Robert downey jr is gay

Robert Downey Jr: My bisexuality was manufactured

According to Popnography, Robert Downey Jr. tells Rolling Stone magazine that his rumored bisexuality was something he manufactured:

"A lot of my peer organization think I'm an eccentric bisexual. That's OK. Organism relaxed about sexuality is something you're born with[My bisexuality] was manufactured. I didn't have an persona. I was playing around. I expressed it. I grew up in the Rocky Horror Picture Present world, where even my butch friends turned out to be androgynous on Saturday nights."

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by Anonymousreply May 9, PM

Robert must have been talking with David Bowie.

by Anonymousreply 1February 19, PM

So, was he making up having sex in prison?

by Anonymousreply 2February 19, PM

I thought he was a pass-around at Hollyweird parties?

by Anonymousreply 3February 19, PM

I never could stand his smug mug. He's a disgusting personthrough and through.

by Anonymousreply 4February 19, PM

So you're finally mentioning this now, Robbie?

Too little, too late, Ms. Thang.



BiWatch

&#;It can be attractive sexy [when women come on to me]. I represent , c&#;mon &#; everyone is sort of bisexual. It&#;s not a big deal. I&#;ve thought about it, when relationships don&#;t work out with guys and you think, &#;God, this woman companion is so superb. It would be so much easier.&#; But really, it&#;s going to be the same damn problems.&#;
Actress Lucy Liu, the ice queen Ling on Ally McBeal, to Details magazine, February

&#;&#;if heterosexuality is in future not to be buttressed by religion, regulation and family pressures it will collapse.&#;
Germaine Greer in her new novel The Whole Woman

&#;It&#;s funny. I managed to sit through a whole episode of the modern Channel 4 homo-drama, Queer as Folk, and at no point did I think, &#;I&#;d love to try that.'&#;
Jeremy Clarkson in the Sunday Times, reprinted in the Guardian, 15 Parade. Don&#;t worry Jeremy, none of us fancy you either.

Biphobia? You gotta laugh&#;

Gimme Gimme Gimme (BBC2) is a comedy series by Liverpool playwright Jonathan &#;Beautiful Thing&#; Harvey, starring Kathy Burke as sex-obsessed fag-hag Linda and James

Andrew Scott, sitting down with a league of actors for The Hollywood Reporter, contributed to a conversation about representation in Hollywood. The actors opened up about their thoughts on multiple issues that have cropped up with the problem of representation. This includes questions related to what kind of actors can participate certain roles, and how the media addresses certain marketable terms to particular groups.

Andrew Scott and Colemon Domingo engaged in a spirited conversation about what they think about the politics that has developed around representation and transformation in Hollywood. Scott pitched to all actors present a particular way to describe actors who are also gay, highlighting that we stop defining things like &#;gay&#; and &#;openly gay&#; as modifiers. The conversation also grew to involve who could play who, and the overall approach the industry has taken up.

Also Read: 1 Paul Mescal Film Absolutely Broke Andrew Scott Despite Earning His Co-star an Oscar Nomination

Andrew Scott believes it is time to drop the word &#;openly&#;

While discussing the adven

Robert Downey's Last Party


Institute for RDJ Studies &#; Reading List


Detour, February , by Steve Garbarino

It just doesn't happen. When I set out to gather and interview Robert Downey Jr for this month's cover story, I beautiful much expected the usual, maybe a little bit more. I'd heard over and over again that he was a kind guy, by Hollywood standards.

Here's what normally would happen: We'd meet for lunch, somewhere obnoxiously trendy (of his, or his publicist's, choice); talk about his upcoming movie projects (that's why stars do these things, after all). Maybe—a big maybe—I'd get a comment or two about life as he's living it after the drugs, possession conviction, the days of jail time, the headlines that chased his every move. We'd tie things up, and some handler would come and whisk him away to his psychic or personal trainer. A few days later, there might be a quickie telephone follow-up. Then the photo fire (four hours max). And that's it—that's how it happens.

That's not how it happened, though. Instead, we met at the obnoxiously trendy-but-r