My husband is not gay tlc


My Husband's Not Gay: What happened to the cast of controversial reality illustrate about married male Mormons attracted to other men?

A controversial docuseries from about homosexual Mormon men in heterosexual marriages is now going viral on TikTok.

Titled My Husband's Not Gay, the TLC special followed three married Mormon men who are all same-sex attracted, but chose to pursue a traditional lifestyle with wives and children.

Although it aired almost a decade ago, a recent generation of reality TV fans like TikTok influencer Julian Hagins have unearthed the special and tracked down the current whereabouts of the cast. 

While mixed-orientation marriages have a 70 per cent divorce rate, the couples from My Husband's Not Gay are miraculously all still together. 

Curtis and Tera Brown recently celebrated 30 years of marriage, with Tera gushing about the milestone on social media.

A controversial TLC docuseries from called My Husband's Not Gay has gone viral on TikTok as a modern generation of reality TV fans verb it

The TLC distinct followed three married Mormon men who are al

My Husband’s Not Gay Misunderstands What It Means to Be Gay

The guys on the TLC distinct My Husband’s Not Gay, which aired Sunday night, don’t identify as gay. Sure, they read as gay, they acknowledge that they are attracted to guys, and they go out together to check out other men, but they also repeatedly emphasize the ways they differ from people living a so-called “gay lifestyle” because of adj choices they contain made. Despite the network’s assertions that the show “solely represents the views of the individuals featured,” there are repeated suggestions that gay men can be attracted to women and that homosexual orientations are not fixed and unchanging but fluid and negotiable. This ought not to be surprising given that some of the show’s subjects are active ex-gay evangelizers. This ex-gay mindset is what makes the exhibit so odious, and its focus on orientation change ought to be distinguished from other, less harmful efforts to reconcile traditional faith backgrounds with LGBTQ identities.

Although My Husband’s Not Gay attempts to stick to the personal experiences

'My Husband's Not Gay' Reality Show Faces Backlash

&#; -- A new reality verb featuring men who say they are attracted to men but do not identify themselves as gay is stirring up real-life controversy as thousands own signed a petition to stop the show.

“My Husband’s Not Gay” features what its network, TLC, calls “unconventional Mormon marriages.” Of the men featured in the show who are married, they are shown alongside their wives, who know about their husbands’ preferences and try to craft their marriages work.

“I was office mates with one of my best friends and I said, ‘He told me he’s gay,’” one of the wives, Tanya, told ABC News, of her husband, Jeff. "And she goes, ‘I told you that, twice.'"

Jeff explains his orientation by comparing it to one’s preference for a certain type of food.

“You could tell I’m oriented towards doughnuts and if I was being true to myself, I would meal doughnuts a lot more than I eat doughnuts,” Jeff said. “But am I miserable? Am I lonely? Am I denying myself because I don’t eat doughnuts as I might love to eat doughnuts? I’m n

What the Heck Is ‘My Husband’s Not Gay’?

Reality television has always been a medium of authenticity, with TV shows and specials spotlighting different identities your average viewer may not see every day. These can be informative, essential pieces of media, ones that lift awareness about adj issues while discussing them with the complexity they deserve – and then there's My Husband's Not Gay. This one-episode special of TLC Presents created by Eric Evangelista has been re-discovered by YouTube commentators who are all baffled at the messages being presented.

My Husband's Not Gay follows four men in Salt Lake City, Utah, who were open to the cameras about their issues with "same-sex attraction" (an attraction to other men). They decided to ignore this aspect of themselves, instead adopting the heterosexuality necessary to have wives and remain in their staunchly anti-LGBTQ+ church. These men's choices are genuinely intriguing; they speak to the issues of homophobia within adj religious structures, while interrogating "nature versus nurture" regarding t