Aaron hernandez gay relationship

Does 'American Sports Story' Overemphasize Aaron Hernandez's Sexuality?

I followed the Aaron Hernandez case about as closely as any NFL fan who wasn’t a Patriots fan. I knew the basics: he was convicted of murdering a close ally and took his have life in his prison cell a few days after being acquitted in a separate trial for double homicide. Once he died, I stopped keeping up with new developments, and I sure as hell didn’t gain any insights from Boston sports talk radio, which distills all the racism and homophobia in Massachusetts into rage bait for the average Boston commuter.

That’s why it was surprising to see Ryan Murphy’s American Sports Story: Aaron Hernandez focus so heavily on Hernandez’s sexuality. In the first two episodes, Hernandez (played by Josh Andrés Rivera) is depicted having secret sexual encounters with a high school boyfriend/girlfriend, experiencing panic over his father or teammates conclusion out he’s gay, and having both online and real-life hookups while attending the University of Florida. There’s even a scene where he fantasizes about a naked teammate in the locker room.

Given what’s publicly known about Hern

More information about Aaron Hernandez’s past relationships is coming forward.

Aaron Hernandez was a former NFL luminary who was at the center of several murder trials. Hernandez was convicted of the 2013 shooting of Odin Lloyd and accused of the 2012 Boston shootings of Daniel de Abrueu and Safiro Furtado. The former Recent England Patriots Pro Bowl tight complete was serving hour for murdering Lloyd, a semipro football player dating the sister of Hernandez’s fiancée Shayanna Jenkins-Hernandez, when he dedicated suicide. Unfortunately, this was just a few days after he was acquitted of charges in the 2012 shooting.

Some believe Hernandez took his life because long hidden secrets about his bisexuality were coming to light through the trial process. Now, one of Hernandez’s old boyfriends is coming forward to talk about his time with the late athlete and criminal.

Speaking to Investigative Discovery, a bloke named Dennis SanSoucie explained that he dated Hernandez in high school. The US Marine shares that the two had a seal bond as fellow athletes, they both were on the Bristol Central Steep School’s football team, but their affair was more than platonic. According to him, the two s

Fiancee of late Aaron Hernandez speaks out on his sexuality after docuseries

The fiancee of the tardy Aaron Hernandez is speaking out for the first time since the release of a fresh Netflix docuseries on the experience of the football-star turned-convicted killer, including rumors about his sexuality.

In a sit-down interview with ABC News' Amy Robach that will air Wednesday on "Good Morning America," Shayanna Jenkins-Hernandez said that while Hernandez did not state to her in any way he may have been homosexual or bisexual, if he did, she "would not have loved him any differently."

Hernandez, a former New England Patriots tight terminate, was found guilty of murder in April 2015 for the killing of Odin Lloyd, the 27-year-old fiance of Jenkins-Hernandez' sister, who was found shot to death in a suburb of Boston about two years earlier. After Hernandez's trial, and prior to his suicide in his prison cell in 2017, his alleged relationships with men became a topic of discussion.

"You can't describe someone's sexuality without them being here," Jenkins-Hernandez told ABC News. "Although I have a child with Aaron, I still can't tell y

In Netflix’s docu-series, Killer Inside: The Consciousness of Aaron Hernandez, one of Aaron Hernandez’s former teammates claimed he had a relationship with the fallen NFL star. 

Dennis SanSoucie, who played football with Hernandez at Bristol Central High University in Connecticut, told the series that they had “an on-and-off relationship from the 7th grade to the junior year of high school.” 

“When I met Aaron, it was fond of meeting your twin brother. It was so funny; we were both the matching. He has dimples, we’re both ‘cheesy smile,’ all happy. He used to be able to construct everyone laugh,” SanSoucie said. 

By 11th grade, the two had become “best friends” and even enhanced teammates — with SanSoucie as quarterback and Hernandez as tight finish, the duo completed nine touchdowns within the first four games, according to The Boston Globe. Hernandez went on to catch 67 passes for a total of 1,807 yards, which was a Connecticut high school record. 

SanSoucie recalled that on the first day of school that year, Hernandez had gone over to his house, where they smoked “two blunts” and