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– French comedy series starring two men who portray themselves as women—Samantha (played by David Strajmayster) and Chantal (Guillaume Carcaud). Sasameki Koto – Masaki Akemiya is a boy who cross-dresses as a girl. Saved by the Bell – Zach and Screech occasionally dress as women either to disguise themselves or for comic effect.
Eat This, Not That! is a media franchise owned and operated by co-author David Zinczenko. [1] It bills itself as "The leading authority on food, nutrition, and health." [2] No independent authority has verified that claim. The original book series was developed from a column from Men's Health magazine written by David Zinczenko and Matt ...
It Is Not the Homosexual Who Is Perverse, But the Society in Which He Lives (Nicht der Homosexuelle ist pervers, sondern die Situation, in der er lebt), West Germany (1971) It's Consuming Me, Germany (2012) It's in the Water, US (1997) It's My Party, US (1996) It's Not a Cowboy Movie (Ce n'est pas un film de cow-boys), France (2012) It's Pat ...
Excluded in this list are films that are based on the same source material. For example, the 1962 version of Mutiny on the Bounty is not a remake of the 1935 film; both are based on the novel Mutiny on the Bounty. Reboots are also omitted. This list is ordered by the title of the original film, inasmuch as there can be multiple remakes.
In a 2002 report analyzing bisexuality in various mediums, specifically movies, television, and music, GLAAD criticized the track record of the movie industry in the United States, when it came to representation, and inclusion, of bisexuality, stating that often bisexual content is either "removed from novels that films are based on," removed from original screenplays when filming begins, or ...
One study published in 2019 found BDSM-related fantasies to be common in 40 to 70% of both men and women. ... For example, instead of chancing getting frisky at the office, she recommends taking a ...
In 2003, Julia Bailey and her research team published data based on a sample from the United Kingdom of 803 lesbian and bisexual women attending two London lesbian sexual health clinics and 415 women who have sex with women (WSW) from a community sample; the study reported that the most commonly cited sexual practices between women "were oral ...
In order to maintain a hierarchy and a gendered division of labour, a prominent feature of the Renaissance era, women and men needed to be distinct. Cross-gender acting disrupted gender distinction. Male-to-female cross-gender actors were either viewed as shameful, or they gained wealth and social status when playing women who married well-off men.