terça-feira, 23 de outubro de 2007


JOSEPH SAYERS

O modelo norte americano Joseph Sayers tem 21 aninhos (nasceu em 15/10/1983) e faz o estilo “mini-barbie” pois é baixinho, tem 1,69m de altura, mas um corpo e um rosto de deixar qualquer um babando. Apesar de ser heterossexual o gatíssimo faz campanhas para uma marca de roupas e acessórios queridíssima dos gays gringos, Abercrombie & Fitch.

Acho que a primeira vez que eu vi uma foto do cara foi há cerca de 2 anos no template de um blig, achei que fosse foto do dono do blig. Depois vi várias vezes fotos do loirão nos mais diversos contextos. Só depois fui descobrir o nome real e quem era ele. Certamente muitos aqui já viram foto dele com os mais variados nomes no Orkut, no Gaydar ou outros sites de relacionamento, ou mesmo já receberam de alguém que dizia ser o cara da foto. Hahaha, pois é gente, parece que as beshas adoram “ser” o Joseph Sayers. Tá na hora de usar a criatividade e pegar uma figura menos manjada, o Joseph já tá conhecido demais galera.





Eu acho o cara lindo demais, o rosto angelical, os lábios desenhados pedindo para ser beijados e principalmente o peito e o tanquinho que são de enlouquecer! Tesãããão! Muito gato. Eu quero um desses pra mim!

JOSEPH SAYERS - PARTE 2

Vamos começar bem o ano? Pra embelezar esse segundo post de 2005 que tal o tesudo Joseph Sayers em mais fotos ousadas? É acho que o Dirty Pearls tava precisando de um macho gostoso pra dar uma animada nas coisas que andam meio fracas por aqui em meio a tantas lamentações minhas. E acho que eu tô precisando de um desses também na minha vida, mas um gostoso assim, acho que só pagando mesmo, e não tô podendo, hehe. Então só me resta sonhar e tê-lo aqui mesmo, em fotos (que por sinal tão com a qualidade meio ruim, mas, fazer o que, foi essas que eu encontrei). O que importa é conferir o material todinho aí, uma pena que o pau tá sempre molinho, só podemos imaginar como seria durão, hehe. Deliciem-se com o loirão, dessa vez fui bem generoso, 11 fotos:











E aí? Gostaram? Então confiram mais fotos e informações sobre Joseph Sayers na primeira parte da Seção Quero Um Desses com ele. Em breve tem mais fotos desse gato por aqui. Não percam!
That's it!

Unwinding Joseph Sayers

Há umas semanas atrás, o Motto falou-me deste modelo que já fez alguns trabalhos para a Abercrombie&Fitch, de nome Joseph Sayers, e que teve uma curta passagem pelo porno gay antes de enveredar pela carreira de modelo (como quase todos os outros da A&F). Na altura, o rapaz "ficou-me na retina" e depois de algum tempo de pesquisa na internet encontrei algumas fotos dele. Gosto particularmente da foto das calças vermelhas e a do ursinho.





Joseph Sayers


O modelo mais quente dos Estados Unidos conversa com o Mix Brasil


Joseph Sayers tem 23 anos, seu signo é libra e está solteiro. O modelo, agenciado pela Major Model Management é conhecido pelos catálogos da Abercrombie & Fitch, com fotos de Bruce Weber, já trabalhou com vários outros fotógrafos e foi capa de pencas de revistas importantes. No curriculo do rapaz tem reFResh, Out, Pref... Descubra tudo sobre esse rapaz, um dos modelos mais quentes dos Estados Unidos, na entrevista exclusiva que o gato deu ao Mix Brasil, em Nova York.

. É verdade que você começou sua carreira fazendo ensaios nu?
Não, não comecei assim. Esse é um julgamento comum, embora errado. Já fotografei nu no começo, mas o título "pornô gay" vem da interpretação de quem vê. Não me arrependo das fotos, mas pretendo comprar o direitos para que se torne ilegal veiculá-las.

. Você só tem 1,68 m. Não é uma altura muito apreciada entre modelos?
É, é verdade. Não sei o quanto é difícil ter minha altura. Acho que o maior desafio é tentar enterrar uma bola na cesta de basquete ou pegar o cereal na prateleira do topo. Fora isso, não percebo minha altura e não me sinto diferente dos que são mais altos do que eu.

. De que fotógrafos você gosta? Como é trabalhar com Joe Oppedisano?
Não vou dizer quais eu gosto, por que posso acabar deixando alguém de fora. Joe Oppedisano é um fotógrafo incrível e uma pessoa ainda mais incrível. Temos uma química ótima e as coisas sempre ficam melhores do que planejávamos. Trabalhar com ele é como ser, ao mesmo tempo, um objeto e um fotógrafo. Ele te mostra uma pose e você tenta ao máximo imitá-lo.

. Você é um símbolo sexual absoluto entre gays. Como se sente nesta posição?
Eu sou, honestamente, heterossexual. Mas fico muito confortável com homens gays. Nossas opções sexuais podem ser diferentes, mas estamos aqui pela mesma razão... Só para viver. Se você é gay, é gay. Não há nada além disso. Joe Oppedisano é gay e eu sou hétero, e somos ótimos amigos. A preferência sexual não afeta a relação que você tem com as pessoas de que gosta. O Joe é família pra mim.

. Ouvi dizer que você não gosta de ser qualificado como modelo. Você tem algum outro projeto, estudos?
Atualmente sou um estudante de medicina, tentando entrar na área. Não me considero um modelo, por que não acredito que o simples fato de ter uma foto sua tirada e publicada mereça este título.

. Como você mantém a forma?
Não fico parado e pratico muito kickboxing.

. O que você acha do rótulo metrosexual? Você se considera metrosexual?
Adimito que já fui metrosexual. Eu era muito obcecado. Mas eu cresci e hoje percebo que sou quem sou e não preciso ficar impressionando ninguém. Se as pessoas não conseguem aceitar isso, então a perda é delas.

. Qual tipo de mulher te atrai?
Nenhum tipo específico. Eu consigo achar beleza em tudo e em todos.

. Quando pretende se aposentar da carreira de modelo?
Vou me aposentar quando ficar de saco cheio e sentir que já tive o suficiente dessa indústria.

. O que é bom e o que é ruim na vida de modelo?
Ser julgado pela sua aparência é um gigantesca negativa.






VEJA NO ÁLBUM






















Joseph Sayers nasceu em Jamestown, Nova York, em 15/10/1983 como o mais novo de quatro irmãos. Quando jovem, Joseph se envolveu com quase todos os esportes. Futebol, futebol americano, baseball, luta livre, entre outros. Foi apenas quando suas irmãs começaram a participar de concursos de beleza que ele resolver tentar a carreira de modelo.

Apenas um ano após sua descoberta, Joseph Sayers se tornou um dos modelos mais quentes dos Estados Unidos. Apesar de sua pouca altura (1m69), ele teve grande sucesso no mercado. Mais conhecido por suas poses para os catálogos da Abercrombie & Fitch, com fotos de Bruce Weber, Joseph trabalhou com inúmeros fotógrafos. Hoje, Sayers é agenciado pela Major Model Management.

Ele é versátil - profissionalmente, claro- pode vir super sexy e maduro em uma imagem e angelical em outra. Um vulcão em um momento, um garoto indefeso na página ao lado. As fotos escolhidas para essa matéria mostram essa versatilitade todo do rapaz. Um ícone de seu tempo.













By Sean Bickerton | July 13, 2005Email Article
Within just one year of being discovered on ModelLaunch.com, Joseph Sayers' remarkable face went on to grace the covers of Contents, Männer, Genre and reFRESH magazines, following a celebrated nude centerfold for A&F Quarterly shot by Bruce Weber that launched his career. In addition, he was photographed by Mattias Vriens for Arena Homme Plus and Todd Oldham for Out Magazine.

Since then he has also fronted notable campaigns for Polo Underwear shot by Richard Phibbs, DSquared photographed by Steven Klein, and Macy's. He was memorably photographed by Steven Klein wrestling with Lucas Kerr for French Vogue, in addition to editorials in Gentlemen's Option (shot by David Byun), Artistic Tile (Joseph Oppedisano), Men's Journal (Aaron Goodman), Numero (Alexei Hay), Instinct, CosmoGirl, XY and Blue magazines. He has also shot with Randall Mesdon and Tony Duran to round out a stellar list of photographers, and appeared in a TV commercial for ESPN; an in-store video for Redken; and a music video for the Pet Shop Boys.

But Joseph's journey from a small town in upstate New York to the studios of New York's leading lensmen was never easy. His initial path was blocked by a photographer known as Edelson who actively tried to sabotage Joseph's career. And as if that weren't enough to deal with when you're just starting out, Joseph stands just 5' 6" tall in an industry that demands six feet in height just to get one foot in the door.

This then is the story of how Joseph Sayers used all of the fighting skills he learned as a boy to overcome great odds — proving his doubters in the industry wrong and vanquishing a miscreant photographer in the process. For ModelLaunch, this story began in the winter of 2001, when a photographer posted headshots of a stunning, 18 year-old blond in the ModelLaunch Forum. Even in those badly-lit, amateurish images, Joseph's natural beauty shone through and the images created a firestorm of interest in the newcomer.

The images also engendered fierce objections to the photographer's plan to submit Joseph for a one-off shoot with Playgirl, with the potential to wreck any chance of a career in fashion before it got started. As a result of the discussion, Joseph got in touch with us to ask for advice and we helped him find a reputable agent he could trust. The rest of the story is Joseph's to tell in his own words. This article is based on two separate interviews with Joseph, held at our offices in New York.

Hi Joseph, let's start right at the beginning. Where were you born?

In Jamestown, NY, up in the Great Lakes region of the state.

What is it like?

It's a small community. Not a hick town, but small enough that everyone knows everybody and word travels quickly. It's also a center for snowbirds, so in the winter it's dead and overrun in the summer.

How many kids in your family?

Four. I'm the baby. I have two older sisters and an older brother.

What were those early years like for you?

I guess you could say that my childhood wasn't so great. I saw some bad things when I was younger and so I guess I went on the defense and started looking out for the weak instead of just letting things ride. Especially for my sisters - I didn't want them to take crap from anybody.

What did you do for fun?

Soccer. I played soccer all spring, summer and fall, and I got into a premier league.

How old were you when you started?

I started playing soccer the same age I started wrestling, which was three and-a-half. The youngest age group was five years old so I was playing in my brother's age group. It never really seemed like I was two years younger than them, I always felt I was at their level.

It sounds like the thing you held onto as a kid was that you excelled physically — what else did you play?

Soccer, football, baseball, track ... and I will also admit to you that I did male cheerleading. (laughs) I actually learned a lot from it. I developed more flexibility and gained a lot of agility that carries over to me today. And communication skills. I learned to put myself out there, so I'll admit to that.

It seems like cheerleading might be a natural extension of participating in school sports and school spirit ...?

(JS cuts me off:) It had nothing to do with school spirit. Just like most stories it began with this girl. I had a crush on a girl who was a cheerleader, and she was begging me to be on the team because the opposing school had a guy on it. I didn't want to do it because I was practically living wrestling at the time. But she called me persistently, practically crying her eyes out. So finally I just said 'Fine, I'll do it.'

Of all the sports you were involved in, what did you like the most?

I really liked wrestling. Because it was individual. If you lost, it was really you. It wasn't like soccer where you had to pass to a buddy, it was just all you out there on the mat.

So you're basically competing with yourself?

Yes, it's hard to ever be satisfied with your performance. I can only think of a few times when I was satisfied. There's always a higher standard to attain ... first there's Divisionals, then Sectionals, then States, Regionals, Nationals, World, Universe ...

Did you ever reach a point where you felt you could stop fighting?

I kind of got freed in the ninth grade, when I realized I'd become a pretty outstanding athlete. That gave me a lot more confidence in my abilities. Not so much in myself, I have to say, but my abilities. And then I got hurt again ... I broke my jaw.

How did that happen?

Well, it was at a party down at a house in North Carolina and there was a situation where I was forced to defend my friend and um, while I was pulling this guy off of him I got hit in the face with a lead pipe. And that's when I lost my temper and that's when other things happened and then I got pistol-whipped with a gun that guy had. It was quite the scene. It took three hours before I even realized I had a broken jaw, there was so much adrenaline pumping through my system. I think I have five plates in my jaw now. Five plates and eight screws. It was an experience.

Can I ask you, when you were younger, did you think you were good-looking?

I thought I was a pretty good-looking guy and I did go to a few model searches.

Did you get that sense from how girls responded to you or from your friends or ...?

Actually from my Mom and my sisters. My sisters were always involved in pageants and they looked like they were having fun. So I went to one of the model searches and wasted my money. They all told me I was way too short. So it was a breath of fresh air to come to New York and find the agency I'm with to this day (Major Model Management). Every agency but Major said my height was an issue.

I guess the time I actually started to get confidence in myself is when I got Abercrombie & Fitch with Bruce (Weber). That was a big turning point in my life because I suddenly realized 'Hey, I'm not just the person I used to think I was, there's a lot more to me.' And that's where having Jason (Kanner of Major Models) is great because he throws it at me. He tells me how it is. He tells me if I'm looking good today or if my hair looks like crap. He's honest with me. He's a straight-shooter. His honesty for an average person would seem brutal, but I accept it because it's real.

How did you look at modeling? As a ticket out of your hometown?

I think I saw it more as a hobby or something different to do. I'm always up for a challenge. And this was something I saw as a challenge. There's really not much I can control. And that's why it can be kind of strenuous on you. A lot of it's the market, timing, luck, opportunity, relationships with clients, with your agent ... the reason I'm still here is because I really feel there's more for me to do yet. So I will probably stick it out until I'm riding a dead horse. (laughs)

So the first thing that happened as far as modeling goes is that a photographer approached you about doing a paid photo shoot, is that right?

Yes. I had no ambition about it at all. I just saw it as a way to get paid once and that was it.

So what turned it into a bad situation for you?

Basically, the fact I trusted him and he was trying to use me. But then after he posted my photographs on the ModelLaunch forum, I started reading what other guys were saying, and some of them were addressing me directly. And then I started thinking: 'hmmm, maybe these other guys are right.' So I decided I would start promoting myself a bit and start answering the people in the forum directly. And when I started answering people, everyone was saying 'Hey, you could turn this into a career.'

Did that surprise you?

Completely. I was very surprised. I thought it would just be a one-time deal and that would be it. I've told Jason this ... if it wasn't for ModelLaunch I would never have come to New York. I probably just would have stayed home watching cartoons or something. (laughs).

So it opened your eyes a bit to what might be possible for you?

Yeah. I think it showed me it's OK to color outside the lines.

Then a couple of managers approached you through the forum, is that right?

Yes. But the photographer was trying to maintain control and capitalize off me, he didn't want to lose control.

How did you ultimately decide who you could trust?

I tried to figure out who had the least hostile intentions. It took me a while to figure out who had truly genuine goals. Like, Adam (Silver) at Strengthnet (now Silver Model Management) offered to fly me down to New York to meet with him, but I told him I wouldn't be comfortable flying down by myself. So he told me it would be fine to bring someone down with me. So my sister flew down with me, and the fact he agreed to that made me pretty comfortable with him. I didn't feel that I was being forced to do anything. He prompted me through a photo shoot, and he told me to just be myself. There are a few posed pictures, but a lot of the photographs were just me hanging out and being relaxed.

So trust was very important to you?

I think having a good relationship with your agent or your agency is one of the most important things. And I could tell right away that Adam respected me as soon as I met him. You don't necessarily have to go out for drinks or be best friends, but you have to have a mutual respect. And that's what's most important. Everybody clashes at times, so there are times you may not feel like talking to them, but what they do for you, what you do for them, what they say on your behalf ... it all has to be mutual.

Now, I don't want to sound homophobic, but I grew up in a small town and it was kind of strange being around homosexuals for the very first time in my life. So when I got down to New York I was intimidated at first. But when I realized they weren't just looking at me like dessert ... (at this point in the interview I break out laughing) ... "no really," Joseph says very earnestly, "that's honestly what I thought. That's what I expected right from the time I was fourteen or fifteen years old. But when I got to New York I was surprised. Then later I found out my friend Matt was gay - I didn't have the slightest clue. I never would have guessed. Actually, that turned out to be true for about 3/4 of the guys that were gay that I knew. I just didn't realize it at the time."

What was next?

The very next thing I shot was the boxing story with Hudson Wright at Gleason's Gym. Then I did the Pet Shop Boys video.

How did you get that?

Bruce Weber was directing the video and called Adam to ask if I was available.

What was the video shoot like?

It was all one long day, about thirteen hours. But it was pretty fun. I met a lot of people that I still run into. I worked with Ralph, who did Polo Purple Label and owns his own music company; Dayton, who had a feature article about him in Out; and Shane. He was a wrestler too, so we had a lot to talk about.

How many guys on the shoot?

I think there were six. I wore this wierd paper suit and angel wings that were made for a really skinny Victoria's Secret model, so it was pretty different. Plus I got to stay in a nice hotel and the food was good, so it was all really cool.

Was Bruce very different to work with as a video director compared with photographing you for A&F?

I'd have to say yes. Behind a video camera Bruce is a lot more spontaneous. Like he'll just suddenly tell all the photographers to come over and start shooting this one thing, even if you're doing nothing, like once I was just tying my shoe, once I was brushing my teeth. He tended to set the stage and let you create the moments. It was totally spontaneous.

Was that when you moved to New York?

I came to New York and started doing castings. My first casting was for Arnaldo Anaya-Lucca and I met Jim Streacker, Art Director for Bloomingdales. My second casting was for Maury at Innovative Artists, my third was for Cosmo Girl, and the fourth casting was for (photograher) Joe Lalli -- we have a favorite movie in common, which is Fight Club, so we got along great. It was a really hectic day because I didn't know the city at all.

But I got a very good feeling from my first week out here. Especially because I was sent to clients I'd heard of: Oscar de la Renta, Macy's, Seventeen, Men's Health, Men's Journal ... I was like 'Holy Cow. This is real.' But I still don't know how I get the jobs I do. The first job I landed with Major was for a Loehmann's catalogue with Joseph Oppedisano. We were shooting in Central Park. It was me and Jack Barley from IMG and a bunch of girls, and I was really nervous because they were such good-looking women and I'm just like some kid who came to the city. And so I asked Joseph 'How did I get this job?', because I didn't go to a casting for it. And he told me: 'I just booked you off your comp card.' And then I worked with Joseph again for Genre.

What was that like?

Joseph is awesome. If you guys ever interview him you should ask him what's the superstition about his T-shirt. It's this old Black Dog T-shirt. Everybody who shoots with him knows exactly what I'm talking about. I mean, this thing is busted. It's so full of holes it's about to tear in places. He is so attached to that thing -- we were leaving New Jersey after the Genre shoot and when he thought that T-shirt was left behind he was going to turn around and drive an hour back to get it until a stylist found it in one of the bags.

That's funny. What was the shoot with Todd Oldham for Out like?

Now Todd Oldham is very lush. He likes personality. And he's very artistic. He'll label something, like he'll take your comp card and put side notes like what colors to use that will complement the person's skin. He's very meticulous. And when he's behind the camera and you're on the other side, it's just ultimate. He's acting and directing at the same time. He's telling you to feel this emotion. He'll say 'Cocky. Sneer. Stick your tongue out!' or something. He's very specific, but he likes your personality to show.

So he's constantly shaping what's happening and giving you cues?

In acting we call it a premise. He'll give you a premise and you just go out there and do it. You just feel it. My acting experience has helped me a lot because there have been modeling situations where I've had to feel something, and even if I wasn't in the mood I had to totally act as though I was. So acting has really helped me. And I realized that most when I was working with Todd Oldham.

What came next for you?

After Out, I shot Arena Homme Plus with Mattias Vriens. That was a lot of fun. He knew exactly what he's looking for. One thing, though — he always uses these boxes he has. You'd think he'd be sitting up in a nice chair or something, but he's sitting on a busted, falling-apart, cracked, splintered wooden box. I don't know where he found those boxes, or why he doesn't fix them but he uses the same ones every time.

What was the story?

There was a different model selected for each designer's clothes for the collections, and I got to represent Giorgio Armani. It's probably the first time I ever wore a suit in my life. It was really high fashion — I didn't have anything else on, just the jacket and the pants. I'm more used to just wearing urban wear so it was a good change and a great addition to my book.

Did you see yourself differently after you looked at those images?

Not really, but as soon as I got it I called Jason. I was all excited and he was like 'get a whole bunch of them' so I got a stack of them. He was really excited because the first four models were all from Major — John, Tony, Ryan and myself — and we all got great tears out of it. Then, two weeks later I shot Men's Journal with Aaron Goodman. The story was 'How to Add 10 Years Onto Your Life.' Then in July, I shot for Männer and got the cover.

That's great Joseph. Nobody gets covers anymore. Especially men.

Yeah, I've been lucky. I was supposed to get the cover of Out Magazine too, but they decided to go with a celebrity instead. But I did get the Table of Contents. (laughs) Then in September I met up with Steven Klein and he put me on option for DSquared. I got to do that shoot with my room-mate and best friend Tony D'Angelo, so that was a real fun experience. I'm used to photographers shooting at a fast pace, randomly trying to catch the good moments. But Steven is very artistic and he really gets into it, drawing everything out first on a storyboard.

What was the theme?

Backyard wrestling. And the entire night before, Gabe & Steve were up all night watching 'Backyard Wrestling' to prepare. You could see the shadows under their eyes the next day. But as soon as they arrived at the shoot they knew exactly what they were looking for. It was very deliberate and kind of slow. He took his time getting everything set up, and he took a lot of Polaroids to make sure everything was perfect first. Then he'd shoot a few rolls of film. But he really didn't have to use much film because he already knew exactly what he was going for.

What else have you done?

I shot this TV commercial for ESPN. I play a surfer in a black wetsuit running across camera with a beer and a surfboard and later hanging onto a maypole singing and dancing. It's really weird stuff. It's ESPN stuff. Something that doesn't make sense but is funny.

It sounds like you enjoy the acting aspect of this.

So far it's more like being a mime. (laughs). But I've taken some classes and hopefully it's going to come eventually, so I'm taking it in stride. I'm trying to relax and I'm trying to make myself more animated. There are still emotions that I don't display. It's about releasing and letting yourself go - on a schedule though. Like, you have to make yourself be something, like crying. That's going to take time. It's more of an instinct than a skill though. You can acquire it, but it's more of an instinct. You have to just do it. Acting could be in my future, but it just depends.

What would you say has surprised you the most about this whole business?

I thought everything was very quick. You get in, have an overnight success and then you're out. But it's not like that. You really have to work at it. You have to develop yourself. You have to develop an image. You have to get on people's radar screens. Look, I'm just a 19 year-old child. (laughs) I can cook for myself, I clean for myself, but I'm still a 19 year-old child, and even so, I didn't expect to have this long a run.

OK, so now that you're a big fashion model, what are you wearing?

(laughs) Black shoes and white socks which is against the law ... (we both laugh because I'm committing the same crime) ... H&M Jeans, a Gap white Tshirt, CK Briefs and a Levi's vintage jacket.

Any tunes you're listening to these days?

I listen to R&B. I love Boyz II Men. When I go out I like something I can move to. And I move like a snake so I like something that's really slimy and sexual. (laughs)

I ask all the guys this, but you especially, given that you were discovered in our forum ... What's your take on ModelLaunch?

ModelLaunch is actually something positive in this industry. You can get your face in front of people that can do something for you. It's a very good thing. There's the forum, where people meet and talk and you can get advice. It's like a scouting agency but better, because you can deal direct with people, you're not dealing with a middleman. So it's definitely something positive. If you guys didn't have that site, I wouldn't be around today.

Do you have any advice for new guys just starting out?

You have to weigh the consequences of your actions. I mean, you have to treat yourself as if your future is sensitive, as if you're going to be a politician. Don't do anything stupid that's going to come back and bite you in the ass. Sure, money talks. But it isn't everything and there are a lot of ways to make money. There's never just one way. So treat yourself as if you're sacred. Don't degrade yourself or you'll come to regret it. Also, trust is like a gift. You should only trust somebody up to the point that they give you a reason not to. I'm very careful about who I trust, and who I give that gift to.

6.10.06


posted by Angel

JOSEPH SAYERS - PARTE 3

E chegamos ao último post especial com o gostoso da vez, o modelo Joseph Sayers. Mas não fiquem tristes, ainda tenho algumas fotos muito legais do cara e estarei colocando nos próximos posts como um BÔNUS até a nova seção Eu Quero Um Desses com outro gato todo bom que é meu "desejo de consumo". Enquanto eu não escolho o próximo bofe fiquem com a terceira parte da série com Joseph Sayers. O loirão é muito lindo, ahhh eu quero um desses pra mim!









Ô tesão de loiro hein? "Quase" perfeito... Hehe... Eu que sou tarado por uma bundinha fiquei um pouco decepcionado com a dele, meio magrinha pro meu gosto. Pra quem curte bunda eu sugiro uma olhada nas fotos do Dick McKay, primeiro cara a aparecer na seção Eu Quero Um Desses, essa sim é uma das bundas mais lindas que eu já vi, ehehe. Basta clicar nos links aí na barra lateral para conferir, ok?

Também na lateral tem links para 3 seções de fotos de Victor Webster outro sarado super gostoso que vale a pena uma espiada.

Mas se você gostou mesmo foi do Joseph Sayers não deixe de conferir a PARTE 1 e a PARTE 2 dos posts especiais dedicados a ele, tem muitas fotinhas interessantes do cara.

.................
Gostaram? É isso aí! Até o próximo macho tesudo, na próxima seção Eu Quero Um Desses!

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