Mormon gay husbands

My Husband's Not Gay: What happened to the cast of controversial reality show about married male Mormons attracted to other men?

A controversial docuseries from about gay Mormon men in heterosexual marriages is now going viral on TikTok.

Titled My Husband's Not Queer , the TLC special followed three married Mormon men who are all same-sex attracted, but chose to pursue a traditional lifestyle with wives and children.

Although it aired almost a decade ago, a new generation of existence TV fans like TikTok influencer Julian Hagins have unearthed the exceptional and tracked down the current whereabouts of the cast. 

While mixed-orientation marriages have a 70 per cent divorce rate, the couples from My Husband's Not Homosexual are miraculously all still together. 

Curtis and Tera Brown recently renowned 30 years of marriage, with Tera gushing about the milestone on social media.

A controversial TLC docuseries from called My Husband's Not Gay has gone viral on TikTok as a unused generation of reality TV fans discover it

The TLC special followed three married Mormon men who are al

Enjoying TLC's "My Husband's Not Gay" Doesn't Make You a Monster, It Makes You Tolerant

On Sunday night, TLC aired My Husband's Not Gay, a special "reality documentary" featuring a group of Mormon men (and their wives) who life SSA, or "same sex attraction," but choose not to act on their gay urges. Even before the exhibit premiered, more than , people signed a petition advocating for its cancelation, while the president of GLAAD, the Gay & Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation, told The Hollywood Reporter that the show "is downright irresponsible" and "putting countless adolescent LGBT people in harm's way." The common concern here was that the show would shame gay men and reinforce the concept that sexuality can be changed or repressed, and that a man who is gay or bisexual could be happily married to a woman in a solely heterosexual relationship if he only tried hard enough. That concern was legitimate, because the implicit judgment on gay folks, and especially those struggling to reconcile their sexuality with societal/re

Getting Out/Staying In: One Mormon/Gay Marriage: Homosexual Attraction and LDS Marriage Decisions

Ben has wrestled honorably and honestly with this matter, trying to make make all of the conflicting personal, societal, and religious/church elements fit into something acceptably coherent. It is a formidable challenge, one faced by a number of Latter-day Saints.

It is eliminate that our culture, in which everyone is expected to marry, puts gigantic and excessive pressure on homosexuals to marry. I am aware of the pressure on homosexuals because in the last fifteen years I&#;ve been studying this issue of lgbtq+ attraction (SSA) and rendezvous with homosexuals in our culture. Universally, they announce feeling the pressure to marry. Many homosexuals also report on their marriages which have ended in failure. For example, in I surveyed an LDS homosexual group of where 71 percent were returned missionaries (indicating their pledge to the Church) and 36 had tried marriage. They had been married an average of nine years 1 and had an average of children. Only two of the 36 were still marri

'My Husband's Not Gay' Life Show Faces Backlash

&#; -- A new reality reveal featuring men who tell they are attracted to men but do not identify themselves as same-sex attracted is stirring up real-life controversy as thousands include signed a petition to stop the show.

“My Husband’s Not Gay” features what its network, TLC, calls “unconventional Mormon marriages.” Of the men featured in the show who are married, they are shown alongside their wives, who know about their husbands’ preferences and try to make their marriages work.

“I was office mates with one of my finest friends and I said, ‘He told me he’s gay,’” one of the wives, Tanya, told ABC News, of her husband, Jeff. "And she goes, ‘I told you that, twice.'"

Jeff explains his orientation by comparing it to one’s preference for a certain type of food.

“You could say I’m oriented towards doughnuts and if I was being genuine to myself, I would eat doughnuts a lot more than I devour doughnuts,” Jeff said. “But am I miserable? Am I lonely? Am I denying myself because I don’t eat doughnuts as I might like to eat doughnuts? I’m n