Details does male cheerleading
Words you don't expect to come from a cheerleader's mouth: "I'm a Yale Ph.D., and here I am counting pom-poms." But they're commonplace among the members of Cheer New York; it's as standard as megaphones and backflips: The eight-year-old organization—one of a growing number of post-collegiate cheerleading teams—includes about 50 urban professionals in their twenties and thirties who yell, dance, and tumble not for school spirit but for charity. And, yes, most of these cheerleaders are male, most of them gay. "People think, oh, gay cheerleaders, campiness, just like a Halloween costume," founder and coach Felipe HernĂ¡ndez says. "But we're real cheerleaders." Indeed, the team performs at events all around New York—fund-raising walks, the New York City Marathon, and the Pride parade, to name a few—and they go at it with as much gusto as any cheer squad half their age. "I mean, 13-year-old girls in Kentucky do it," HernĂ¡ndez quips. "It's not that hard." And with only about a quarter of its members female, the group's guys are often the ones flying through the air and balancing atop teammates, a fact that makes Cheer NY a gender pioneer of sorts. "Cheerleading," HernĂ¡ndez says, "is such a sexist sport now. But we're different." Here's a look at a week in the wild, high-flying, wide-smiling world of Cheer NY, from practice to performance to final cheer.
Photographs by A. Jesse Jiryu Davis
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