While Edenfield didn’t intend to step into adult-film, he says the experience was life-changing, and he wouldn’t change it. Something as simple as me saying, ‘Hey, I’m done with baseball, because of how I’m being treated,” led to that. It’s funny how one decision can lead to another. “I even thought about that question a few times before. If Edenfield was embraced by his conservative father and lifelong friends, would he have still attended the audition?
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Find registration and more information by clicking here. Join LGBTQ athletes and mental-health professionals Taylor Vanderlaan and KC Cross for Outsports webinar: Maintaining mental health in isolation. We talked about his brave decision to come out as a high school student, and whether the lack of acceptance he initially received propelled him towards porn. On this week’s “Sports Kiki Podcast,” I chatted with Edenfield about his unique journey from high school baseball stardom to the world of gay pornography. Shortly thereafter, Kacey Edenfield became “Troy Ryan,” starring in 27 scenes over a multi-year span that stretched from his late teens to early 20s. A few months later, he was on his way to a shoot for Helix Studios, one of the country’s preeminent gay adult-film studios.
After spending nearly the entirety of his senior campaign on the bench, Edenfield turned in his uniform and closed the book on baseball. When Edenfield came out prior to his junior year, the worst case scenario occurred: his teammates shunned him, and so did his new coach. He dreamed of playing college ball, and was eager to start the process of scoping out schools and programs.īut that never happened. The son of a Major League pitcher, Edenfield played baseball throughout his childhood in Tennessee, and unsurprisingly, was one of the standout players on his high school squad. "We will never stand back and stand by! Together for 25 years with two amazing children," Dan Ort-Patrick wrote.Kacey Edenfield was the kind of All-American high school athlete that you read about. Brotherhood."Īt least one of the many tweets from gay men using the #ProudBoys hashtag referenced Trump's debate words.
The SLPC maintains, however, that the group, founded in 2016, affiliates with extremists and is known for anti-Muslim and misogynistic rhetoric.ĭuring a debate exchange between Trump and moderator Chris Wallace about white supremacists, Trump told the Proud Boys to "stand back and stand by." Following the debate, members of the group celebrated Trump's reaction, using "stand back" and "stand by" in their logo and posting videos from the debate with the caption "God. The Proud Boys referenced in the debate are "self-described 'western chauvinists' who adamantly deny any connection to the racist 'alt-right,' insisting they are simply a fraternal group spreading an 'anti-political correctness' and 'anti-white guilt' agenda," according to civil rights organization Southern Poverty Law Center. #ReclaimingMyShine- George Takei October 1, 2020 What if gay guys took pictures of themselves making out with each other or doing very gay things, then tagged themselves with #ProudBoys. I wonder if the BTS and TikTok kids can help LGBTs with this.