1. Please tell me these two are on a cruise.
2. This is like the start of every bad **** film.
3. The guy on the left is definitely dreaming of brief *****.
4. Um, guys, what’s going on here?
5. This poor woman, she has no idea where her husband is.
6. The coach knows what’s up.
7. OK, seriously?!
"Just ask Susan Marks, author of the new book "In the Mood for Munsingwear," and Linda McShannock, Minnesota History Center collections curator who put together the companion exhibit, "Underwear: A Brief History
Most surprising is that Munsingwear's ad writers appealed discreetly to gays and lesbians after World War II. One ad shows two men wrestling in their underwear, and there was a series with "glam girls" checking out other women in their undergarments.
"I toned down the homoeroticism when I wrote the book," Marks says. "There was a lot of this kind of advertising during and after World War II. So many men were bonding during the war, and advertisers capitalized on this. Of course, the ads were appealing to the gay market on purpose, but they did it in a way that someone could also say, 'That's interesting.' "
"Just ask Susan Marks, author of the new book "In the Mood for Munsingwear," and Linda McShannock, Minnesota History Center collections curator who put together the companion exhibit, "Underwear: A Brief History
Most surprising is that Munsingwear's ad writers appealed discreetly to gays and lesbians after World War II. One ad shows two men wrestling in their underwear, and there was a series with "glam girls" checking out other women in their undergarments.
"I toned down the homoeroticism when I wrote the book," Marks says. "There was a lot of this kind of advertising during and after World War II. So many men were bonding during the war, and advertisers capitalized on this. Of course, the ads were appealing to the gay market on purpose, but they did it in a way that someone could also say, 'That's interesting.' "
The place where I found them it was written unintionally like in capital alphabets
but if they are intionally
Given the thread title, I was expecting this thread to have massive traffic but yeah, having "tops" in quotes for "tops in comfort" was a little too much of a coincidence