Friday, December 27, 2019

Honcho (December 1992), Part Two

Akin to the December 1988 issue of Advocate Men, which featured Colt Studio’s Sam Dekker in western attire, the December 1992 issue of Honcho also contains a cowboy-themed centerfold. In addition to this element, the second half of the magazine (see the first half here) includes photo spreads titled “From the Heart,” “My Favorite Jockstrap,” “On Top,” and “A Touch of Leather,” the short story “The Copy Repairman” (about the release an overworked Assistant Education Superintendent finds in a chance meeting with a handyman), and a gay tourism guide to Germany.

Friday, December 20, 2019

Honcho (December 1992), Part One

Akin to the December 1988 issue of Advocate Men, which featured Colt Studio’s Sam Dekker in western attire, the December 1992 issue of Honcho also contains a cowboy-themed centerfold. In addition to this element, the first half of the magazine includes photo spreads titled “Raunch, Sleaze and Forbidden Pleasure” and “Sexual Welding,” the short stories “A Navy Cruise” (a tale of torrid encounters between marine soldiers and navy sailors written by a member of the United States Navy which may or may not hold an ounce of autobiographical truth) and “The Sting” (about a police stakeout that boils into a sultry affair), and sexual advise from author Larry Townsend.

Friday, December 13, 2019

Advocate Men (December 1988), Part Two

Advocate Men closed 1988 on a strong note, with the December issue prominently displaying Colt Studio’s Sam Dekker – who quickly became a preferential model in the realm of homoeroticism during the 1980s and early 1990s – as both the centerfold and cover. In the second half (see the first half here), photos of Don Jacobs and Kurt Wilde are joined by the short stories “Ben’s Brother” and “Circulation” (which, much like “The Swamp Woggy,” both center around the tenacious pursuits of a domineering older man toward a younger individual), a Poppers cartoon concerning Billy’s inability to maintain employment, a showcase of Rand Worrell’s artwork, and reader-submitted fantasies.