No, they don't have to turn anyone gay. The pictures of bikini models and such are there because the audience is in the closet. They are insecure about tthemselves. Supplement companies have business models based of male insecurity.
They include women in their products as an illusion. If they labeled their product as gay, it would only sell well to those who admit they are gay.
See, what most of these guys have never understood is that the two fathers of modern bodybuilding here in the USA are both GAY men in brutal denial. From its inception to the very present, the entire "sport" has been founded upon GAY principles. Every picture, every ad, down to the very underlying message inside is there to serve the mission of homosexualism.
Behind the scenes, the bodybuilding magazines have always truly served as catalogues of sorts for affluent gay men. The "pros" inside have always merely served as the cattle/livestock available in the market for escorting services or, as you all have so lovingly come to know it, GAY-4-PAY.
Ultimately, there are two types of men out there, those who are not completely sure or are insecure about their true gay nature, who purchase these magazines for the "bodybuilding" tips (Which we ALL know is a scam because all of these "pros" can barely even spell their names and instead have ghost writers put together their columns)
AND those men who are too straight to ever touch the smut.
Where do you fall?
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