Gay Men's Catnip (Ep. 3: Wizard of Oz)

There was a time when gay men were so besotted with Judy Garland that "Judy" was just slang for a gay man. Josh Trujillo caught the tail end of that culture: as a kid, he was obsessed with The Wizard of Oz, and discovered that Oz conventions (yes, there really is such a thing) served as a sort of meeting-place for older closeted gay men.

What is it about The Wizard of Oz that calls to the gays, and why has its grip weakened over the last few decades? Also: why are there so many INSANE adaptations? I'm not just talking about the creepy Return to Oz or the delightful The Wiz, but also strange phenomena like the sex ed play The Wizard of AIDS, a Japanese version set in space, and a proposed TV series that would have Dorothy working in a hospital. Oooookay.

If you're enjoying the show, please do give it a rating & review on the iTunes store! You might also enjoy my marriage equality show, Marriage News Watch; or my videos over on the Matt Baume YouTube channel. And let me know your thoughts -- I'm @mattbaume on Twitter.

And now, here are a few YouTube clips of interest. Let's start with The Wiz, parts of which I adore and other parts of which I can't skip over fast enough. I forgot just how '70s this movie is.

...and then just a few years later came Return to Oz, a chilling horror show.

And then there's Wicked. The Oz universe sure is a chameleon.

Music:
Parisian Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) 
Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/

I was Quite Happy to be the Villain (Ep. 2: Julian and Sandy)

In the 1960s, fabulous queer characters were hiding in plain sight on the BBC radio show Round the Horne, which featured two squealing gays speaking in barely-veiled innuendo. They were using a form of gay British slang known as "Polari" that's all but died out today.

Decades later, Tork Shaw would listen to tapes of the episode in the car with this family, and he'd hear something of himself in the bookish, aristocratic, quick-witted gays like Kenneth Williams and Hugh Paddick on the radio. He didn't quite fit in at school -- everyone around him was sporty and posh -- so he cultivated a caustic wit, modeled on the Round the Horne's Julian and Sandy, Oscar Wilde, and Noel Coward. He was kind of a young-boy version of Downtown Abbey's Dowager Countess. Despite being a small, unathletic kid, his classmates grew a bit scared of him and he was voted "worst bully" in his class. 

But by the time he was teenager, he was feeling ready to set that aside. "I didn't want to be mean anymore," he said. "What happens if I let go of everything I've done in the past?"

Well, let's find out on tonight's episode!

Hey, if you're enjoying the show, please give it a rating & review on the iTunes store! You might also enjoy my marriage equality show, Marriage News Watch; or my videos over on the Matt Baume YouTube channel. And let me know your thoughts -- I'm @mattbaume on Twitter.

Here are a few delightful Julian and Sandy segments from Round the Horne on the BBC:

And the show Gimme Gimme Gimme that Tork mentioned:

And though it might be unfamiliar to Americans, here's Kenneth Williams in some Carry On films:

Music:
Parisian Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) 
Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/

Camp is like Pornography (Ep. 1: Eurovision)

Jānis

Jānis

Jānis grew up in Latvia with few gay influences. That's probably why he was so drawn to Eurovision, the strange campy continental song contest. Also pivotal: Queer as Folk, which showed him how gay men talk about condoms, and the German version of American Idol, which showed him that there are other flamboyant boys out there. Now that he's living in the U.S., he's making up for lost time by racing to consume as much gay culture as he can.

After the jump: a few of the clips we discussed on the show, including some Eurovision, some gay-adjacent Hitchcock, and some hard-core camp. 

Here are my favorite Eurovision clips. Please do tweet more at me -- I can't get enough. I'm @mattbaume.

 

And here's a trailer for Rebecca. Gosh what a lovely film. Can you spot the lesbian undertones?

And while we're on the subject, here's some good old fashioned American camp: Mommie Dearest and Baby Jane.

Music:

Parisian Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) 
Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/

Welcome to the Sewers of Paris

Ah bonjour, and welcome to the Sewers of Paris! I’m Matt Baume, and I’ve started a brand new podcast about the entertainment that changed the lives of gay men.

We all have a story to tell about the book, the show, the song, the film that made us who we are. And that’s what this podcast is about. Each week, my guest plucks a piece of entertainment from their past, and answers the question: how did it change your life?

Back in the 70s, The Sewers of Paris was a gay bar in Southern California. Their signature drink: the manhole cover. Like its namesake, The Sewers of Paris podcast is a space for gay men to come together between high culture and low culture. Glitz and glamour above, filth and sleaze below. It all blends together into strange, wonderful stories on the show.

Each episode ends with recommendations, so whether it’s a piece of culture you already love, or something you haven’t discovered yet, you’ll hear amazing stories and maybe come away with a new favorite that could change your life, too.

Together we explore such formative entertainments as Oscar Wilde’s opera Salome, the classic sitcom Soap, the erotic Pink Narcissus, camp comedians of BBC radio, The Wizard of Oz, Queer as Folk, Eurovision, Anne Rice, Ru Paul, and so much more.

Each episode ends with recommendations, so whether it’s a piece of culture you already love, or something you haven’t discovered yet, you’ll hear amazing stories and maybe come away with a new favorite that could change your life, too.

You can subscribe to the Sewers of Paris right now, for free. Get each new episode automatically by subscribing to The Sewers of Paris on the iTunes store, Stitcher, Overcast, or wherever you like to hear podcasts.

And if you enjoy the show, please rate and review — those ratings are so important, and your support right now can make a huge difference.

I hope you’ll join me down here in the sewers. Head over to SewersOfParis.com to listen and subscribe. Until we meet again mon cheri… croissant.


Music:

Parisian Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) 
Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/