• CLICK HERE To Join Broke Straight Boys & Instantly Get Full Access To Entire Site & 3 FREE bonus sites.

Brock Gets Dominated By Archie's Dick - scene thread

IMG_3548.jpeg


Ok, who the fuck is “WE”? All I see in this comment is “WE WE WE” People are certainly entitled to their opinions but don’t speak for me and don’t speak for anybody else. Seriously. I can’t stand when people do that bullshit. This scene has a decent rating at the moment and more positive comments.

“we get stuck watching horrible content for a solid month.”

🙄

I don’t know about y’all but I didn’t get “stuck” watching anything. I don’t watch anything I don’t like. I got a Roku stick.
Also, this comment was left yesterday. 4 days after the scene was released so obviously not a priority and not anything he got “stuck” watching.
 
I would just like to say this. Everyone is entitled to a negative opinion. It’s the language used that pisses me off. The “we” and calling model’s names like “loud mouth” or “asshole” (left in a different comment from another user). Or calling the scene “crap” when many people were involved with the scene including the acting, filming, directing, editing, writing, producing.

This scene was NOT crap to me. In fact, I absolutely loved it and gave it all 5s.
 
I am 100% agreement with you Jay. I loved the Brock scenes that we have seen so far, and it is fucking annoying when people project their own prejudices onto the overall audience by using the term, “we” instead of “I” to express their thoughts. I understand it is a big world with varying tastes but people should learn to speak just for themselves. Again, it is fucking annoying.
 
However the shit that Brock is getting pales in comparison to the vitriol that Jimmy Johnson received while he was here. I don’t have the patience to look up the scene threads from twelve years ago, but they went on for pages and pages and Jimmy was called a lot worse than what they are saying about Brock.

I checked Jimmy’s page and there are still comments about him even made in the last few years. Here are a few examples.

Gianniplays1 on 08/10/2018​

Biggest douche to ever hit gay porn. I hope his scenes stay out there in the porn tubes forever, and he gets hazed on the regular. Funniest fucking thing ever was his one and only "bottom" vid, People with copies of that should be slappin it up on every tube site, just to be sure his level of deniability remains zero.

coco57 on 07/31/2018​

Some guys, liked this straight boy. I think he was a jerk. Boring Stupid Bum.


Ronjon on 07/03/2016​

Unquestionably the lowest rated model on Broke Straight Boys Its not hard to understand why as he has the attitude and personality of a potato. He is the most homophobic model I have ever seen on any gay porn site anywhere. Why Broke Straight Boys employed this guy is beyond me. Broke Straight Boys has produced a lot of outstanding content, and Jimmy's scene's should not be associated with Broke Straight Boys, and should be be deleted from the site. As a gay man, and a subscriber I find him offensive and reprehensible. Broke Straight Boys you are so much better than this. I am truly disappointed in your decision to air this garbage.


These are just a few that still remain on Jimmy’s page. Back in the older days, management censored a lot of content on the scene pages, (while not on the forum, which is why I have always remained here). Anyway my point is that polarizing models who do not fit into the typical box will always get the hate. But I hope that Broke Straight Boys will continue to at least occasionally bring us a Jimmy or a Brock. It shakes things up and keeps it real! lol
 
Have you ever heard of the ‘Joffrey Dilemma” ? During the shows run of Game of thrones, the character Prince Joffrey was hated so much by the audience that they simultaneously directed that hate at the actor who played him. Supposedly, people were mean to him on the street and made death threats to him. It got so bad that he retired from acting altogether after that role.

A majority of everyday people do not understand filmmaking and the processes revolving it. So if the Broke Straight Boys audience wants to create a simulacrum of character and actor, create a negative representation of me as the character, then that would make a pretty funny joke. A joke created from the audiences deepest emotional responses to what they see on the screen; Ignoring the barrier of the device they are using and letting those emotions truly convincing themselves that what they are seeing is not fiction, but something really real. They blend together fantasy and reality, and think that their contention was not the planned response that was anticipated. A joke where I am the set up, but they are the punchline.


The performer does not tell the audience when to laugh, and the audience does not tell the performer when to tell a joke. So with that; They can hate, They can comment, cry, and they can even threaten. The audience can do whatever they want to feel like they are in the spotlight. I will not try to stop them. I want them to be in that spotlight, the comment section is that stage, and the keyboard is the mic, continuing the same song and dance while I sit in the audience, laughing. I will continue laugh so long as they keep telling the same joke; for this joke only ends once they break said simulacrum and realize the actuality of what they see as opposed to what they want to see. The roles are reversed, and only the performer can end the performance. So they must ask themselves the question: Are they the audience, or the performer?
 
Interesting and thought provoking point you are making Brock. One of my favorite all time artists is Bob Dylan. I am reminded of the last verse of his song, “Positively Fourth Street”.

“I wish that for just one time you could stand inside my shoes
And just for that one moment I could be you
Yes, I wish that for just one time you could stand inside my shoes
You'd know what a drag it is to see you“

It may not be the same concept, but that is what I thought of, reading your post, Brock.
 
Have you ever heard of the ‘Joffrey Dilemma” ? During the shows run of Game of thrones, the character Prince Joffrey was hated so much by the audience that they simultaneously directed that hate at the actor who played him. Supposedly, people were mean to him on the street and made death threats to him. It got so bad that he retired from acting altogether after that role.

A majority of everyday people do not understand filmmaking and the processes revolving it. So if the Broke Straight Boys audience wants to create a simulacrum of character and actor, create a negative representation of me as the character, then that would make a pretty funny joke. A joke created from the audiences deepest emotional responses to what they see on the screen; Ignoring the barrier of the device they are using and letting those emotions truly convincing themselves that what they are seeing is not fiction, but something really real. They blend together fantasy and reality, and think that their contention was not the planned response that was anticipated. A joke where I am the set up, but they are the punchline.


The performer does not tell the audience when to laugh, and the audience does not tell the performer when to tell a joke. So with that; They can hate, They can comment, cry, and they can even threaten. The audience can do whatever they want to feel like they are in the spotlight. I will not try to stop them. I want them to be in that spotlight, the comment section is that stage, and the keyboard is the mic, continuing the same song and dance while I sit in the audience, laughing. I will continue laugh so long as they keep telling the same joke; for this joke only ends once they break said simulacrum and realize the actuality of what they see as opposed to what they want to see. The roles are reversed, and only the performer can end the performance. So they must ask themselves the question: Are they the audience, or the performer?
Excellent comment, Brock. It is often said that a good performer can create a scene so perfectly that the viewer has completely suspended disbelief and accepted the performance as reality. The concept was first proposed by Samuel Taylor Coleridge, a poet and philosopher. You are a skilled enough performer that a certain subset of the viewers cannot separate the human being, Brock, from the persona you use in your appearance.s on film.

As for Number 94, his outrage over your scenes, and his threats to cancel his subscription, I wonder how many times he has made similar comments to a manager at a restaurant, s retail store, or elsewhere.
 
If there’s ever a season 2 for Broke Straight Boys the tv series, Brock and Archie are 2 models they should definitely feature.
Well, they did promise a second scene if they came back. We will have to let management know we want to see that scene.
 
I would just like to say this. Everyone is entitled to a negative opinion. It’s the language used that pisses me off. The “we” and calling model’s names like “loud mouth” or “asshole” (left in a different comment from another user). Or calling the scene “crap” when many people were involved with the scene including the acting, filming, directing, editing, writing, producing.

This scene was NOT crap to me. In fact, I absolutely loved it and gave it all 5s.
As did I!
 
Have you ever heard of the ‘Joffrey Dilemma” ? During the shows run of Game of thrones, the character Prince Joffrey was hated so much by the audience that they simultaneously directed that hate at the actor who played him. Supposedly, people were mean to him on the street and made death threats to him. It got so bad that he retired from acting altogether after that role.

A majority of everyday people do not understand filmmaking and the processes revolving it. So if the Broke Straight Boys audience wants to create a simulacrum of character and actor, create a negative representation of me as the character, then that would make a pretty funny joke. A joke created from the audiences deepest emotional responses to what they see on the screen; Ignoring the barrier of the device they are using and letting those emotions truly convincing themselves that what they are seeing is not fiction, but something really real. They blend together fantasy and reality, and think that their contention was not the planned response that was anticipated. A joke where I am the set up, but they are the punchline.


The performer does not tell the audience when to laugh, and the audience does not tell the performer when to tell a joke. So with that; They can hate, They can comment, cry, and they can even threaten. The audience can do whatever they want to feel like they are in the spotlight. I will not try to stop them. I want them to be in that spotlight, the comment section is that stage, and the keyboard is the mic, continuing the same song and dance while I sit in the audience, laughing. I will continue laugh so long as they keep telling the same joke; for this joke only ends once they break said simulacrum and realize the actuality of what they see as opposed to what they want to see. The roles are reversed, and only the performer can end the performance. So they must ask themselves the question: Are they the audience, or the performer?

Boy that was deep, very well said Brock

This also happened to William Atherton from the Ghostbusters movie (the 1984 one). Apparently people would try to pick fights in bars over the role of Walter Peck ("yes it's true, this man has no dick" an epic burn started by Dan Aykroyd and finished by Bill Murray 🤣)

 
View attachment 182147

Ok, who the fuck is “WE”? All I see in this comment is “WE WE WE” People are certainly entitled to their opinions but don’t speak for me and don’t speak for anybody else. Seriously. I can’t stand when people do that bullshit. This scene has a decent rating at the moment and more positive comments.

“we get stuck watching horrible content for a solid month.”

🙄

I don’t know about y’all but I didn’t get “stuck” watching anything. I don’t watch anything I don’t like. I got a Roku stick.
Also, this comment was left yesterday. 4 days after the scene was released so obviously not a priority and not anything he got “stuck” watching.
Or by saying "been stuck with" no one is forcing anyone to watch videos. I commented on this person's comment and also mentioned there are literally thousands of other videos including from the vault, Broke Straight Boys vintage and College Boy Physicals and others.
 
BTW, our boy, Brock just had a scene released on AC and he was quite good in the scene. Brock is a versatile young man and that scene and his scenes here show he has range and talents. I hope we see a lot more out of Brock.
What's AC?
 
Top