Taking care of the actor’s sexuality mobilizes those who want it and also those who discriminate against it
Experts say that people who resent having too little sex or having low-quality sex spend their time just spying on the pleasure of others.
Perhaps this theory explains Reynaldo Gianecchini’s interest bordering on obsession with sexual pleasure. The actor’s bed is nosy like a reality show.
The new episode of voyeurism involves the rescue doctor Wadih Vilela, dubbed the ‘heartthrob of SAMU’ for his explicit beauty and cut body in the gym.
Are they boyfriends, dating, friends having sex? Social networks are euphoric and the celebrity press explores the intimacy of the two in search of an audience.
There is a collective frenzy in imagining – or rather, fantasizing – Gianecchini and Wadih under the sheets. Both represent a mixture of Adonis and Eros, the Greek gods of beauty and lustful desire.
The actor’s invasive look at intimacy surfaced in 2000, when he was catapulted to fame when he made his TV debut playing the docile and seductive Edu in ‘Laços de Família’.
At the time he was married to the presenter Marília Gabriela. The 24-year age difference has been used to generate cruel gossip about the relationship.
There was talk of fake marriage and love for interest. They even made up that Gianecchini was secretly dating Gabi’s youngest son, also an actor Theodoro Cochrane.
The hot scenes of the young artist with Vera Fischer in the soap opera Globo have raised many bets: how long will it take the diva to ‘steal’ Giane from Marília Gabriela?
Already at that time, the actor had the label “Gay Closet”. He was always bombarded with prying questions and conjectures. While understandably annoyed, he responded gracefully.
In September 2019, when she told ‘O Globo’ that she had romances with men before, Brazil stopped to comment. “Didn’t I say that?” bragged the gossipers.
Speaking to EFE news agency a year later, Gianecchini classified himself as pansexual, someone predisposed to feel desire for anyone, regardless of gender or sexual orientation.
“They say I’m gay, but I don’t consider myself gay. I consider myself everything at the same time. If there’s one word for me, then it’s pan, because pan is everything,” he explained.
There was a new wave of interest in who and how had sex — and empty criticism, of course, from those who lend themselves to problematizing other people’s orgasms.
Why is so much attention paid to this aspect of Reynaldo Gianecchini’s life?
There is an explanation based on the reflection of the French psychoanalyst Jacques Lacan, a disciple of Sigmund Freud, the most famous theorist of sex and eroticism.
“If Freud focused on sexuality, it is because in sexuality the talkative being mutters,” he said. “The only thing we talk about is our symptom.”
For him, those who talk so much about the sexuality of others are actually talking about themselves. Mainly in relation to repressed desires and dissatisfaction with sex life.
Whoever monitors and judges what Gianecchini does or doesn’t do within four walls transforms him into the object of his desire and highlights the frustrations in the field of lust.
We all wish we were as sexually free as he seems — and also as beautiful, sexy, and with equally “perfect” partners.
The best thing to do is take better care of your pleasure and let Giane, in her fifties, have sex in peace.
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Source: Terra

Amanda Larkin is a celebrity journalist at Gossipify, known for her in-depth interviews and unique perspectives on the entertainment industry. She covers celebrity news and gossip, providing readers with engaging and informative content, and understanding of the inner workings of the industry. She’s respected for keeping readers up to date with the latest trends and providing a fresh perspective on the celebrity world.