Pat keeps his voice low. “Alright, Jimmy… just do your thing. Like I’m not even here.”
Jimmy glances over—
“No—don’t look at me,” Pat cuts in softly. “Forget I’m in the room.”
Jimmy settles, breath shifting, focus turning inward—then, instinctively, he starts to rush it.
Seconds later—“I’m close…”
Pat steps in, steady, recalibrating.
“Not yet… cool your jets. We’re just getting started.”
1. Jimmy Palmer (the name says it all)
This one doesn’t really bother pretending. It’s not about suggestion anymore—it’s about what’s actually happening. And somehow, because it’s just one guy, it still slides into that gray area…like it could be a hetero thing. That tension is part of the hook.
2. Ty Arthur (double duty)
3. Jayson MacBride (reflection)
4. Adam Stuart (on the floor)
There’s also that candid, caught-in-the-act feeling—like the reading shots—but more charged. It’s one thing to pose nude, to hold a shape for the camera. It’s another to be in the middle of something, usually set in private spaces where he thinks he’s alone…then pushed further into locker rooms, public stalls, or showing the happy ending.
5. Billy Putnam (robe and watcher)
6. Paul Baressi (bathroom stall)
7. Gregg Donovan (locker room)
There’s something else going on too. Watching another man in that moment can trigger a physical response—it’s not just in the head. Our bodies start to mirror what we’re seeing, what brain scientists call “mirror neurons.” And that’s where it shifts for me. It’s no longer just being seen—posing for the camera—it becomes being watched. Exhibitionist meets voyeur.
8. Derrick Stanton (white sheets)
9. Scott Hammond aka Dick Orsini (striped sheets)
10. Jeff Turk (action shot)
Thoughts?
If you have time to look into mirror neurons, it’s fascinating. They’re brain cells that fire both when we do something and when we watch someone else do the same thing—basically, they mirror behavior. Which might explain why, as men, watching another man in a moment of self-pleasure can create a physical response in our own bodies. Kind of wild, right?








I agree, watching another man playing with himself does create a physical response. But can we agree that the guy in question has to be hot too?
ReplyDeleteThat probably helps—haha! But I don’t think that’s exactly how it works. Mirror neurons aren’t really about attraction or sexuality—they’re more basic than that. Even straight guys are wired to mirror what they see, which might explain why so much straight porn still focuses on the dick. From what I understand, it’s tied to survival—learning by watching and copying each other, and even bonding as a group for protection. In this context, it just takes on a whole other meaning--haha! Hot right?! Honestly, someone’s gotta have written a book on this—I’d read it.
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