Difference between revisions of "Groovy guy contest"
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Image:Groovey Guy Contest 1971 Jimmy Hughes Card.jpg|[[Groovey Guy Contest 1971 Jimmy Hughes Card]] | Image:Groovey Guy Contest 1971 Jimmy Hughes Card.jpg|[[Groovey Guy Contest 1971 Jimmy Hughes Card]] | ||
Image:Back of 71 Groovy Guy Card.jpg|[[Back of 71 Groovy Guy Card]] | Image:Back of 71 Groovy Guy Card.jpg|[[Back of 71 Groovy Guy Card]] | ||
+ | Image:GG 71.jpg|[[GG 71]] | ||
Image:Sept 15 1971.jpg|[[Sept 15 1971]] | Image:Sept 15 1971.jpg|[[Sept 15 1971]] | ||
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Image:Aug 2 72.jpg|[[Aug 2 72]] | Image:Aug 2 72.jpg|[[Aug 2 72]] | ||
Image:Sept 13 72.jpg|[[Sept 13 72]] | Image:Sept 13 72.jpg|[[Sept 13 72]] | ||
Image:1972 Groovy Guy Program.jpg|[[1972 Groovy Guy Program]] | Image:1972 Groovy Guy Program.jpg|[[1972 Groovy Guy Program]] | ||
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Revision as of 00:57, 29 March 2010
The Groovy Guy contest was started by The Advocate magazine in 1968 as a marketing tool for the then newly formed magazine and as a way to unite the Los Angeles gay community. The first contest had seven contestants and 150 people in the audience. Word of mouth created such a buzz that by the following year there were 18 contestants and 700 people in the audience. By 1970 the contest had become so famous that The Advocate featured a Groovy Guy float in the first gay pride parade down Hollywood Boulevard in June 1970. The last contest was held in 1972. It suffered a setback when one of the winners was convicted of murder soon after winning. It also lost a lot of luster when naked dancers became common in gay bars in the early seventies. It was the forerunner of gay beauty pagents to this day.