MacDonald said he spent hours deleting their comments celebrating him. Eventually, white nationalists discovered the song. Even if you’ve never seen the video for “Whiteboy,” you know precisely the type of person who would put it on repeat. Those reactions, he hoped, would “spark the conversation.”īut MacDonald started something more vicious than a conversation. He says that he wanted viewers to get pissed off. Almost as if it were an HBO Max original, MacDonald released an accompanying behind-the-scenes clip where he describes the concept of the song. “Cringing With Whiteboy,” a reaction video, is currently sitting around 1.6 million views. The rest of the classroom begins to taunt him: “White boy, don’t say that/White boy, you so bad.” MacDonald overpowers them with a scream of anguish, his voice rising above all the others in the room: “White boy, white noise, saying shit I can’t say with my white voice.” Naturally, there are viral videos mocking the song.
The teacher, played by a Black actor, tries to quiet MacDonald down, waving his arms and wordlessly shouting. Just as he starts rapping about how he shouldn’t have to feel bad for being white, the students start to make faces and throw paper at him. It’s set in a Southern California classroom where the musician, who is white, wears blond box braids and sits at a desk in a row of bored-looking students.
Soggy jocks, heaving muscle, the tang of victory in the mouth! It's more than enough to satisfy my demanding kink for m/m erotic wrestling.Perhaps you’ve seen the music video for “Whiteboy,” which currently has more than 22 million views on YouTube and made a minor celebrity of a carpenter turned pro wrestler turned rapper named Tom MacDonald. The climactic choke-out is the match's sweet spot for sure. At the 30:00 mark, both bodies are again luminously wet and bound in a rear naked choke that lasts (gloriously! decisively!) for almost 90 seconds. By the 24:00 mark (out of 35 minutes), both are down to jock straps, and the battle is far from over, and far from a done deal for either. When McNair muscles loose of Flynn's flesh-and-bone shackles, it's fairly clear (if not yet certain) who is going to rule this mat.Ī third of the way through the video, both adversaries are attractively gleaming with sweat, which disappears after a jumpcut apparently dries them off so they can work up a fresh coat. He loses some momentum when Parker hurls him down to the mat and traps him in a cross armbar.
Scrappy remains in charge for the next three minutes, during which he roughly strips his opponent down to the waist. I'm a fuckin' pro wrestler!" He lifts Flynn up in a bear hug, intensifying pressure to the wrestler's lower back with terse, dramatic squeezes. "Y'know what?" Scrappy barks all of a sudden, running low on patience. They lock up again, tentatively, nervously, though hiding all that behind lively banter. Scrappy recovers quickly and shoves Parker all the way to the opposite side of the mat. He picks the curly-haired Hercules up and slams his back to the wall. Parker easily fends off Scrappy's opening attack. It's all a big tease, of course, but how I do love to be teased! Together these two are almost too much eye candy, especially as the match progresses, and the two shed their singlets, eventually stripping down to their jockstraps. While Scrappy has moves and holds on top of his muscles, Parker seemingly glides on pluck alone. He's fit, photogenic, and sure of himself - and he's one of the first wrestlers on the MBW roster two years ago. Scrappy, of course, is an underground wrestling phenom, but Flynn is a draw, too.
Scrappy offers to "knock some rust off" Flynn, whose last appearance in this fight space was at the end of 2017. Parker apparently thinks Scrappy is too musclebound to grapple. Scrappy overhears his opening pitch and steps in to remind everybody, Parker especially, of how much muscle he brings to the game. Parker is feeling good about being back at MuscleBoy and confident in his ability to take on Scrappy.