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The Kids Are All Right

Photographer Jeffrey Kilmer has dedicated the last seven years to capturing the awkwardness, rebellion, and personal style of young men across the country and around the world. His book, 23% PURE, is a collection of hot guys, far and wide.


1 PIXEL GIF | ADVOCATE.COM

23% PURE JEFFREY KILMER 01 BRANDON XSLIDE | ADVOCATE.COM 

Brandon - Sarasota, Fla.

***

In the past, when you wanted to capture the face of disaffected youth, you would hang out in record stores or McDonalds parking lots. Jeffrey Kilmer found most of his subjects through MySpace, from 2002 – 2008. Most of them are musicians or members of local bands. In many ways nothing has changed with youth: these are kids who have perfected their fame pouts and slouchy attitudes before they really know themselves. In the midst of that age when you think that smiling is a sign of weakness.

You can see timelessness in Kilmer’s portraits — in the practiced expressions and awkward sexuality of these young people, but this book could end up being totemic. The photos depict a moment in culture — when the Internet was less controlled and kids were using MySpace to express themselves and as a flyer for their bands. Now there is less chance for unfettered connection on the Internet. Myspace has been inundated with messages from Russian sex spambots named Katya, and people are gravitating towards less penetrable social networking sites like Facebook. In a way these portraits are a snapshot of a virtual Wild West, when people made thrilling, sometimes scary connections with total strangers and it still felt fresh. Moody, tattoo-ey, using their hair to express their emotions, the subjects that Kilmer captures embody the real face of American youth as it was briefly in this wandering, hungry era: the strangely excessive yet depressingly weighty Naughties.

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8 readers have recommended this story.

Reader Comments
  • Name: Joseph
    Date posted: 1/23/2010 9:11:12 PM
    Hometown: Montgomery, AL

    Comment:

    Who cares if they're just white guys? I mean, since when do people of color have anything to do with being gay? C'mon, it's really only white guys that are cute anyway, duh.

  • Name: Jason
    Date posted: 12/10/2009 5:30:07 PM
    Hometown: Montreal

    Comment:

    Check out the new book A Vigil for Joe Rose about being gay and out in high school. One of the stories is about me. :) Available through Amazon and Barnes & Noble (bn.com). Direct links at: http://JoeRose.viviti.com

  • Name: Dante
    Date posted: 11/24/2009 2:41:58 PM
    Hometown: Chicago

    Comment:

    THANK YOU, RATIONAL THINKER, for being one. i'd be interested in knowing how the pics were chosen for placement here, but the relentless hunt for something to rail about on these boards can be really tiresome after awhile. i'm all for speaking your mind, but constant, judgmental, self righteous indignation... ugh. it's getting a little shrill in here. and btw, just for the record, i'm pretty sure pg. 7 (Inno) is Asian, and the kid from El Paso looked pretty Latino to me... i'm just sayin.' they may not appreciate people just labeling them white for expediency. maybe you still feel that's far too few boys of color, fine, but completely ignoring someone's actual racial identity in order to make a snappy comment about ignored racial identity -- pretty lame.

  • Name: Tom
    Date posted: 11/23/2009 6:06:48 PM
    Hometown: College Station, TX

    Comment:

    So this photographer traveled all across America and the world and found only Caucasian kids? Not the America I know...

  • Name: Clay
    Date posted: 11/23/2009 5:45:03 PM
    Hometown: Joliet

    Comment:

    "Hot" guys? Perhaps a few...the overwhelming majority are NOT, in my opinion. The only thing I find interesting about this photo collection is how it illustrates generational differences. It makes me glad to be middle-aged!

  • Name: rationalthinker
    Date posted: 11/23/2009 1:11:48 PM
    Hometown: boston

    Comment:

    Drake: out of upwards of 20 guys, one was pictured with a cigarette. hardly promotion. i pass more smokers on the way to my bathroom. Raymond: love what you're after, but it's not impossible for the first person of color i see halfway through any given day to be in the mirror. I know it's the spirit of advocate.com commenters, but can we not scour the website for things to complain about and consider that this is one guy with his own perspective and camera, and what he sees [or even wants to see] won't necessarily make us all feel good. the magic of artistic expression is that no matter what's going on in his mind, we're all free to interpret it however we want; from how it makes us feel to our perception of the artists intentions. spare yourselves the frown lines.

  • Name: Drake
    Date posted: 11/23/2009 12:55:55 PM
    Hometown: Washington

    Comment:

    The Advocate should not be promoting smoking in youth, and in the gay community.

  • Name: Raymond
    Date posted: 11/23/2009 12:49:54 PM
    Hometown: Asheville NC

    Comment:

    Does the photographer only see white youth? No racial diversity? How utterly boring.

  • Name: Tom
    Date posted: 11/23/2009 11:21:07 AM
    Hometown: Toronto

    Comment:

    They look pretty healthy to me. When I was their age, I was skinny too. And not on drugs. Regardless, great shots!

  • Name: Siegfried
    Date posted: 11/22/2009 5:05:54 PM
    Hometown: Duesseldorf

    Comment:

    Many of these guys look as if they may be using drugs that deplete their subcutaneous layer of fat. Is healthy out?



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