Old Gays
Old Gays | |
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TikTok information | |
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Followers | 10.9 million |
Likes | 227.1 million |
Last updated: 10 August 2024 |
The Old Gays are a group of five gay social media personalities and LGBT rights activists.[1] The group consists of Robert Reeves, Michael "Mick" Peterson, Bill Lyons, Jessay Martin and Joc Anderson. At the time of their formation, their age range was from mid-60s to late 70s. They are the subject of an upcoming unscripted docuseries produced by Brian Graden Media.[2]
History
[edit]1943-1980: Background
[edit]Robert E. Reeves was born on June 8, 1943 to a supportive middle-class family in Jonesboro, Arkansas.[3][4] By third grade, Reeves worked the cash register and helped people at his father's shoe store, which shared the space with a nearby bakery,[5] played the baritone saxophone in high school and attended a rural Southern Baptist church.[6] Reeves left Jonesboro to study architecture at Washington University in St. Louis, Missouri, before working as a property manager for the Olympia, a seven-story apartment complex near Saint Louis University, who partnered with Reeves to form the nonprofit Newtown St. Louis.
William C. "Bill" Lyons was born on May 18, 1944 to a loving mother and charismatic father in Covina, California. He was the eldest of five siblings, though his father favored his younger brother for getting a basketball scholarship to UCLA. Lyons grew up working for his family's restaurant, Lyons Den, before working as a general manager for the Galleria Design Center, an interior design showroom in San Francisco's SOMA neighborhood.[7]
Jesse L. "Jessay" Martin was born on July 30, 1953 to Benjamin and Jannie Martin, loving parents from Greeneville, Tennessee who worked as a police officer and a housekeeper respectively whilst shielding Jessay from racism and homophobia by insulating him in a Seventh-day Adventist Church. Because of racial segregation, Jessay attended an all-Black school until the 6th grade, when all of his classmates were white except for in his choir class.
Michael J. "Mick" Peterson was born on May 22, 1956 to a Christian family in Minnesota. His father was a World War II veteran-turned-dentist and his mother was schoolteacher, who quit her job to raise Mick and his three sisters before being hospitalized with Lupus when Mick was only six months old. During her hospitalization, Mick and his siblings were raised by thirty different housekeepers until a plump finnish woman, Susan, joined his family and continued to raise them for years, even after their mother was discharged from the hospital. Mick moved to Southern California immediately after graduating college, then worked as a competitive bodybuilder after meeting a former Mr. Olympia on the beach.
Joc James A. Anderson, PsyD was born in the Philippines but considers himself a native Californian after moving with his family to Mission District, San Francisco at four years of age.[8][9][10] Joc and his family relocated to Southern California in his high school years, where he excelled in academics and was considered a star athlete in track and cross country. Anderson is Martin's longtime friend and a fellow Seventh-day adventist.
1980-2003: The golden days and the AIDS crisis.
[edit]After resigning from Newtown over homophobia from SLU's Jesuit community, Reeves moved to San Francisco in 1980 and befriended Lyons while city planning a baseball stadium in the SOMA neighborhood. After many of his friends and partners passed away throughout the start of the AIDS Crisis, Reeves tested positive for HIV in 1987 and later moved to Cathedral City to focus on making art.[6]
During this time, Lyons lived with his partner on a houseboat in Sausalito until 1996, when he was unceremoniously dumped by his partner and forced to take a $25,000 loan from his mother. Lyons entered a period of heavy drinking and developed bipolar disorder, which his doctor attempted to treat with Celexa. After enrolling for outpatient therapy at Langlery Porter Psychiatric Hospital, Lyons filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy and had to sell dope in order to help pay off the houseboat.
In 1998, Martin developed MRSA while performing with the Gay Men's Chorus of Los Angeles, but didn't seek treatment after his doctor misdiagnosed it as an ingrown hair. One of his coworkers at the California Pacific Methodist Church noticed how anorexic he became and took him to a new doctor for effective treatment.
2003-2017: Formation
[edit]After selling his houseboat for $125,000 in 2003, Lyons moved to a house in Cathedral City before it was swiftly foreclosed as a result of the Great Recession. Lyons had to live off of Social Security benefits while remaining abstinent from relationships for a period of 10 years, but was able to move to a HUD-owned apartment after reconnecting with Reeves in 2005.
Reeves was forced to file for bankruptcy until two gay men bought $16,000 worth of art from his Laguna Beach gallery.[11] To help cover his bills, Reeves transformed his garage into a living space and rented out his three bedrooms on Craigslist. His first and only constant tenant was Peterson, who took the master bedroom with private bath after a sexual encounter with Reeves.[7][11][12] Martin moved across the street from them in 2015 while touring as a gospel singer and working as a florist.[7][11][13]
2016-2021: A new beginning
[edit]John Bates, a younger gay man who moved into a separate bedroom in November 2016, tried to liven up the household to no avail before getting into a relationship with Logo TV producer Ryan Yezak at a gay bar down the street the following February. Initially perplexed that Bates lived with "a bunch of old farts," Yezak grew to appreciate the group after initially meeting Reeves and Peterson, who were completely nude.[5] While getting stoned, Reeves grew interested in a Gen-Z catchphrase used by the younger couple, prompting them to record the older group trying to decipher Gen-Z slang.[14][15] Upon noticing the organic comedy and chemistry between the three, Bates and Yezak officially rebadged them as the "Old Gays" and uploaded the video to YouTube.[5]
The video was an immediate hit amongst audiences, though Yezak felt the group was "too white" and needed diverse representation. This was swiftly resolved once Martin spoke with Reeves after seeing their first video and immediately handed over his business card to appear in their second video, which had the group perform as drag queens.[16] But shortly after Martin officially joined the group, Peterson suffered a seizure of unknown origin and had to be rushed to a nearby hospital for a neurosurgical operation on his left eye, which had a giant bleeding gash.[5] Peterson returned to Reeves' home after recovering in an assisted living facility, though his health continued to worsen to the point where he overdosed on gabapentin and was rushed back to the hospital in 2020. After another stint in assisted living, Peterson decided to move to a nearby motel until his 64th birthday, when he returned to Reeves' home and gradually became healthy again.[5]
Old Lesbians
[edit]During the time of Peterson's health crisis, Yezak worked on a series of videos with a group of similarly aged lesbians: Belita Edwards, Phyllis Rose-Child and Sable Boruff.[17] While the Old Lesbians weren't as viral as their male counterparts, the two groups did collaborate for a video[18] promoting and reacting to American Horror Story.
2021-Present: Online Success
[edit]The group became a viral sensation in March 2021, gaining millions of followers from daily TikTok videos filmed at Reeves' house.[6][19][20][21][22] Their popularity would later hit the mainstream with appearances on Drew Barrymore and The Today Show, collaborations with Netflix, T-Mobile and Rhianna's Savage X Fenty, and the 44th spot on Forbes' 2022 Top Creators list.[5]
The group was later expanded after Anderson, now a psychologist from nearby Rancho Mirage, first appeared in a video dancing to Shania Twain's Man! I Feel Like a Woman! alongside Twain, Lyons, Martin and Justin Fuko on June 30, 2023. Anderson officially joined the group the following August after filling in for Reeves, who had been hospitalized with a urinary tract infection.[23]
Personal lives
[edit]Reeves was diagnosed with HIV in 1987.[6] Peterson tested positive in 2001 and was also diagnosed with chronic CIDP in the late 2010s, both being treated with five-hour immunoglobulin infusions every other week.[5]
References
[edit]- ^ Italie, Leanne (2021-09-02). "Social media's 70-up 'grandfluencers' debunking aging myths". Associated Press. Retrieved 2021-11-08.
- ^ Wakefield, Lily (2021-11-06). "Social media icons the Old Gays to star in their own docuseries". PinkNews.co.uk. Retrieved 2021-11-08.
- ^ "Old Gays on Facebook Watch". Facebook.com. Retrieved 19 April 2022.
- ^ "Viral stars the Old Gays on their newfound fame, coming out and the next LGBTQ generation". Today.com. 29 June 2021.
- ^ a b c d e f g Peterson, Mick; Lyons, Bill; Reeves, Robert; Martin, Jessay (28 November 2023). The Old Gays Guide to the Good Life: Lessons Learned About Love and Death, Sex and Sin, and Saving the Best for Last. Harper Wave. p. 256. ISBN 978-0063333604.
- ^ a b c d Villarreal, Daniel (7 December 2022). ""The Old Gays" never thought they'd survive HIV, but now they're a viral sensation". LGBTQ Nation. Retrieved 2023-04-19.
- ^ a b c Patterson, Denny (2023-01-10). "The Old Gays Discuss Social Media Fame and Winning the Hearts of Millions". OUT FRONT. Retrieved 2023-04-19.
- ^ Anderson, Joc (26 April 2011). "About". Anderson Consulting & Educational Services. Retrieved 21 December 2023.
- ^ "Old Gays on Coming Out, Hook-Up Stories, and More". YouTube (Podcast). Retirement House Podcast.
- ^ Anderson, Joc (July 8, 2011). The Author of Love: Understanding a Misunderstood God. WestBow Press. p. 384. ISBN 978-1449708047. Retrieved 21 December 2023.
- ^ a b c "Out100 Cover Stars: TikTok's Old Gays Prove Life Starts After 65". www.out.com. Retrieved 2023-04-19.
- ^ Chapman, Rachel (16 June 2022). "The Old Gays Have The Wildest Pride Story (It Involves Edibles)". Elite Daily. Retrieved 2023-04-19.
- ^ Dunbar, Randy. "The Old Gays prove there are second acts". Desert Magazine. Retrieved 2023-04-19.
- ^ "Old Gays Try New Gay Slang". YouTube. Grindr. May 22, 2018. Retrieved December 3, 2023.
- ^ Bollinger, Alex (September 16, 2019). "The old gays try Grindr for the first time & they're not shy. At all". LGBTQ Nation. Retrieved 2021-11-08.
- ^ "Old Gays Try Drag". YouTube. Grindr. August 5, 2018. Retrieved 25 December 2023.
- ^ "Old Lesbians Try New Lesbian Slang". YouTube. Grindr. June 28, 2018. Retrieved December 11, 2023.
- ^ "Old Gays & Old Lesbians React To American Horror Story". YouTube. Grindr. September 1, 2021. Retrieved December 11, 2023.
- ^ Kacala, Alexander (November 5, 2021). "The 'Old Gays' are getting their own docuseries". NBC News. Retrieved 2021-11-08.
- ^ Ermac, Raffy (2021-06-16). "The Old Gays Sharing Their Coming Out Journeys Gives Us So Much Hope". Out.com. Retrieved 2021-11-08.
- ^ Henderson, Taylor (2019-05-28). "Old Gays Reminiscing Over Past Lovers Will Warm Your Heart". Pride.com. Retrieved 2021-11-08.
- ^ Kacala, Alexander (June 29, 2021). "How 4 gay seniors became social media stars for their humor and heart". Today.com. Retrieved 2021-11-08.
- ^ Anderson, Joc (November 20, 2023). Do Everything in Love. The Book Publishing Solutions. p. 371. ISBN 978-1963017182.