialite).

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This article examines Chinese gay men pursuing fame and money (gifts and payments made online) on livestreaming apps.

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