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Monday, March 20, 2023

Glen


Lots of thatch creeping out from under the posing strap in this shot of Glen Kinkead.

 

9 comments:

  1. Damn that's a sexy man. He has a Robert Conrad vibe... again, DAMN!

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  2. Ah, Mr Seeger again. I always wondered what Mr Seeger's heritage was. I've looked the name up. English: from the Middle English personal name Segar Segor Sagar (Old English Sǣgār from sǣ ‘sea’ + gār ‘spear’), Seeger being the Americanized version. Interestingly, I have never come across this surname in England. I know he is heavily tanned, but he is naturally dark and perhaps looks more Scots than English. Kinkead: Scottish, variant of Kinkaid/Kincaid, in the county of Stirlingshire (North of Glasgow). The name of Kincaith, from which the family derive their name is almost certainly of Gaelic origin, coming from the Gaelic words "ceann", meaning top or head and "caithe", meaning pass. So, perhaps Kinkead was his real surname and Seeger his, er, "nom de peau".

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    1. Who knows? He wouldn't have been the only one of these guys to have used more than one stage name, just to add to the confusion.

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  3. what is that dark crescent running across the top of his chest? It isn't hair or a tattoo. I've seen guys who skin was so fair you could see the veins under the skin of their chest and arms, but I don't that applies to our very tan subject here.Dee Exx

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    1. I think it's just the interplay of light and shadow on his chest hair.

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  4. The crescent shaped line is the separation of the clavicular head (topmost) from the sternocostal head of the pectoral muscle (major pectoral muscle). It is normally not obvious even in men with well developed pectoral muscles. But the position and angle of Mr Kinkeads arms pulls back the clavicular head, making the separation (based on their attachments to bones) obvious.

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  5. Thanks, I'd like to explore anatomy like that!

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