October 22, 2024 |
Zachary Zane Has âDirty Wordsâ for NakedSword |
LOS ANGELESâHe has a weekly sex advice column. He penned a book called Boyslut. And now he appears in the new NakedSword Originals hit Dirty Words. Itâs hard to image Zachary Zane ever felt anything but comfort in his sexual skin, but his own story is perhaps more surprising than the escapades he writes about. âI grew up in Los Angeles, in the Valleyâwhich explains my ever-so-slight Valley girl accentâto a liberal Jewish family. I was a little neurotic kid with diagnosed OCD, which my psychiatrist declared âsevere.â I actually had so much shame surrounding sex, nudity, and watching porn as a kid and teenager. At 8 years old, I once cried in my therapistâs office because I kept imagining him naked and convinced myself I was a âbad person,ââ Zane recalls. âBecause of this, I started watching internet porn at 15, which was way later than my friends, who all started watching porn at 11. It took years to overcome my sexual shame, but I finally did. That is what Boyslut: A Memoir and Manifesto is all about!â After college, Zane worked as a smoking cessation researcher and counselor at Massachusetts General Hospital. He thought he was going to get a Ph.D. in clinical psychology. âHowever, I realized that, for such a seemingly altruistic profession, academics are cutthroat and steal your work. I would also end up writing grants every day until I died. So, I freaked out and decided not to apply,â he says. âInstead, I started writing during my free time at work and published a piece on how challenging it was dating as a bisexual man, but how I found love and acceptance dating a bisexual woman. The piece went viral, and outlets started reaching out to me to write more bisexual content.â At the time, Zane bemoaned the dearth of bisexual content online. âEssentially, when you Googled âbisexual man,â what came up were studies about bisexual men having and spreading HIV, â10 Things to Never Say to a Bisexual Person,â or â10 Myths About Bisexuality.â Essentially, it was content attempting to prove to gay and straight people that bisexual people exist. But there wasnât much content about bisexuality for actual bisexuals, like how to date while bisexual, overcome biphobia, address bisexual health disparities, find a bi community, when itâs appropriate to label yourself as bi, and so on. âSo I became the internetâs âBi Guy,â addressing all these issues. I didnât love being pigeonholed, though, so I slowly expanded out from there, talking about queer male sexuality, then queer sexuality for all genders, and then grew to write about all things sex and relationships for all genders and sexualities.â Since then, Zane has built his influence with an impressive resume: His work has appeared in The New York Times, Rolling Stone, The Washington Post, Cosmo, NBC, GQ and Playboy, among other outlets. He had a biweekly column at Bisexual.org titled âGood Bi Love,â and was a contributing editor at Pride.com, HIV Plus magazine and The Advocate. He was also an associate digital editor for OUT magazine. He has a weekly sex advice column at Menâs Health titled âSexplain It,â and co-authored the book Menâs Health Best Sex Ever: 200 Frank, Funny & Friendly Answers About Getting It On. âI feel like I have such a larger impact writing for Menâs Health than I ever did writing for OUT, The Advocate, or Pride.com. A lot of closeted men donât feel comfortable reading the content on gay-specific sites, but they are open to reading content on Menâs Health. So, Iâve been able to reach and help elder millennials, Gen X and boomers come out and embrace their bisexuality. I donât think I would have reached that audience writing elsewhere.â Zane has also spoken across the country at universities and on panels, and been featured as an expert on multiple podcastsâincluding one by someone who inspired him. âThank God for Dan Savage. That man paved the way for me to become a sex columnist, and his work has literally helped millions of people over countless years,â Zane says. âBut there wasnât a Dan Savage for the bisexuals, someone who dove into the nitty-gritty of bi identity. I wish there were someone like that when I was struggling with my sexual orientation in my teenage years and early twenties. Now, Iâm in my mid-thirties, and Iâm proud to say Iâve become the person I wish I had while growing up.â That pride shines through in Boyslut. Published last year, the series of essays was named a 2024 Lambda Literary Award Finalist. âMy goal, in a nutshell, is to help my readers overcome at least some aspects of sexual shame. Youâll notice I write with a lot of humor and levityâI want to make this a fun and enticing read. Sex is often written about so seriously, but I think by using humor, I can lower peopleâs emotional guards and actually get my message across better,â Zane says. âBoyslut is also my love letter to the bisexual communityâto help them feel seen and understood and realize they are not alone. There is a burgeoning bisexual community thatâs out there; you just gotta find it.â An announcement about the book got the attention of Ben Rush, the awarding winning producer, director and writer at Falcon | NakedSword. âThe book sounded really compellingâand the author is quite handsomeâso naturally, I reached out to see how we might work together. Zachary sent me an advanced readers copy of the book, which confirmed my hunch: Heâs a fresh, original voice tackling subjects that should be more conversational. His style is relatable and matter of fact.â After developing a rapport by phone, text and social media, the two had dinner when Zane was back in L.A. visiting his family. âZachary is very open and very comfortable in his skin. He has a wonderfully sexy confidence that is healthy, but not at all off-putting or arrogant. That, plus his natural charm and writing talent, really stood out to me,â says Rush. âI think his relatability is key. He offers practical advice and shares his experiences openly, which is, in my opinion, what people respond to. He takes the shame out of sex by making his opinions and knowledge accessible. He never talks down to his readers, and he embraces all lifestyles and orientations.â In the meantime, Zane researched Rush, watching hits like Overdrive and the Bred & Breakfast series. âQuickly, I learned that the wit in his writing translated to a wit in real life,â says Zane. Soon, a new project was born. Sex is fun, and so is the quippy romp Dirty Wordsâa playful fusion of pop culture and porn. âZachary has been doing some short-form video sex tips for Falcon | NakedSword, and we were on the phone discussing the content. While we were chatting, the idea came to me. What if people could get a glimpse of Zacharyâs world?â Rush says. âHeâs recognized on the street quite a bit, and people always want to ask questions about their sex lives. What if porn stars, despite their profession, had their own questions about positions, health and sexuality? I called [President and CEO] Tim Valenti immediately, as heâs always open to innovative and thought-provoking material, and he greenlit the project on the spot.â Zane shared a list of his favorite porn stars, which Rush says is essentially how the movie was cast. âIn fact, Michael Boston flew from L.A. to New York for only two days just to be part of Zacharyâs porn fantasy. Once we had a cast locked in, I began writing the script. The goal was to come up with something fun and campy, with Zacharyâs fantastic sense of humor woven in. We then reviewed the conceit and the dialogue together, and Dirty Words came to life.â The project casts Zane as himself on a trip to Fire Island, where he encounters a bevy of porn stars eager to get his advice and put in into action, In addition to Boston, Dirty Words stars Braxton Cruz, Beaux Banks, Travis Connor, Oliver Hunt, Harold Lopez, Alexander Muller, Axel Rockham and Matty Westâwho âwas in the middle of reading my book; he had started reading it before he was cast in the film,â says Zane. âWhen he saw me, he was so excited and told me how Boyslut positively impacted his life. He then had me sign his copy. It was life intimating art!â The film is directed by Marc MacNamara, while Rush wrote the screenplay. âI found this film to be particularly interesting because it puts a current pop culture figure smack in the middle of the adult entertainment industry in a way thatâs honest and authentic. Zachary plays a larger-than-life version of himself, so I hope viewers will feel a stronger connection to this material, the same way they feel connected to his advice and stories,â says Rush. âZachary is a joy to have around in real life and at work. Heâs observant and extremely focused, but he also injects his humor into the process. Iâm looking into hiring him to be my emotional support sex writer on all future projects. We had so much fun during the shootâ¦we laughed constantly.â Initially, Rush cast Zane in a non-sex role, but the columnist expressed a desire to be a sexual performer in the film. âHe was surprised by that response, but I wanted to be a star! I also saw the stacked cast and had a crush on half the performers and wanted to fuck them.â But a few days later, Zane called Rush after a change of heart. âI was a little overzealous. The main reason why is that I have a nonfiction erotica zine on Substack, also called Boyslut, where I share real sex stories. My readers masturbate to the idea of me, the fantasy of me. Theyâve definitely built me up in their heads as this fuck machine, a rock star. Donât get me wrongâIâm a sex writer and educator, and I do think Iâm pretty good at sex, but I will never be as good as what theyâve built me up to be in their minds. In other words, seeing me fuck may ruin the fantasy.â Zane notes that he may change his mind one day, and looks forward to future collaborations with NakedSwordâincluding potentially writing his own screenplay. Rush is on board, and wants to create more unique projects like Dirty Words. âLike Zacharyâs writing, this kind of collaboration normalizes open conversations about sex, sexuality, gender and identity. For example, the marketing campaign for this project brings adult content to a mainstream audience in way that you donât typically see. Through the lens of a prescriptive, how-to perspective, the hardcore moments become more meaningful. Zacharyâs comfort level with the material essentially gives audiences permission to embrace who they are and enjoy sex unapologetically.â And thatâs something Zane wants everyone to embrace, no matter what stage of life or sexual discovery they find themselves in. âPorn has helped me safely discover a range of sexual acts, scenarios, and kinks that turn me onâthings I wouldnât have ever thought to even explore,â he says. But he also offers a word of advice: âWhile you can and should enjoy pornâand thereâs nothing shameful about watching and enjoying itâremember that porn is a fantasy. I shouldnât be comparing myself to these men with rock-hard abs and nine-inch dicks that never (seemingly) go soft. Similarly, most women arenât going to squirt buckets or orgasm through penetration alone. So enjoy porn, get off to it, but also educate yourself about having more real sex.â
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