Black Inches
Editor in Chief | George Wallace |
---|---|
Categories | Gay pornographic magazine |
Frequency | Monthly |
Publisher | Tony DeStefano |
Founded | 1993 |
Final issue | 2009 |
Company | Mavety Media Group Ltd. |
Country | USA |
Based in | New York City |
Language | English |
Website | www.blackinches.com |
ISSN | 1084-2462 |
Black Inches (ISSN 1084-2462) was a US-based gay pornographic magazine featuring African-American men. Published by Mavety Media alongside magazines such as Mandate, it was established in 1993 and folded in 2009.[1]
Features
The photos appearing in the magazine had various sources; some are obtained from companies that produce gay pornographic films (although most layouts depict individual men, rather than simulated "action" scenes). Photographers whose work appeared in Black Inches include Anneli Adolfsson, Ken Kavanagh, Brian Lantelme, and Abednego (formerly associated with Mansurf.com). The magazine also carried film reviews, erotic stories, cartoons, and advertisements.
Black Inches in gay culture
D. J. Murphy's Sons Like Me starts with a reference to Black Inches in its first lines:
"What the hell is this, Travis?" My mom yelled as she held the Black Inches porno magazine in her hand.[2]
Other novels that mention the magazine include John Weir's What I Did Wrong[3] and Jim Norton's Happy Ending.[4]
Black Inches featured every major gay black porn star in photo shoots and interviews, from Bobby Blake and Tyson Cane to Tiger Tyson, J. C. Carter, and T-Malone. Bobby Blake writes of his relationship with the magazine, "Black Inches was always very supportive of me. They reviewed every film I made, did photo-shoots, interviewed me, and gave me my own column."[5]
References
- ^ See Kit Christopher & Joe Thompson, "Mavety Media: The Rise and Fall of Socially Redeeming Content," Unzipped (October, 2009), 10–11.
- ^ D. J. Murphy, Sons Like Me (Lincoln, Nebr.: iUniverse, 2002), p. 1.
- ^ See John Weir, What I Did Wrong (New York: Viking, 2006), p. 126.
- ^ See Jim Norton, Happy Ending (New York: Simon and Schuster, 2007), p. 201.
- ^ Bobby Blake (with John R. Gordon), My Life in Porn: The Bobby Blake Story (Philadelphia: The Running Press, 2008), p. 227.
External links
- American LGBT-related magazines
- American pornographic magazines
- Defunct magazines of the United States
- Ethnic pornography
- Gay male pornography in the United States
- Gay male pornographic magazines
- LGBT African-American culture
- Magazines established in 1993
- Magazines disestablished in 2009
- LGBTQ-related magazine stubs
- Pornographic magazine stubs