Gay santa claus sex
I Am Santa Claus
I AM SANTA CLAUS follows five men for one year, culminating in their immersion into the role of Santa Claus at holiday moment. Without narration, intercutting among them and focusing upon three, viewers meet Santas: Russell, Jim, Mick, Frank (who has legally changed his name to Santa Claus), and Bob. They're from diverse parts of the country and different cultures, though their paths sometimes cross. After all, there are associations of Santa Clauses, agents for Santa Clauses, contracts and bookings and play dates for Santa Clauses. For Russell, his Santa time is an economic necessity, and he glories in the part. For the sensitive Jim, it's a peak of a year that's otherwise fraught with emotional hurt and longing. For Mick, it's a dream come true -- the pinnacle of a life spent preparing for the moment when he can be the Santa Claus he knows he was always meant to be. For Frank, it's fun, fulfilling, and a welcome break from the back-breaking construction work that fills his days. As the backdrop for these men, Tommy Avallone gives his viewers a flavor of the
Gay Santa ad highlights giant shift in Norwegian society
Nordic affairs journalist
Christmas ads have become an annual tradition, often appearing as mini-films with their hold festive story. But one Norwegian commercial, featuring Father Christmas kissing a gentleman waiting for him at home on Christmas Eve, has become a surprise hit.
In When Harry meets Santa, the four-minute ad by Norway's state-run Posten postal service, the dude is seen writing Father Christmas a letter to the North Pole with the message: "All I want for Christmas is you." And he gets his wish.
"We wanted to celebrate the year anniversary since the abolition of a law prohibiting lgbtq+ relationships," says Monica Solberg, Posten's marketing director. The ad has been watched well over two million times online.
"The magnitude of response took us a bit by surprise. We expected a reaction, but not to such an extent."
The ad raised few eyebrows in Norway or in neighbouring Nordic countries, but it has prompted some discussion beyond. As well as praise
A Norwegian Christmas advert has sparked a vigorous debate with some critics accusing postal service Posten Norge of sexualizing Christmas with their depiction of a homosexual Santa Claus.
The postal service released a 4 minute advert to their Youtube channel earlier this week where Santa Claus struggles to balance his Christmas duties and his boyfriend.
The video was posted to the channel on November 22 and has already amassed over 1 million views.
The video depicts the couple's first encounter and showed that the pair would spend an evening together around Christmas time before Santa returns to his present-delivering duties.
The frustration of only seeing Santa once every year leads his partner, the unamed protagonist of the video, to send a letter to the North Pole with the message "all I want for Christmas is you."
Ahead of their next encounter a Posten worker delivers the man's Christmas present with Santa remarking that this year he decided to procure some help for deliveries.
The pair then share a ardent kiss and the camera pans out of the place into the sky to show mult
Gay Santa Claus indicates amazing strides in Norwegian society
Christmas commercials in the build of short films contain become a tradition in Norway, and this year one, in which Santa Claus kisses a bloke waiting for him at home on Christmas Eve, became a real knock , writes the BBC.
In a four-minute film by the Norwegian State Post, a man writes a letter to Santa Claus with the message: "All I want for Christmas is you." And his aspire was fulfilled.
The ad ends with the words: "In , Norway celebrates 50 years where we can love whoever we want."
"We wanted to celebrate 50 years since the repeal of the law that prohibited same-sex relationships," said Post Marketing Director Monika Solberg.
The advertisement has been viewed more than two million times on the Internet.
"We were surprised by the scale of the reactions. We expected a reaction, but not so much".
The commercial also caused some eyebrows to be raised in Norway and neighboring countries, reports Hina. Along with the praise, there was criticism mainly because Santa Claus was turned into a sexual object and because he "fool