• Seems like a lot of people are having an issue logging into chat since we updated. Here is what you need to do: Logout of the chat and forums, clear your cache and cookies. Log back in to the forum, then login to the chat with the same user/pass you use for the forums.

Breath-taking black cock, it's not fair ....

  • Thread starterBLACKDICKjealous
  • Start date

BLACKDICKjealous

New around here...
Beloved Member
Jan 14, 2006
46
0
6
50
Just look at this breath-taking black cock that this guy's got. It's just stunning, isn't it? What an awesome sight.

Just over 9 inches long layed on the table, measured by the ruler along side it. Glistening, veiny and really thick. Must be quite heavy to hold. Just the right size. Restrained by a thick, brass collar. A nasty black fucker indeed.

The magnum condoms layed alongside it, ready for action.

Most women, and quite a few guys too, would go crazy for this - to be in its presence, to feel the power of this black cock.

God, I'm jealous. Wish I had that between my legs. I'd enrole as a black stud at an ****** agency, and get all the black dick crazy women to pay 500 a night to suck, stroke and worship it.
 

Attachments

  • dick.jpg
    dick.jpg
    9.4 KB · Views: 584
Bloomberg's New French Kiss

Tina Brown Tries to Retract Clinton Headline

Restaurateurs Buy $250K Black Angus Bull

Abramoff Escapes O’Reilly No-Spin Zone

Predictions About The Future From 25 Years Ago

Bohemian Archaeology: A Walking Tour

Index Magazine Shuts Down

It Happened Last Week

It Happens This Week...
t

More




Save a link to this article and return to it at www.savethis.comSave a link to this article and return to it at www.savethis.com Email a link to this articleEmail a link to this article Printer-friendly version of this articlePrinter-friendly version of this article View a list of the most popular articles on our siteView a list of the most popular articles on our site
Intelligencer
Hung Up on Size
The author of a new book about an old stereotype discusses America’s fixation on measuring up.

By Brian Keith Jackson

(Photo credit: Donald Bowers)

The cover of Scott Poulson-Bryant’s new book, Hung: A Meditation on the Measure of Black Men in America, is none too subtle: A ruler is slapped across an image of a chiseled, shirtless man. But what about the meditation part? Brian Keith Jackson spoke with him.

Your title doesn’t leave much to the imagination.
The title came to me before the book did. I loved the idea of black men historically and stereotypically being considered well hung. But there was also a time when black men were being hung from trees for being well hung—a supposed threat to white American culture during slavery, Jim Crow, and afterward.

Okay, but what about that ruler? Isn’t that exploiting the exploitation a little?
I wanted a ruler on the cover. I’d be lying if I said there’s no power to be derived from the myth.

Have you derived much power from it?
I was a sophomore at Brown, and I met a white girl at a party. We had sex. She’d come after me. I didn’t pursue her. Afterward, she basically said, “I thought your dick would be bigger.” I asked her why, and she said, “Because you’re black.” And I said, “I did too.” That isn’t to say that I have a tiny dick, because I don’t. But I always thought as a black man I should have a certain number. That’s what society teaches you.


Neiman Marcus

But how are you trying to advance the conversation about all this?
Enough people talk about it, so I figured maybe they’d want one brotha’s perspective on it. There was a time when as black men we were the discussion—but not part of the discussion. The mere fact that I can be is a step forward.

So what have people been saying about your contribution to the discussion?
Women love the book.

And men?
Black gay men do. Some white guys that I’ve talked to have really been excited—well, not excited, but into what I was talking about. One white guy sent me an e-mail and said, “What you don’t deal with in the book is the perspective of dick size. A seven-inch dick on a guy who is five foot five is going to look different on a guy who is six foot nine.” Probably, but that’s not what the book is about.

Related Links:
Previous Stories: Intelligencer Archive
Also In This Issue: New York Magazine - October 24, 2005
From the October 24, 2005 issue of New York Magazine.




Subscribe now and get 1 year of New York Magazine for ONLY $17.97!

New York Magazine brings you the best from the city that never sleeps. From the tastiest restaurants, to the biggest Broadway openings, to the people, power and politics behind the city - New York delivers it all to you every week.
Take advantage of this special offer - Act now!

Outside the US? Canada or International
GIVE A GIFT
 
From Publishers Weekly
"For a lot of men, how you hang has a lot to do with who you hang with, where you hang, and sometimes, how long you hang once you get there," writes Poulson-Bryant, founding editor of Vibe and co-author of What's your Hi-Fi IQ?, in his new book, a libidinous hybrid of cultural commentary and personal anecdotes. The pervasive belief that African American men are prodigiously endowed presents a conundrum for the contemporary black male, who is simultaneously drawn to- and repelled by- this notion. In the book's opening pages, Poulson-Bryant admits that, as an African American man, he should be "hung like a horse," but he's not, nor does he want to be. "I think of black-man dick and I think that once upon a time we were hung from trees for being, well, hung." Today, Poulson-Bryant says, black men risk being viewed as little more than an engorged sex organ. Take "Simon" for example, a successful athlete who refuses to take showers at the gym and changes clothes with a towel wrapped around him, because he would rather be a star on the basketball court than in the locker room. For those seeking an academic approach, Poulson-Bryant's "meditation" on the "measure of black men in America" may not measure-up, as much of the research is internet-based or culled from anecdotal narratives provided by largely unnamed acquaintances. Still, Poulson-Bryant's assertion that black men "need to start thinking like the Big Swinging Dicks on Wall Street instead of acting like the Big Swinging Dicks of the public's fascination" has the kind of thrust and vigor necessarily to stimulate dialogue on this topic.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Book Description
Following in the footsteps of such bestselling, taboo-breaking books as Randall Kennedy’s Nigger and J. L. King’s On the Down Low, Hung brings a topic previously discussed only in intimate settings out into the open. In a brilliant, multilayered look at the pervasive belief that African American men are prodigiously endowed, Scott Poulson-Bryant interweaves his own experiences as a black man in America with witty analyses of how black male sexuality is expressed in books, film, television, sports, and pornography.

“Hung” is a double entendre, referring not only to penis size but to the fact that black men were once literally hung from trees, often for their perceived sexual prowess and the supposed risk it posed to white women. As a poignant reminder, he begins his book with a letter to Emmett Till, the teenager who was lynched in Mississippi in the mid-1950s for whistling at a white woman.

For Poulson-Bryant and other men of his generation, society’s deep-seated obsession with the sexual powers of black men has had an enormous, if often deceptive, influence on how they perceive themselves and on the assumptions made by others. His tales of his sexual encounters with both sexes, along with anecdotes about the lives of various friends and colleagues, are wryly and at times shockingly revealing. Enduring racial perceptions have shaped popular culture as well, and Poulson-Bryant offers a thorough, thought-provoking look at media-created images of the “Well-Hung Black Male.” He deftly deconstructs movies like Mandingo and Shaft, articles in the popular press, and edgy works like Robert Mapplethorpe’s Black Book, while also providing distinctive profiles of icons like porn star Lexington Steele and rapper L.L. Cool J.

A scintillating mixture of memoir and cultural commentary, Hung is the first and only book to take on phallic fixation and uncover what lies below. Readers may be scandalized, but they’ll also have plenty to ponder about America’s views on how black men measure up.

See all Editorial Reviews
 
BTW. This author is a black man. This should explain the myth you guys so religiously promote.

If not i can bring in some scientific facts.

And if that's not enough i can go get 10 times the amount of pictures,with white guys packing 10 inches or more.

It's all about individual genetics.

You can be attracted to black men for other reason's,but the big dick thing is getting old and most people know it's a myth.....Except for most black men and the Women chasing them:)
 

Users who are viewing this thread