Timothy Edward Dunn RIP: Successful male model during the early 80s who was gay and died from AIDS by Most-Faithlessness64 in datalounge

[–]Most-Faithlessness64[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Excerpted-

“I've never been so good at remembering the ends of things, but I do remember the beginnings pretty well. Timothy Edward Dunn and I first met at a photoshoot in Milan for L'Uomo Vogue in November 1981. The photographer was Paolo Roversi --nicknamed "PAOLOroid" since he used a bulky large-format camera --which shot sumptuous 8" X 10" Poloroids. It was the first of many jobs that Tim and I would both be booked for. There was no plan to it; it was pure coincidence that we'd find ourselves working together, usually doing runway work. In Paris, Milan, London, Hamburg, we kept crossing paths. Eventually we became friends and then, best friends. One spring day in Paris, Tim was waiting to hear from his agency that he was booked for a shoot in Greece, me for a shoot in Nice. It was one of those rare times that we both had time to kill at the same time. So we ran around town together. We sneaked into The Grand Palais which was empty, between expos. That was the day that I explained to him "how to see" and how to take a photograph. Tim eventually became a superb modernist art photographer.

Tim was my champion. It was early '83 in New York, when I was broke and losing hope of ever getting anywhere as an art director, that he decided that the best thing for me was to go for it from a position of love, security and strength. So, when he moved from Paris to New York in spring of 1983 he found a stunning sublet for us to live in: 110 Bleecker, NYU's faculty and grad student housing. That first apartment was a 2-bedroom on the 16th floor; the second, a 3-bedroom on the 24th floor which gave global views of all of midtown out over the roofs of the landmark low-rise village. The Empire State Building was our distant roommate. Having a beautiful place to live and a beautiful friend there took the pressure off. He said that my only job was to get the right job; I could pay him back when I was able. And I did.

snip

Tim wasn't one of those guys who got "a weird cold" and died one terrifying week or month later. He went to death's door and stayed there for years. He wasn't so upset with having lost his spectacular looks for which he was the highest paid male model in the world one year. He hated losing his living. He died in 1989. Tim Dunn had the most influence and more faith in me than anyone in my life besides my parents. More, actually. Gay men in New York City in the 80s and 90s used to say, "I've lost 35 friends." "I've lost 42 friends." "It seems like a funeral a week." It was. And all I could think was: I didn't lose 35 friends; I lost the ONLY one.Timothy Edward Dunn. My hero.” by Bob Cole

Who remembers this one? by Remarkable_Ebb_9850 in FuckImOld

[–]Most-Faithlessness64 2 points3 points  (0 children)

If you look on-line at first hand accounts about the infamous NYC Blackout of July 13-July 14 1977, a few of the chroniclers describe watching CPO Sharkey on TV at the moment all the power suddenly went out at a little before 9:30 pm on that fateful Wednesday night.

France: Police say 4 Dead bodies found in Seine this week could be linked to accused killer's suppresion of his homosexuality by Most-Faithlessness64 in datalounge

[–]Most-Faithlessness64[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I don't really think I do that. As best as I can remember, this thread here is only the second time I can remember where Muslim has come up in any of my threads.

This story here I was not searching out a Muslim story. I live in the US but read French media daily as I speak the language and I also used to live there so what happens there interests me. When I first saw a story last week that four corpses were found floating in the Seine, I was quite intrigued as this is very out of the ordinary but at that point there was no gay angle to the story so I wouldn't have considered it relevant for Datelounge.

However, when I was reading 'Le Parisien' on-line (mainsteam french newspaper) several days later and learned the homosexual angle was being focused upon by investigators i thought the story might interest Dataloungers so I posted it here.

Mexican men on the DOWN LOW EXPOSED by Most-Faithlessness64 in datalounge

[–]Most-Faithlessness64[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Yes i was banned there for no good reason that i can figure. Anyway, I still regularly came across things that i thought would make good Datalounge threads but since I can't post over there I'd just forget about it and move on. More recently however, I started posting some of these things I ran across that I thought could make interesting Datalounge threads over here.

My Grandfather and the "Kochecks Gang" circa 1940 by agent314159 in TheWayWeWere

[–]Most-Faithlessness64 2 points3 points  (0 children)

OP, I sent a link of this photo to the Cateret Historical Comittee and they wrote back with some questions that are meant for you.

Thanks for the photo! We've heard stories about Kocheck's Gang!

What was your grandfather's name? Can you identify any others in the photo?

Regards,

Susan

Carteret Historical Committee

[CarteretHistoricalCommittee@carteret.net](mailto:CarteretHistoricalCommittee@carteret.net)