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John goodman is gay

Is John Goodman gay?

Yes, I know this is Datalounge, and we are only ever interested in discussing the potential gayness of hot, young 20ish studs, but somebody told me this and it always stuck with me. I was struck by how matter-of-fact this person made this statement, and accept me, this person has no reason or craving for this to be true if it wasn't.

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by Anonymousreply 113July 15, 2019 3:29 PM

He's married to a woman, no?

by Anonymousreply 1March 28, 2018 11:13 PM

I see it, too. Even though he’s not flamboyant, he’s always pinged to me.

by Anonymousreply 2March 28, 2018 11:22 PM

He's gay. Like Karl Malden and Raymond Burr nobody really cares.

by Anonymousreply 3March 28, 2018 11:33 PM

Real World: He's been married to a female since 1989 - so it's extremely unlikely. Why?

Gay World: he’s always pinged to me. He's gay.

by Anonymousreply 4March 28, 2018 11:37 PM

The best I've seen him look lately was in Atomic Blonde where, for a alter, he didn't play a working class guy or a looser, but a high ranking CIA agent.

I have no idea if he's gay.

[quote] He's married to a woman, no?

Ed Asner was

John Goodman Played Gay on Normal, Ohio

“Caught on Tape” (November 15, 2000)

John Goodman’s follow-up sitcom to Roseanne was Normal, Ohio, which only lasted seven episodes before Fox yanked it from its schedule in late 2000. Unfortunately, the take-away from its shortcoming was that audiences wouldn’t buy a guy enjoy Goodman playing gay, which is perhaps not one of the problems this show needed to fix? This week, special guest / homosexual academic Hollis Griffin joins us to discuss why this exhibit didn’t work and why it’s still worth discussing as a failed imitator to Will & Grace.

You can now watch Glen’s movie, Being Frank, on Freevee via Amazon Prime. WATCH IT NOW!

Watch the episode we’re discussing on YouTube. Also watch Don’t Ask, the unaired pilot that eventually became this show.

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And yes, we do have an official website! We even contain episode transcripts courtesy of Sarah Neal. Our stamp was designed by Steal Wilson. This episode’s art

John Goodman

John Goodman was born in Affton, MO - a small, unincorporated area of St. Louis County. His father, a postal worker, died of a heart attack when he was only two years old, leaving his barbeque joint waitress mother to raise three children on her own. Goodman was a dedicated football player - as well as a smart aleck devotee of Mad Magazine - and following high college graduation in 1970 he earned a football scholarship to Southwest Missouri Articulate University. An injury squashed any hopes of a professional sports career, forcing the funny, outgoing charmer to switch his major to drama. In 1975, Goodman graduated with a theater degree, then moved to New York with a suitcase in hand and some money lent by his brother, Leslie. He had never been to the Big Apple - as a little town Midwesterner, he immediately felt out of place. Undeterred, however, Goodman strike the audition circuit running and in a month landed work with a touring dinner theater performance of "1776."Over the next few years his average working-guy looks paid the bills in a series of commercials, including a rather infamous one where he slapped his encounter with skin bracer and commented "Thanks, I needed that!"

John Goodman Shares Where He Stands With Roseanne Barr

Roseanne Barr Disses Eminem in Donald Trump Rap “Daddy’s Home”

“Oh John Goodman, where art thou?” may not be a ask on Roseanne Barr’s mind.

In fact, the Roseanne patriarch said he hasn’t spoken to his former onscreen wife since she was fired from the sitcom’s revival in 2018.

“I’d rather doubt if she wants to talk to me,” Goodman—who starred alongside Barr on her eponymous sitcom from 1988 to 1997, and again for its one-season reboot—told The Hollywood Reporter in an interview published July 9. “We haven’t talked for about seven or eight years."

Roseanne was initially renewed for an 11th season. However, amid its success, Barr compared President Barack Obama’s then-advisor Valerie Jarrett to an ape in a Twitter (now known as X) post, leading ABC to retract the series’ renewal.

"Roseanne's Twitter statement is abhorrent, repugnant and changeable with our values,” then-President of ABC Entertainment Channing Dungey said in a statement at the moment, “and we have decided to cancel her show."  

A spinoff series called The Conners—which killed off Barr’s character in its fir

john goodman is gay

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