Gay New York: Gender, Urban Culture, and the Making of the Gay Male World, 1890-1940 by George Chauncey (1994)

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Gay New York: Gender, Urban Culture, and the Making of the Gay Male World, 1890-1940 by George Chauncey (1994)
List 5 facts about a favorite sim of yours, and send this to 10 simblrs whose sims you adore ❤️
Thank you so much! 🥰 I've done one for Ryan and for Winnie, so I think it is about time I list some facts for Gideon!
Though his parents disowned him when he was attending boarding school in San Myshuno, he was actually born and raised in Willow Creek.
I actually made his parents and placed them in world (just in case) and they ended up having many other children! So, Gideon actually has siblings he not only has never met but doesn't even know they exist! **
Continuing off the last one, he has no interest in reconnecting with his parents whatsoever. He loves his life the way it is and doesn't feel like he is missing out without them.
Between work and spending time with his family, Gideon is usually kept busy. But if he finds a minute of free time, you can usually find him playing video games, watching movies and reading up on his research and debate skill!
His traits in game are Family-Oriented, Romantic, Ambitious, Arrogant (I think I may have changed it to Self-Assured though?), and Goofball!
In Memoriam: Western Hills Press 1924-2022 Part One – Double Nepotism
The Western Hills Press didn’t quite mark a century, shut down by its third (or fourth?) owner after languishing for a decade. The old rag deserved better, but don’t we all?
The Press was founded by Will L. Finch, who certainly knew his way around a composing table. Finch came up as a reporter for the old Cincinnati Commercial Gazette when it was edited by the legendary Murat Halstead. He was later city editor of the successor Cincinnati Commercial Tribune. Finch married a Dent farm girl and moved to the West Side where his civic enthusiasm led him to plant a newspaper when he was 56 years old. The first issue rolled off the presses on 17 November 1924.
Finch died of pneumonia in 1933, just after being elected to the Ohio General Assembly. The previous year, as he launched his political campaign, Finch handed the reins to his young protégé, Al Huneke, who ran the paper for the next 40 years or so. Huneke eventually built a small chain of weekly papers running from Delhi to Sharonville.
Your proprietor entered this saga in 1968, aged 16. My family had just moved from Dent to Cheviot. Our new home was in easy walking distance to the Press at 3708 Davis Avenue. My uncle was the foreman of the printing operation, so I was literally hired through nepotism. As it turns out, my uncle got a job in the print shop because his uncle had a job in the business office, so my career was launched as a case of double nepotism.
Although hired because I was related to the boss, the job I landed was anything but cushy. Officially, I was a jogger. I grabbed newspapers as they came off the press, stacked them into bundles of 150 or 200, wrapped them with twine and loaded them onto wooden pallets. To the printers, I was the shitboy. I had to clean the press between runs, mop the pit in which the press sat, filled with a noxious slurry of water and ink, and I had to haul all the scrap paper out to a baling machine in the parking lot.
My shift was 3:00 p.m. to 11:30 p.m. Pay was minimum wage. While the press was running, it was too loud to talk and the work was essentially mindless, so I got a lot of time to think. I’d compose my school papers in my head and write them out when I got home.
A big, four-unit web press is an expensive monstrosity and cannot be amortized only by printing the 15,000 weekly copies of the Western Hills Press. We printed the sister paper, the Price Hill Press, but also took in job work like the American Israelite, the UC student-run News Record, and lots of K-Mart shopping inserts. We printed the underground Independent Eye for a couple of months until a copy landed on Al Huneke’s desk. We even printed Larry Flynt’s Hustler, back when it was only a PG-rated, two-color tabloid filled with columns written, apparently, by the barflies at Flynt’s saloons.
When I started, the paper was set in “hot type” – linotype cast from molten lead. The linotype machines were upstairs next to the job shop where an ancient letterpress and a couple of offset machines churned out the jobs too small for the big web press in the basement. The life of the community passed through that job shop: church bulletins, business cards, wedding invitations, birth announcements, posters for festivals and dances, award certificates and obituary cards.
The print crew was entertaining and educational. I worked with another shitboy, a toothless 55-year-old from the hills of Kentucky. He was nicknamed Doc, in reference to his intelligence. It was the age of Polack jokes and one day the second pressman asked if anyone had heard about the Polack who was stuck on an escalator for four hours when the power went out. Several hours later, Doc said, “I’ve been thinking about that boy on the escalator. If the power went out, all he’d have to do is jump over the side!”
Our delivery truck was pitted with what the crew called “whiskey divots.” The truck driver blamed the dings on telephone poles that weren’t there yesterday. The crew began sending him off with warnings to avoid the “pixie telephone poles.”
The second pressman didn’t want to be a printer. He wanted to be a fireman. He kept a scanner in the print shop and listened to fire and ambulance dispatchers during breaks. He used to take naps lying under the press while it was running. If anyone from management wandered through, they’d assume he was doing maintenance. The head pressman told us, “He’s going to jump up from a nightmare one day and that press will rip his head off.”
While the second pressman never lost his head (and did become a fireman) many of the crew lost fingers or gained stitches from the abundant hazards of the print shop. In those pre-OSHA days, no one wore ear protection and all the printers went more-or-less deaf from the thundering press. Baling wire was little more than a 400-foot roll of scalpels. Who knew what pigments went into the ink? Any job requiring red ink found the entire crew looking like clowns with bright red noses. Some crimson pigment caused our noses to itch, so we rubbed them with ink-stained hands.
The head pressman collected 1957 Chevies. Once the presses got rolling, he turned things over to the second pressman and scoured the want ads looking for garages to rent. Someone said he owned 40 of the prize autos. Someone else said it was more like 50.
These men had an extensive vocabulary that has yet to appear in any dictionary. Every shift plumbed further depths of vulgarity, obscenity, indecency and scatology. Your basic expletives were as common as conjunctions, and every conversation somehow involved activities that were physically impossible, medically inadvisable and morally reprehensible. The press crew was incapable of uttering the simplest instruction without larding it with malediction. Asked what he was planning for the weekend, the truck driver routinely replied, “I’m gonna fish, gonna fight, gonna [f-bomb], gonna drink some beer.” One of the pressmen regaled new hires with an extended riff involving cunnilingus and flatulence that would probably still get him arrested if he tried to tell it on stage.
I worked as a printer for six years, two years of high school and all the way through college. By the time I graduated, I had worked my way up to a pretty good salary and I was running the plate room on second shift. The plate room was considerably cleaner and somewhat quieter than working on the press itself. Soon after graduation, I was called upstairs and informed that my career plans had changed.
(To be continued.)