My husbands not gay where are they now

My Husband's Not Gay: What happened to the cast of controversial reality exhibition about married male Mormons attracted to other men?

A controversial docuseries from about homosexual Mormon men in heterosexual marriages is now going viral on TikTok.

Titled My Husband's Not Gay, the TLC special followed three married Mormon men who are all same-sex attracted, but chose to pursue a traditional lifestyle with wives and children.

Although it aired almost a decade ago, a brand-new generation of actual world TV fans like TikTok influencer Julian Hagins have unearthed the special and tracked down the current whereabouts of the cast. 

While mixed-orientation marriages have a 70 per cent divorce rate, the couples from My Husband's Not Gay are miraculously all still together. 

Curtis and Tera Brown recently acknowledged 30 years of marriage, with Tera gushing about the milestone on social media.

A controversial TLC docuseries from called My Husband's Not Gay has gone viral on TikTok as a modern generation of life TV fans realize it

The TLC particular followed three married Mormon men who are al

People Are Outraged Over The New TLC Show 'My Husband's Not Gay'

TLC/"My Husbands Not Gay"

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The recent TLC special "My Husband's Not Gay" doesn't even air until January 11th, but it's already causing controversy.

The show, based in Salt Lake City, UT, follows three Mormon men who say they are attracted to their wives, but they are also attracted to other men. They refer to it as "Same Sex Attraction" — not gay — but SSA, according to a show description on the TLC website.

TLC/'My Husbands Not Gay'

"There's no marriage that is perfect. Ours isn't. But with our faith in god we think we can overcome anything," says one of the men in the show's trailer.

Another male actor of the show explains: "I'm attracted to my wife, for sure. But I'm also attracted to men, too."

But the premise of the show is not sittin

RememberwhenTLC was The Learning Channel?

With Sunday night's debut of My Husband's Not Gay, the channel that once aired programming intended to educate pre-schoolers, train about outer space, and was originally founded by the Department of Health, Education and Welfare and NASA solidified itself as a mouthpiece for the religious right to propagate false -- and deadly -- ideas about LGBTQ people.

My Husband's Not Gay is an hour-long extraordinary about four Mormon men in Salt Lake Urban area who are attracted to other men, but decline to identify as queer or bisexual. Three of the men are in "mixed orientation" marriages -- partnerships where one member, in this case the wife, is straight. The special is far from TLC's first foray into fringe radical religious communities; the reach of shows like 19 Kids and Counting and Sister Wives has already given a platform to movements that are intrinsically homophobic and misogynistic.

The couples contain Jeff and Tanya, who've been married for nine years with one child; Pret and Megan, who have been married for eight and have one c

What the Heck Is ‘My Husband’s Not Gay’?

Reality television has always been a medium of realness, with TV shows and specials spotlighting different identities your average viewer may not see every day. These can be informative, essential pieces of media, ones that raise awareness about essential issues while discussing them with the complexity they deserve – and then there's My Husband's Not Gay. This one-episode extraordinary of TLC Presents created by Eric Evangelista has been re-discovered by YouTube commentators who are all baffled at the messages being presented.

My Husband's Not Gay follows four men in Salt Lake City, Utah, who were open to the cameras about their issues with "same-sex attraction" (an attraction to other men). They decided to ignore this aspect of themselves, instead adopting the heterosexuality necessary to hold wives and remain in their staunchly anti-LGBTQ+ church. These men's choices are genuinely intriguing; they speak to the issues of homophobia within different religious structures, while interrogating "nature versus nurture" regarding t