It’s a “G” thang!

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What is the general rule on making fun of gay people? This is an earnest question I’m posing. No tongue in cheek here. Someone please loop me in. Am I likely to start a storm in this teacup if I poked fun at gays? I’m sorry, what’s that? They will take offense? Really? What, gays can wear heels but are incapable of laughing at themselves? Isn’t that double standards and being somewhat uptight? (No pun, of course). Camaan!

Listen, last month I read this Op-ed piece in the Washington Post about this rousing “renaissance” of gayism. It was a satirical piece that theorized the intellectual supremacy of gay people. The writer went ahead and dropped names of some of the most successful gay people in business, arts, culture and sports and tried to link their sexuality to their success. It was a foolishly hysterical piece because I’m sure there are also unsuccessful gay people. I think your level of intelligence isn’t dictated by your sexuality. Anyway, the piece came an inch from implying that gayism was the new green movement global phenom and it generated over 800 heavy-breathing comments by gays, homophobes, bible thumpers, and the French. I learnt one vital thing from that piece; that gays don’t use smileys as much as I had imagined.

But seriously, if gays are as intelligent as they are lauded to be then they should be able to see a joke. If not laugh at it. I mean, this whole pussy footing (that pun belongs there) around gays is frustrating me. Oh, by the way, this is not about whether gayism is right or wrong, that moral debate will never happen here, I can assure you. This is about gayism and humour. I mean if gays want equal treatment, surely they should first start by allowing people to make fun of their pants. It’s like going into a stand-up comedy club and saying, you can’t be made fun of because you are sensitive. Here is a theory; if a gay guy wore a ridiculous hat would you not want to make fun of him? You aren’t being made fun of because you are gay; you are being made fun of because of your hat, which, when you think about it, might be a product of your sexuality. And a bad hat can happen to anyone; straight, gay, Indians, even monkeys in a circus.

I’m of the opinion that if one can make fun of a pigmy why not a gay guy? And making fun of a pigmy is the lowest of lows, it’s the full gallows humour, because there is something cowardly about making fun of someone you can outrun. A gay guy can choose to catch up with you if you make a joke about them they don’t fancy, wrestle you down and proceed to strangle you with his yellow scarf. I think gays should learn to stop being so bloody sensitive and take it…on the chin. For a change.

There is a reason why I’m writing about this.

Actually I’m writing this while seated at the Boarding Gate A1, OR Tambo airport, Johzi. It’s 7 degrees. I can’t feel my feet. I’m connecting to Nairobi after a week in Durban, another trip by the ever-gracious South African Tourism. Last night we watched Snoop Lion perform live at the MTV Africa All Stars. Him and Fali Ipupa, Coco Master and Flava. It was a complete ruckus, especially watching Snoop perform “Gin and Juice” the official anthem that defined my teenage. But before the concert, we attended a VIP pre-party, which was a joke.

And curiously, that’s the whole point of this story; a joke.

The party was held somewhere at this club at the seafront. For this trip I was with seven Nigerians, two Congolese, an Angolan, Rupi Mangat and Miss Thumi from Hill+Knowlton Strategies, the PR that put the trip together. So it’s with this group that I checked in with at this shambolic pre-party. We walk in through security; turn right where security lifts up red velvet to let us up a small flight of stairs into the VIP area. 9am and it’s jammed. Music is pulsing. We all split up when we walk in because you need not ask a horse to drink once you have taken it to the river.

I walk into the second section where the bar is. It’s packed too. And louder. I stop in the middle of the room, to drink in the room, because you have to drink in a room before you find your drink. So I’m standing there, taking it all in when I see some guy and chic standing so close to each other’s faces. Like half inch away from each other. I guess that’s one way to seduce a woman; by standing in her face, gives her no much room to look for the exit. But something strikes me wrong with that couple. Something about their bodies. So I look closer and notice what was odd; their body shapes look similar. They are both men! Whoa! Gaddammit, the chap, uhm, girl, to the left is almost kissing the other chap, uhm, guy! I look around and the room swirls in nonchalance as the two keep staring into each other’s eyes intimately, at the brink of kissing. Good Lord! I look away.

Then I really notice the room for the first time. Holy cow! Super skinny folk, man! Super skinny folk! Flashy guys too, colourful chaps. Guys in tight pants, and handkerchiefs hanging from their belt hooks. Guys in Mohawks. And colorfully dyed hair. And skinny shine-heads that remind you of Gestapo cooks. Guys in heels. Like high heels! The very high ones PR- agency chicks rock. And these guys are laughing and standing so close to ach other. And hugging each other, a lot. Taking pictures, a lot. Look, I’m not well travelled. I have never lived in Europe or the States. So I’m over my head here and my jaw is on the floor. This is new to me. The deep end. I’ve seen a couple of gay guys in Nairobi, but never have I been in a room with many gay guys, especially ones who don’t make bones about it.

I find myself immobilized in the middle of the room, like a statue. I thrust my hand in my pocket because some guy with soft hands might just hold it and coo, “looking for anyone special, darling?” and that might affect my sensibilities for a long time. I dunno, man. I then realize that if I keep standing there immobile some guy with a pierced tongue might mistake me for a pillar and lean on me. So I start swaying to the music to show that I’m a living thing. But not a seductive sway, just a normal sway. You know the way you are in a club and you see a chic you dig across the room swaying to the music and you start swaying as well to match her body rhythm? Not that kind. A small bland sway. You don’t want to put your hip into it too much because you might draw attention.

All these makes me crave for a stiff (oh boy) drink. Little problem, sonny; over at the bar counter is a group of gay folk, the same bar that promises me a drink. I’m talking a large group of colourful guys. How do you call a group of gays? Is it a cluster of gays? A school of gays? A knot of gays? A conglomeration of gays? A buncha gays? A phalanx of gays? (Rhymes with phallus). I think I will go with a forest of gays. So yes, at the bar counter is a forest of gays trying to get drinks as well. I’m immediately faced with a small dilemma; do I go over and squeeze myself between them, body against body and get my drink? Do I need that drink that badly? Am I willing and daring enough to venture into the forest? And you know what happens when you go into a forest, you will get wood. (Admit it, that’s a tight pun).

Anyway I decide that I don’t need a drink that badly. In fact, I decide I don’t want a drink the whole night. Just as I’m contemplating leaving to go look for the Nijjo brothers, a hand suddenly grabs my shoulder. And I jump out of my skin.

Who do I see when I turn around? Phillip Mwaniki, from Nation. The hell? He’s not wearing tight pants, thankfully. Now, normally Phillip and I would not hesitate to do the whole shoulder hug in greeting. But I’m sure today. I mean. I don’t know. It wasn’t the right evening for such contacts. But we do the shoulder thing anyway, very quickly. We stand there for a while, chatting. He’s says he’s there to cover the MTV shindig. We then take our seat at the edge of the room where Miss Thumi joins us later. From there we literally stare at what’s going on. I make a few observations.

One: In the whole room, it’s only the gay guys who had HOT chicks on their arms. The straight guys sat alone in small miserable clusters, pretending to be cool. The gay guys pecked these chicks. And hugged them. And held their waists. It was like watching a vegetarian stand in line at a steak buffet. At one point I saw this gay guy playfully lift up the skirt of this terrifically hot chick and peek at her knickers (if she had any). The girl just squealed in delight. Really? They played with these girls. In my head I heard a motherly voice say, “Don’t play with food, Tim. There are guys starving out there somewhere.” There is a lesson in there; if you never have any hot girls milling around you, maybe you should try being gay.

Two: gay guys love the camera. They love to see their own pictures. They will be posing before the camera is out. Showing their good side. Purring into the camera. Eyes misty with seduction. Hips thrust out. Click. Click. Whirr. Click. Turns head, click. Click.

Three: At some point Miss Thumi breathlessly cooed, “Awww, I so want his purse.” She was referring to this chap with a purse slung across his bony shoulders. But he wasn’t the only one. Two in every six gay guys in that club had a clutch purse (I learnt that word that night; clutch purse, I like how it sounds, clutch. Clutch.). Those purses fascinated me. Not that I wanted one, no, I don’t think there is one that would come in a colour I like- straight. I just wondered what they kept in there: eye liner? A little pepper spray can in case you decided to paw her flat chest?

Four: not every gay guy is clean. We know gay guys to be very neat. Like super clean. So clean it’s almost anal. Hehe. We know gay guys to mind how they look; go to gym, drink chardonnay, eat white meat etc. But I saw some pretty unclean, fat gay guys. I saw this one particular chap who wore suspenders with his large belly spilling between the suspender straps. He looked like Mr. Kamau in those books we used to read in Primo. Mr. Kamau is driving a bus. Remember them? This guy at some point picked a mshikaki from a passing tray and sort of did this thing where he opened his mouth suggestively while biting and looking our way at the same time. Phillip swore he was looking at me. I swear he was looking at Phillip because earlier on Phillip had sort of leaned back and opened his legs and a bunch of gay guys sort of nudged each other giggling. I told Phillip that the same advice our mothers reserved for our sisters applied to him then; don’t open your legs to anyone.

Lastly: They looked happier than we did. No, really, they did. They joked and laughed and took pictures and grabbed at the women and drunk. Us? We sat in a corner and watched them drink and laugh (giggle, more like) and grab at women. They seemed to make more friends, while we straight guys sat there, staring into our drinks hoping to see a mermaid in there. I suspect that the word “gay” was given to gays because they are always happy?

I have a pal I suspect is gay. But he hasn’t come out (in a clutch purse) so we all treat him as straight. Besides he doesn’t touch my thigh when he laughs, so it’s cool. So I asked him (and another straight female friend, and another straight guy) what he thought of a piece like this would mean to gay people. If their humour is enough to take this, because really it’s never

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that serious.

“Depends, did you make them sound weird?” He Whatsapped.

“I wrote that they carry clutch purses, will that offend them?”

“I’m not sure, not all carry clutch purses, some look more manly than you do, by the way,”

“What, they can chop down a tree with a look?”

“LOL,” he wrote and asked, “but you didn’t make them look different, did you?”

“They are different, son. We all are different as human beings, no?” I asked.

“Well, yeah, but…”

“Look,” I pressed on, “ I make fun of Okuyus all the time, and Kissiis, and Lunjes, I don’t make fun of them because we are alike, I make fun of them because we are different. But it doesn’t mean I think less of Lunjes, for instance, it just means I bloody can’t understand why they take tea after dinner, that’s all.”

“Well, if you put it that way…” he wrote back.

“If I put it that way?” I wrote back, “OK, let’s flip this. If I was a gay guy making fun of other gay guys, would that fly in Gayville?”

He’s yet to reply. If he does, I will inform you.

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129 Comments
  1. LOL! absolutely hillarious! and yes some gays are more manly than straight guys. Which makes me think that it is JUST a lifestyle they choose. Good Read!

    1. Same Here. Gayism is the fad right now. No one is ‘born’ gay, (otherwise we would have Adam and Steve and not eve). They choose to transform into women (dress like them) and like men. Simple!

      ooohh but they do make good bosom friends!

      1. Damn some of y’all in the comments are ignorant. Like people don’t choose to be gay. Homosexuality is prevalent in almost all species. Sexuality and gender are just social constructs hence presence of intersex people. And the people of Adam and Eve just shuuut up like the whole world population couldn’t come from two people imma assume y’all just religiously brainwashed and dumb.

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  2. “I then realize that if I keep standing there immobile some guy with a pierced tongue might mistake me for a pillar and lean on me. ”
    Totally love this!.it made my afternoon..you’ve been away for a while -we noticed 🙂 Hope you had fun though.

    1. I know right Done, he killed me with this one and the one about playing with food while others are starving.

  3. “And you know what happens when you go into a forest, you will get wood. (Admit it, that’s a tight pun).”
    LOL! You outdid yourself on these puns.

  4. That part of the fat man enjoying his mshikaki and the exchange of looks amongst yourself and the blame trading….Absolutely funny…

  5. “don’t play with food, Tim. There are guys sterving out there somewhere’.
    Am on the floor! Seriously biko..

    1. Hillarious..did you get your drink sir, approaching the forest of gays must send a chill to your spine.i remember a post i read about the weird guy in Lamu..Don’t play with food, Tim. There are guys starving out there somewhere.”..its like a lioness playing with a bunny

  6. Biko, one gay is referred to as a crowd. Two gays is a maltitude. Yenyewe, the wooden pan was nice though.

  7. * Been hiding in a corner while reading this piece. panting, hoping the light comes out before the guys in clutch

  8. So vividly true. I was there. Sat by the side, trying to act cool and starring at my drink (straight, not shaken) like it had a mermaid inside…

  9. “I just wondered what they kept in there: eye liner? A little pepper spray can in case you decided to paw her flat chest?” Hehehehehe, you are a nut case Biko………..Btw, Lunjes dont take tea after dinner, they take tea with dinner

  10. *As I wipe the tears from my eyes* God those puns! Made my night they did..An awesome read though, as usual.. Can’t wait for the next one.:-)

  11. ……..that might affect my sensibilities for a long time…..hehehe….great read as usual Biko…and yes, i think the word gay has somethin to do with the happiness after comin outa the closet..(or is it the clutch purse…..)

  12. “….vegetarian stand in line for a steak buffet..” hehehe but seriously something needs to be done to eradicate that illness

  13. Hilarious this was,if you walk into a wood of gays you will get wood.That killed it and the tea after dinner for luhya’s lol!

  14. chockfull of puns!!! fell out on the floor!! Biko, you outdid yourself this time!! A phallux of gays??? lol!!

  15. So simply said and yet this might be the way to start a conversation on this pretense taboo topic! My gay friends take a joke so I am not sure about the ones you have accidentally met. But then I guess I live here and you there where like you say the closet still rules! You also need to be accepted before you can make jokes about them…but great job on here. I laughed but cautiously too!

  16. ”If you go to the forest, you will get wood…..
    “So vividly true. I was there. Sat by the side, trying to act cool and starring at my drink (straight, not shaken) like it had a mermaid inside…”

    so awesome and freakin funny..looolest!!!!!

  17. You got to love the puns in this article eish! biko kwanza this—-> “And you know what happens when you go into a forest, you will get wood”. that was tight bro

  18. ‘….strangle you with his yellow scarf………don’t play with your food Tim…….. you will get wood….” had me rolling on the floor with laughter. One day Biko you will get me fired.

  19. I love this!!!

    Those puns made me laugh and laugh.

    And the story is quite good. Eti, “A gay guy can …. proceed to strangle you with his yellow scarf.” Hahaha.

  20. Yeah jokes should be about all sorts of differences, if you can’t take it tough for you.

    Always remember:
    ‘If you can take a dick! You can take a joke’ -Richard Pryor

  21. lol crazy situation. All them gays having chicks n straight guys just staring unlovingly hhahahah. Love this piece, could also be a box of gays (like matchsticks) or a pack of gays.

  22. lo! crazy stuff. In the whole room, it’s only the gay guys who had HOT chicks on their arms. hahahaha funnily stated. Enough chuckles for my Tuesday aaight

  23. Wooi Biko,
    You have so killed me! I have succeeded in looking like a complete fool laughing alone at my laptop.
    Excellent piece! I am unable to pick which part was the funniest, too many were.
    Keep at it!

  24. a whole post on gayism and their peculiar habits and all the pun used, i bet some will be offended, funny read though

  25. From the title I expected some gangstar, westside connection thing, but damn, this is hilarious! You made gayism sound cool at some point you know, but I’ll stick to straighthood.

  26. X’D …Biko,
    You’ve reminded me of one of my pal’s expressions when he saw a cross-dresser.
    Fat people still get teased and don’t wrestle people down so why not?

    The puns….wah! I wanna be you when I grow up.

  27. Good read but thought the puns were a bit overdone (sit down; its just my opinion). I think puns are funnier when they are subtle and hard to detect; not when they are outright pointed out.
    Grade: B

  28. …In my head I heard a motherly voice say, “Don’t play with food, Tim. There are guys starving out there somewhere.” …

    ha ha ha….just nasty…Biko, Nasty!!!!

    Nice read

  29. Aich.the puns will be your undoing!
    Someone asked the same question in a movie once,yaani gays can take a d**k and not a joke?

  30. I love the way your writing is so well pieced together and clever too! All the puns were hilarious! :’)

  31. Biko you remind me of what good writing is all about, hilarious, well put-together article which comes alive in the mind, i feel like i was there. Excellent work, if you keep writing like this, we shall always read.

  32. i send this link to my gay friend and he laughed. because it is true-they have zero sense of humor!!
    and i like you make your stand without casting stones.

  33. He he heee…my favorite.. How do you call a group of gays? Is it a cluster of gays? A school of gays? A knot of gays? A conglomeration of gays? A buncha gays? A phalanx of gays? ..then u settle for ‘a forest of them gays’ 🙂

  34. The pun is off the hook…laughed my self silly. “If you go to the forest you get wood….i think i would like to sit far and watch a forest of gay, you painted a good picture of their behaviors in my mind…must be interesting to watch!

  35. I love gay guys. they really intrigue me, and I can talk about the things straight guys find vain… Like soaps, or fashion.

  36. Rainbow is so apt

    Great piece Biko….and it’s a good thing that you didnt
    make it a piece about the morality of it all…..

    The Washington post link….?

  37. Great piece Biko ,,love the puns.
    I sensed mischief on the line below after “take it…” the dots suggested something else !

    ” I think gays should learn to stop being so bloody sensitive and take it…on the chin. For a change “

  38. “And a bad hat can happen to anyone; straight, gay, Indians, even monkeys in a circus.” _This got me. No way he couldn’t win the BAKE award. Thank you Biko, for a great read.

  39. Jesus!! The humor in this piece is INSANE!!!! Can’t even decide which pun was the best…but possible the ‘don’t play with food one’ or Phillip and his open legs! Loool

  40. Your friend is sooooo gay…. “I swear he was looking at Phillip because earlier on Phillip had sort of leaned back and opened his legs and a bunch of gay guys sort of nudged each other giggling. I told Phillip that the same advice our mothers reserved for our sisters applied to him then; don’t open your legs to anyone”. #DEAD.

  41. You’ve really justifying making fun of gays and trying hard not to be offensive which dispels any humour that might have been there 🙁

  42. I never read Mr Kamau, perhaps that was in a another generation. I am of the Tom & Mary, Moses & Mildred etc generation.
    That said, I do not judge gay people any less or more than I do straight people who wank in public.

    http://therealginc.wordpress.com/

  43. There’s a time in Silk,5 guys who were big in ‘Wasee wa mjengo’ kinda way with tools to boot sat fondling each other. I am yet to cure.the eye sore effect.Lucky you you get the clutch-purse heel wearing kind.

  44. Some gays have no sense of humor. Some gays have a great sense of humor. Some take themselves extremely seriously and some are extremely self deprecating. Since gays are just people, with a certain sexual orientation, and people are different…

  45. Great Article i felt your pain here…..At one point I saw this gay guy playfully lift up the skirt of this terrifically hot chick and peek at her knickers (if she had any)…..what am experience

  46. A gifted and gently funny writer…and those puns…man, you always found a moment to slip one in didn’t you? Oops…:-p

  47. MUCH NEEDED HELP

    The tavern was squeezed, smoky, stuffy
    I rotated on the bar stool slowly drinking on
    My dreams flowed out to welcome my beer
    A life story, it is embarrassing, my life story

    And he ordered another round for my sorrow
    A heart scorned, bitter in the dark of light
    Shuttered memoirs, forgotten romances
    A life story, it’s embarrassing, my life story

    And another round, head dead on counter
    I blink sobriety from drowsy watery eyes
    The bar stool rotated me slowly into a whirl
    He’s sorry… or “his story”? It’s embarrassing

    So kind that he helped me up, on my feet,
    Oblivious that I too helped him up, on his feat
    And the pee hole seems too far, so he helps again
    I am sorry; his story, slowly gets embarrassing

    I think I am done urinating, he doesn’t think so
    I think my pants need not be all the way down
    He seems to know best how he should help
    He’s sorry… His story…? He’s embarrassing…?

    He grabbed my neck and pulled my junk
    For which I am not, as he thought, too drunk
    I push away; he seems not to give a f***
    He had said “He’s horny”. This is just embarrassing

    The tavern, less squeezed, less stuffy, shocking
    He still gazes at me, disenchanted he appears
    No more rounds, no more help, I want none…
    He is sorry; embarrassed. My story… #sigh#
    This is just embarrassing…….

  48. How do you call a group of gays? Is it a cluster of gays? A school of gays? A knot of gays? A conglomeration of gays? A buncha gays? A phalanx of gays? This killed it…LOL

  49. Lol, nice one. That Mwaniki guy scared me too! The hell? I would scream my intestines out if in room full of gay people, some one tapped my shoulders.

  50. and take it…on the chin.For a change. haha..i laughed right out of my seat. great stuff as always Biko.