Tuesday, November 07, 2006

Now he's just making stuff up.

He's just trying to get attention for himself and his book. Last week, and about a month before that, he talked about being sexually assaulted at the Air Force Academy. Ok, Reichen, we get it. You have a book, and are looking to extend your 15 minutes of fame.

Lehmkuhl Says Harris Was 'Lanced'

Doogie Howser wasn't outed, he was "lanced."

That's a new term to describe celebrities who have been forced to reveal they're gay, said Reichen Lehmkuhl, boyfriend of 'N Sync star Lance Bass.

"It's to be outed by someone in the public media and to a celebrity, and Neil Patrick Harris, I understand, has been 'lanced,'" Lehmkuhl told AP Radio News in a recent interview. The term was coined, he said, after Bass revealed earlier this year that he is gay.

"They're calling it a 'lancing.' It's to be 'lanced,'" Lehmkuhl said of Harris, who said last week he is "a very content gay man living my life to the fullest."

Bass, 27, said he had decided to "speak my mind" because rumors about his sexuality were starting to affect his daily life. The singer also said he was in a "very stable" relationship with Lehmkuhl, 32, a former Air Force captain and winner of season four of CBS' "Amazing Race."

"People should be able to come out on their own," Lehmkuhl told AP Radio. "I don't know so much that it helps gay equality if a celebrity is outed by someone else and it shows that they're forced out."

"It seems like it just continues the vilification of homosexuality in the media in this country," he said.

Lehmkuhl is promoting his book, "Here's What We'll Say," which recounts his time keeping his sexual orientation a secret from Air Force colleagues.

1 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Oh, he's been making stuff up for a long time. Receiving a free blow job that he fantasized about for days afterwards is still an "antigay sexual assault" in his spin. He and Lance aren't actually worried about the alleged death threats but yet he reports them far and wide to a panting media. In 2003, he told most interviewers that he grew up in Boston, but the book confirms it was little Norton, MA, several miles away, in a trailer park. Nor does he repeat the big whopper that he told for some time--that Nancy Reagan attended his and Chip Arndt's wedding. On the other hand, he can't quite seem to make up his mind whether or not to attempt to continue shamelessly promoting the fiction that he was the only solo winner in the history of "The Amazing Race." While he acknowledges that he AND Chip won in the last few pages of the book, the promo on the interior of the book's dust jacket begins by saying that HE won and alone took home the million dollar prize, a version of nonreality that gay and nongay media alone keep repeating over and over. And so quick are so many to swallow his load whole that few are pointing out that he admits in the book to having claimed that some things that actually happened to others happened to him. Of course this isn't so he can inflate his own image as hero/martyr but "to protect their identities." Strange, authors have done that simply by changing names, etc., since mankind first began to write things down millenia ago. This fame whore's "use by date" is about two years past hairy green mold.

November 08, 2006  

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