Oscar de la hoya gay
The infamous photos of Mexican-American boxing icon and entrepreneur Oscar De La Hoya wearing fishnet panty hose, heels while posing in boxing gloves and also posing seductively in the bathtub, is a sight most fans either wish to forget or will never forget.
For years that photo, sold by a woman to the tabloids, created a narrative around De La Hoya that he was possibly male lover or at the very least a cross-dresser, although his close friends and opponents such as Sugar Shane Mosley denied it, as has De La Hoya.
De La Hoya Clears Air On Cross Dressing Photo With Shannon Sharpe
De La Hoya recently became the next celebrity to take the coach and share a cognac on the award-winning “Uncle Shay Shay” podcast.
Shannon asked De La Hoya, “Why you let them snap that picture 15 years ago?”
” I was drugged up,” De La Hoya responded. “I was drugged up.”
“I didn’t even know it.”
“You didn’t know you place the panty hose on?” Shannon asked.
Have you ever tried it?” the champ asked Sharpe.
“Hell nah,” Shannon replied, “I ain’t never gonna try it either.”
“Ar
Источник: https://www.instagram.com/reel/DGysyR9N1DY/After running 50 blocks though midtown Manhattan during the morning rush—all in leather shoes, slacks and a blue sport coat, and let’s see your Fitbit account for all that—I finally reached the heavy glass revolving doors of the restaurant, and made my way, huffing, past the bar, which was bathed in red light.
I was 20 minutes late to an interview with boxing icon Oscar De La Hoya, who won an Olympic Gold Medal in 1992, then 10 world titles in six divisions as a pro, and now runs his own promotional company, Golden Male child. We were encounter at the fabled French restaurant Le Cirque, which opened specifically for us, and us alone, at 9 AM on a Thursday. No big deal.
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Then I saw him, in a smaller help room, with the same smile I recalled from his post-fight interviews. He was wearing his trademark dark shirt and dark skinny suit—he’s partial to designer John Varvatos—with neatly trimmed graying hair. I introduced myself and apologized.
Soon, I had chugged several bottles of Fiji water—thanks, Le Cirque!—and the nearly-all-access interview began at a beautifully arrange table, where I used all the napki
Источник: https://www.instagram.com/reel/C5NF9vbLZbm/
Rodriguez, Gregory. "16 Boxing and Masculinity: The History and (Her)story of Oscar de la Hoya". Latino/a Popular Culture, edited by Michelle Habell-Pallan and Mary Romero, New York, USA: New York University Press, 2002, pp. 252-268. https://doi.org/10.18574/nyu/9780814790816.003.0020
Rodriguez, G. (2002). 16 Boxing and Masculinity: The History and (Her)story of Oscar de la Hoya. In M. Habell-Pallan & M. Romero (Ed.), Latino/a Popular Culture (pp. 252-268). New York, USA: New York University Press. https://doi.org/10.18574/nyu/9780814790816.003.0020
Rodriguez, G. 2002. 16 Boxing and Masculinity: The History and (Her)story of Oscar de la Hoya. In: Habell-Pallan, M. and Romero, M. ed. Latino/a Popular Culture. Brand-new York, USA: Recent York University Squeeze, pp. 252-268. https://doi.org/10.18574/nyu/9780814790816.003.0020
Rodriguez, Gregory. "16 Boxing and Masculinity: The History and (Her)story of Oscar de la Hoya" In Latino/a Well-liked Culture edited by Michelle Habell-Pallan and Mary Romero, 252-268. New York, USA: New York University Press, 2002. https://doi.org/10.18574/nyu/9780814790816.003.0020
Rodriguez G. 16 Boxing and Masculinity: The History and (Her)story of Os