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Tim Parise: Beyond

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Beach Read by Coppola Studios

'I found that I needed a format in which I could test and explore ideas that reshaped the world dramatically instead of merely playing out within its existing boundaries.'

2 images below by Mr Artie

Pushing down and pushing out, at boundaries and barriers, is trait many artists have in common. The restraints put upon us, often from within, cloak and restrict the limits of imagination. The ability to visualize beyond what can be seen, creates not just great art, but new experiences and original concepts. This is true for all art forms, great images, paintings and sculptures as well as the written word. Tim Parise has not just the desire, but a need to move beyond. Beyond not just boundaries, but the limits of space and time creating stories which take us places we never could have imagined we wanted to visit.


The Kihei, Hawaii author began modeling in 2009 after being approached by a photographer about a shoot for Freshman Magazine. The magazine soon after went out of print, so the project never saw the light of day. That setback didn't stop Tim from continuing to model. He worked steadily however, with many different photographers over the next three years. During his time in front of the camera, Tim usually wore either just a tiny swimsuit, often on one of Hawaii's many incredible beaches, or more often not, he wore nothing at all. Modeling naked was initially an exciting new experience and a way to reshape boundaries. When the novelty of the experience, of being naked, daring and edgy, began to wear off, the clothes went back on.

3 images below from Coppola Studios

With his pants pulled up, the number of offers went down. Tim reports that the number of offers to collaborate, dropped to almost nothing. The plus side of modeling less was the time Time found to now focus seriously on his writing. Tim has already published four novels and is currently working on his fifth. His goal, to work on his his written work rather than his body thus far, hasn't worked very well. When people, like pesky blog owners like myelf, stumble upon him on line, it is usually his nude images, that they contact him about.


It was indeed an image, one from one of my favorite photographers Mark Gratham, that introduced me to Tim and his work as a model. It was his passion for writing however, that had me stubbornly pursuing a piece for the blog. Although FH is full of images of men in various forms of undress, it is also full of stories. I would rather post 1 great image and an interesting story, than dozens of hot images of a naked man, if the model or photographer, had nothing of interest to say. Thankfully Tim had plenty to say. So.... after a bit of negotiation, mostly about which images we should use, here is a small slice of Tim's story... his modeling, and beyond.


Favorite modeling experience?
'Probably a shoot I did with Lucas Ferrier back in 2011. It was quick, it was fun, and the resulting photos had a look I never expected. He captured something in me that no other photographer ever has. Those shots are still my favorites out of all the thousands I’ve posed for.'

Interesting stories from your shoots?
'There was one I did with several other models in the ruins of an abandoned schoolhouse which had been a very grand building once. We posed in the empty window arches high above the ground, somewhat like the Caryatids on the porch of the Acropolis. I also did a shoot with a photographer on Oahu who specializes in nudes in a jungle setting. Most of his usual models are dancers or yogis, so it was quite strenuous for me, trying to keep up with the dynamic poses he had in mind'

Next three images by Downeastphoto

'Probably the oddest request I’ve gotten was an offer to play Dr. Watson in a gay-themed Sherlock Holmes film. I may be a devotee of the Holmes stories, but I can’t act to save my life!'


What factors did you weigh before deciding to take it all off?
'First and foremost, whether I would enjoy the experience or not. That was my main consideration: would it be fun? I also thought about whether it would be an effective way of expressing my sense of distance from a society that illogically fears the human form. When I was satisfied that it would accomplish both of those objectives, I went ahead.'

I came upon your work via two of my favorite photographers, Mark Grantham and Mike Tossey, what was that experience like?

'I have a weakness for concepts that allude to Greek sculpture and architecture, and they shot me in the ruins of an abandoned nineteenth-century factory as well, which appealed to my sense that the organic should triumph over the industrial.'


So Why did you stop?
'The work with Mark and Mike was special with a good, strong concept behind it. Most photographers who were contacting me about shooting nude at that point didn’t have anything in mind for a setting beyond a beach, or a forest, or a studio or ordinary room. I’d done those all before. There was nothing new in it. I first became interested in nude modeling as a means of expression. By this time, it had become repetitious, which isn’t to me an accurate representation of my personality. So I stopped doing it and focused on my writing as a more effective outlet instead.'


'I visualize my stories quite easily, but I’ve never been able to visualize how I look in front of a camera as a model. I rely on the directions from the photographer. On those few occasions when I do have an idea of my own as to how I should pose, I have trouble getting my body and face to respond accordingly. It’s probably lack of experience. When it comes to writing, though, I don’t have those drawbacks.'


Have you used your looks, your work as a model, as part of promoting your work as a writer?
'Only to the extent that I use one of my modeling photos on my books and business cards. It’s not as effective a tool as you might think. I’ve had too many people act impressed by my combination of looks and intelligence and swear that they’re going to go right out and buy one of my books - and then they never do. The world’s attitude towards books has changed a lot since Truman Capote draped himself over the arm of a sofa for Harold Halma.'


It is hard to think of Stephen King without thinking of Maine, Anne Rice without connecting her work to New Orleans. Has Maui played a role in any of your stories?
'Yes, it certainly has. Maui was the main inspiration for my third novel, Totum Hominem, where I drew on the island’s history of exploitation by missionaries and agribusiness to create a fantasy about what might have happened to a similar land in a remote past, a fantasy that also serves as a cautionary tale about the future. It discusses or hints at a variety of changes I would like to see made here on Maui, both culturally and economically. And it’s the most vigorous protest I could make against the ongoing pollution of the island by the Hawaiian Commercial & Sugar Company, which is doing its best to poison us while still operating at a loss. For us, here, pollution isn’t an abstract issue. You can stick your head out the door and smell the stench from the factory fifteen miles away. That can have a pretty strong impact on your writing.'

Remaining images of Tim by Lucas Ferrier

You have 4 novels published, how difficult was the process of getting your work published and promoted?
'The publishing part was easy. It’s always possible to find a small press that will take your work these days, or if you want to do it yourself, you can self-publish. The promotion part has been difficult so far. I’ve done some advertising, and I’ve gotten my books into the local library, bookstore, and gay resort, but they’ve yet to catch on on a larger scale. That is the sole advantage that the large traditional publishing firms still retain for the moment. They can afford to print copies in bulk and just throw them into bookstores in the hope that readers will buy them. Those of us who operate locally aren’t able to be so bold and have to build an audience first, a little bit at a time, before seeing the avenues for promotion open up.'


Is there any particular theme or focus that you feel represents you or your work?
'The biggest theme in my work is individualism. Every one of my novels features a single character, or a small group of characters, who work against organized society and overcome it. They don’t lose, they win. They’re not Byronic anti-heroes, they’re victorious! Another focus of mine, a subtler one, is time. I think chronologically, not spatially. I’m far less concerned with how an action looks now than I am with its effects ten, a hundred, five hundred years in the future. My characters reflect that in different ways. As a rule, they live mentally in the future, not the present, and possess the unstated conviction that a single action by a single person, multiplied over enough time, can alter humanity as a whole. Humanity itself is perhaps my third major theme. I try to convey that there is no point in common between individuals except their shared humanity, and that the division of the human race into cultures, nations, societies and other groups is more or less idle imagination.'


If someone is reading this interview and finds themselves wanting to read one of your books, which one would you suggest they begin with and why?
'That’s going to depend on individual taste, of course, but personally I think my second book, L’Affaire Famille, is my best and most accessible work so far. It’s short, it has a lot of variety in it, and it’s based in part on the real-life development of an antiviral capable of curing HIV. It’s more immediately relevant than the rest of my writing. Alternate history fans, and anyone interested in World War II and the Cold War, would probably appreciate my latest book, The Bettor, about a history professor who makes a fortune during the war and then puts it to use changing the world’s political landscape. My first novel, Hyperdrive, is hard science fiction dealing with the terraforming of Mars. It’s also my only book so far with gay protagonists. And my third book, as previously mentioned, uses the history of Maui as a basis for a tale of self-discovery. It features themes that would appeal to readers concerned about the environment, industrialism, religious extremism, and overpopulation.'


Last Week On...

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Last Week On...
Saturday Night Live

Brilliant on the big screen, actress Charlize Theron demonstrated that although she may be a good actress, without dozens of takes, a firm script and great direction, she is really not that hot of an performer. Maybe it was the SNL format or the fact it was comedy, but Theron was painfully bad, even in well written sketches. After a so so start with her not singing monologue, things quickly went downhill. Thankfully, Taran Killam was briefly shirtless. It didn't entirely make up for Theron, but it helped a little.

Big Brother Canada: Coda

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Big Brother Canada is over, but many of last years house guests recently join this years crew for a multi-day celebration of the end of this years season. This image featuring Andrew and Kyle with Alec and Tom from last years cast. Ahhh, forgotten how I lusted after Alex's stomach...

Happy Birthday today May 16th

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Check out which Y & R hunk is blowing out candles today in today's birthday's HERE:

Favorite Pic of the Day for May 16th

Fleet Week: Gregory Stiles by Nathan Scott

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When I think of Fleet Week, I think of summer. Thousands of servicemen and women from the U.S. Navy, Marine Corps and Coast Guard docking in ports along the coast for a brief respite from the daily grind of their regular duties and routines. City streets full of young men and women, all in white, walking the pavement in groups, excited to be temporarily free of the confines of the ship they spend so many hours aboard. When I think of Fleet Week, I also think of sex.


I think sex in part due to history, along with more than a little Hollywood mythology. The heartache of opposing goals, sailors looking for sex, and locals looking for love. Fleet Week is often chronicled through films and stories in terms of the relationships, most temporary, that begin, are consummated, and in most cases, evidently end, over those brief seven days.


The faces on the young sailors touring these port towns and cities, exhibited a youthful innocence and enthusiasm, in part due to their temporary leave and freedom. Below the smiles, and just under the laughs the youthful innocence also covered the reality of what may lie ahead. It is one of the reasons this weeks of freedom were so powerful, and why the sexual energy, so heightened. If during war time, it was a moment in time which no one had a guarantee would ever be repeated.


Model Gregory Stiles blends these mixed expressions beautifully. His face, highlighted by his beautiful and curious eyes, great lips mouth and smile show an energy and excitement for what is about to occur. Looking a little deeper though, Gregory is also not quite innocent, clearly experienced and aware of the raw sexuality and power he exudes from every inch of his body. It is a sure bet, that if Gregory was was one of those men in white, walking the streets during a seven day hiatus, sex would be plentiful, and the unreciprocated love, utterly painful.


When I first discovered the work of Dallas photographer Nathan Scott, I know was in love with his imagery. There was what I would call a fullness which made Nathan's images not just visually dynamic, but full of erotic emotion. They were complete. Nathan filled each frame of his work with model and mood. I was especially taken with Nathan's work with Gregory. The artist's skill and creativity, especially with lighting, framing and pose, complete a full story, not just depicting a happy sailor looking for sex, but a man searching, for maybe a little bit more. Gregory, as well as being incredible looking, expresses through his eyes and face the complexity of emotions that fit the theme of the shoot.


'I love shooting fashion and fitness and also enjoy the human form and what kind of body designs it can make!'


In addition to his work as a fashion photographer, capturing the beauty and form in others, Nathan Scott also creates his own. A professional ballet dancer and actor, I think Nathan's ability to capture such complete visuals, full of story and emotion, comes in part, due to his own experiences of creative expression. A graduate of The University of North Texas, Nathan obtained a BFA in dance and acts when he can, including a small part, recurring as Max, the bodyguard on TNT's Dallas.


These images actually developed from a shoot Nathan had done a few weeks previous. He had been shooting for an underwear campaign for Blue Collar Underwear and had shot in the same location, on the bed and in the bathtub, with another model. Nathan liked the images but couldn't help but think there was something missing. He proceed to set up another shoot , this time with Gregory and his girlfriend,.  It was raining on the day of shoot so they ended up shooting mostly inside and Nathan says the cloudy sky worked perfectly as a soft box in the bathroom window and some of the other locations that they shot.  The theme was created while Nathan was looking for some interesting props for the shoot and came across a skipper hat and a sailor hat.


'I almost bought the skipper hat, but chose the sailor hat, because I really liked it. I went into the shoot knowing I was shooting an underwear campaign, and for some reason I could only think of Fleet Week when I was shooting Greg. I focused it more towards a what would a sailor do, if he could come home and wear underwear like this, or just hang around naked, it just all morphed together and Greg was super open to try anything!'


The climatic culmination of Fleet Week


Just Because: Who'Da Thunk It?

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Next up Jay Z and Solange on The Amazing Race!

Welcome Back Valerie!

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With the onslaught of television news the past few weeks it has been hard to keep track of all of the cancellations, renewals, last season announcement, castings and pilot pick-ups. In all of the clutter, the six episode return of The Comeback was certainly cause for celebration! It is virtually unheard of for a show to be granted a second season, ten years after it's cancellation, but if anyone can pull it off its our very own Valerie Cherish. I have written about my love of The Comeback several times on FH and if you have never watched, now is the time. A show ahead of it's time, in many ways a predictor of where reality was heading. Lisa Kudrow was brilliant as Valerie, a fish out of water, and almost anti Housewife, desperate and needy, both hilarious and heartbreaking. I can't wait!

Happy Birthday today May 17th

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Happy 29th Mr. Hough!

Check out more of today's birthdays HERE:

Favorite Pic of the Day for May 17th

Jason Priestley: A Memoir

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Jason Priestley was an early crush. During my teen years, the actor was a regular part of my television watching and teen magazine buying, then pin-up lusting. Although I like Priestley, there is something just a tad pretentious about an actor, barely in his mid forties, writing an autobiography. Priestley's A Memoir might make a fun read, but the actor's life and career haven't yet achieved the degree of success required to live up to that title. He hasn't won any major awards, been in any huge movies, nor had any love affairs that have set Hollywood gossip tongues wagging.


Priestley had had a long career, a successful one, but not one I would say deserves to be permanently chronicled in print, at least not yet. It speaks to the interest in Priestley's life that most of the press surrounding his book is focused on his brief time as Brad Pitt's room mate (above) and stories of 90210 terror Shannen Doherty. I don't mean to minimize Priestley as an actor, simply questioning the standards used today for celebrity biography's. Now Priestley isn't exactly Snookie, but he isn't Paul Newman either. Priestley isn't either, not one to burn, nor one to buy and keep.... he is right in the middle, he is Kindle. Here, starting with Sister Kate and co-star Stephanie Beacham are some of my favorite Jason memorable moments in images.

Sister Kate 1989


Beverly Hills 90210 1990

90210's hottest couple


Calendar Girl 1993


Die Mommie Die 2003

Call Me Fitz 2010

James Peach: For the Fun of It!

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'Just starting out, I'm outgoing and adventurous and I'm up for anything. I'm here for the fun of it, and to see what this could lead to, got to risk it to get the biscuit!'


It was that sense of adventure and fun that spoke to me when I first spotted an image of model James Peach last week. James has an incredible body and I especially love the beauty and visual symmetry he has created with with his tattoos. Great body notwithstanding, it was the excitement that I sensed, the eager anticipation of a embarking on something new, especially something creative and risky, that had me wanting to feature his images.


The Ontario model's grin and the twinkle in his brown eyes, even when shooting completely naked for the first time, make for beautifully engaging captures. Although new to modeling, you can see at once that the camera loves James, and that the feeling is more than mutual. James was encouraged to give modeling a shot by his friend George Bolduc who James calls his inspiration for giving it a try. 'He made me feel like it was something I could do, and that I could one day be good at.' James says any success with modeling he may achieve will be credited to George and his constant encouragement.


'My first shoot was pretty different since I had no experience before and didn't really know what to do or to expect. As the shoot progressed i felt more and more comfortable till i realized this is actually pretty fun. from that point i found the joy in doing shoots and the nervousness and stuff just kinda melted all away to the point were now I'm pretty much in to try anything in the modeling game.'


It was George as well, who was responsible for connecting James with the photographer who did that first shoot. The first five images above are from that shoot with George's photographer friend Marty. James says that shoot was a lot of fun and that Marty, and her friend Raven, walked him through process, and the poses. The end result produced thousands of images that James and George poured over in order to choose the best ones to showcase on his newly created Model Mayhem account.

Remaining images of James via The Naked Sunday Project

Model Mayhem is a great connector for models and artists. One of my favorite questions to ask models, especially ones new to the business, is about the strangest job offer they have encountered. James certainly has an interesting one. James reports one of the oddest was a request he received to partake in an e-mail audition. The audition consisted of sending on photos of James holding his junk at different angles, and holding beside rulers and other objects so that they could get good feel for his size... 'This came off as pretty odd to me since they didn't really ask for anything but soft and hard junk photos, with only one head shot of my choosing to associate the rest of the collection of photos. Needless to say I did not feel like a buying a new tooth brush just for close comparisons.'


One of the most positive MM connections was that with photographer McKenzie James for The Naked Sunday Project. The decision to take it all off was not really that difficult of a decision for James. Although there were some around him against it, most encouraged the idea and ultimately he chose to do what worked best, and felt most comfortable for him. Modeling is a not a sure thing for anyone, and James decided that nothing ventured, nothing gained. James has also thought the idea of making an adult film might be cool, so shooting naked might be the next best thing, and closest he may get to that fantasy.


'The shoot with McKenzie was fun it was my first nude one and he made me feel very comfortable about it. So much so that I would gladly do more nude work! I very much enjoyed the freedom in the shoot, the fact that he wanted to catch things in the moment, I found this to be the perfect style for me. It was a fantastic experience and he is an amazing photographer, I encourage everyone out there to do a shoot with McKenzie, an amazing photographer and an amazing human being.'


Although like many male models, James has dreamt of one days seeing himself in a fitness magazine, or blown up huge on a billboard, he also wisely to chose to begin modeling with no real expectations of it going anywhere. After his shoot for The Naked Sunday Project however he saw a huge bump in the amount of comments and positive feedback his images received. Some of this may be of course the naked factor, but positive attention, and feedback, is always great. James gives most of the credit for the increased interest to McKenzie James. Although he continues to have no expectations, that doesn't mean he doesn't have dreams. 'I would love to make a living out of this but if those aren't the cards I hold then I'm content simply doing this for fun. I got into this just to try new things and I'm in it for the life experience.'





Just Because: What you lookin at?

Happy Birthday today May 25th

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Happy Birthday Sir!

Check out more of today's birthday's HERE:& HERE:


Ian McKellen in Priest In Love (1981)
Thanks to the original poster at DC for the caps.

Favorite Pic of the Day for May 25th


Reese: Lend Me Your Eyes...

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'Lend me your eyes, I can change what you see. But your soul you must keep totally free.'


I have had a sort of odd relationship with tumblr. In some ways, tumblr reminds me of how I felt when everything started coming out only in DVD format. I had invested seven years in collecting VHS tapes and as much I could see the advantages of disc, I dug my heals in. Blogger is in many ways very retro, in reality it began behind the times. Although it still has yet to reach MySpace status, I fear it will in time.


I have started dipping my toes into tumblr though. My initial nose snubbing at the ease in which you can 'right click, save and the post the work of others went against all the values and rules I set up for my own site. Obtaining consent from copy write holders is almost laughable on tumblr, is outright discouraged with ease in which they allow you to post is mass.


It is that mass that most alarmed me. With pages and pages with dozens upon dozens of images, how is a really great photo ever to really able to be seen, felt and appreciated. The answer of course is tumblrs created and run by the artists themselves. Several of my favorite photographers now use tumblr as a way of displaying their work. Run by the artist, the content can be displayed how they choose, images after image quickly posted, or slowly unveiled at their own pace.


There is friend of FH who has written me often, with suggestions about content, ideas for artists and models I may want to feature on the blog. They often include images, based usually on my writing, of subjects they think I may connect with. A few weeks ago, an image came to me, the last one posted at the bottom of this piece. It was sent on based on all my stories and writing of my passion for images which include windows. I won't repeat why I connect so much with images featuring windows, it is all well documented on many previous features and stories. I will say however, the image at the bottom has become one of my all time favorites and I think if you spent a few minutes with it, it will become one of yours.


'Pretending I’m on a nude beach today. Sun-dried, sandy, and salty.'


The image, a self portrait is luminescent, almost spiritual. The artist and model, Reese, manages to create such beauty through pose and light. The orange coming through the blinds, the specs of sun dancing on his body and sculpted backside are breathtaking. Reese uses shape and silhouette to create tranquil, sometime sad, but always incredible moments in time.


The degree of emotion Reese is able to capture, even when his soulful eyes and beautiful face are covered or obscured, is remarkable. Resse's images confirm for me that a camera is just a toy unless the person behind and in front of it, have a true vision of what they want to capture. The artist's tumblr is a beautiful place to visit and I am so glad I was sent an invitation.


My favorite images from Reese are of course the ones under, beside or near a window, even when it is just a peak. The window confirms, that although the artist may be alone in the room, there is something on the other side which powerfully affects what happens on the flip side of that glass. Whether it be the heat from the sun shining through, the light or even possibilities of what is, and what will be. Windows may reflect and illuminate, but they don't allow one to hide.





Just Because: Oh Daddy?

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Now I am not implying the image below had anything to do with Tatum's future struggles, but it certainly couldn't have helped... Just sayin! I came across the image (equally horrific and fabulous) while researching another story, but knew instantly it deserved one of it's very own.


Tatum and Ryan O'Neal were ahead of their time. Billy Ray and Miley, and Will Smith and family, may be today's most well known celebrity parent/child dysfunctional families, but they were far from the first! Tatum's struggles, and her relationship issues with her father, are well documented and have provided tabloid stories most of the last five decades. They even headlined a failed reality show on Own. Come on Oprah, The O'Neals? Lohan? Really, not two your best ideas...


In all honesty, I have never seen a Ryan O'Neal movie, although watching clips of Ali McGraw emoting in Love Story do make me giggle. Most of what I know is from what I read about his relationship with Farrah, none of which painted him in a favorable light. While researching images to accompany the father/daughter shot, I must say at one time he certainly was purdy!


Thanks to the recommendations of FH readers, I did finally see a Rock Hudson movie. I loved Magnificent Obsession, even though it was initially hard to get the image of Jane Wyman as that old crow from Falcon Crest out of my head. If anyone has any suggestions for a Ryan O'Neal movie to try, I welcome any suggestions!


Wild Rovers


Oliver's Story

Palpitations

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I used to bemoan the fact that Ryan Murphy has brought me some of the best hours of television I have ever watched, and also some of the worst. I have come to a point where I can simply appreciate the great hours (season 1 of Popular) and ignore and not try to love the worst. (season 2 of Popular). I will not have time to really sit down and watch The Normal Heart until the weekend. Good or bad, with some of my favorite actors, speaking the words of play write Larry Kramer, I am sure it will be powerful.



The Bottom Line

Favorite Pic of the Day for May 27th

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