Overexposed: Hungarian Olympian Banned for Porn Past
Gergo Szabo was one of Hungary’s top-ranked freestyle and Greco-Roman
wrestlers in the 66kg
(130
pounds) weight class. He competed most recently in the United States at
the 2003 World Wrestling Championships held at New York City’s Madison
Square Garden. Szabo was defeated in a 9-5 match by U.S. wrestler Evan
MacDonald, who will compete at the Olympics in Athens.
Ranked fifth in the European Championship and ninth in the World
Championship, Szabo stood a chance to at least place, if not win, a medal
in Athens. That ended when Hungarian media reported on his performing in
almost a dozen gay porn videos under the name Sergio Foster.
Among the videos, the ironically titled Secrets of a Wrestler series
features Szabo and others in authentic wrestling scenes, then having sex
in a sports facility near Budapest.
Hungarian laws prohibit the sale of such videos in their own country,
which perhaps led the naive athletes to believe what producers told them—that
no one they knew would find out. But the Internet quickly made their faces—and
bodies—known to the world.
Why would an Olympic athlete appear in hardcore porn, if actors only
make a reported 700 Euros ($866 USD) per video? Mark Kleim, who broke the
story in English on his website www.gaypornblog.com, referred me to a
Hungarian insider, who translated his country’s news coverage.
The tabloid Szines Mai Lap interviewed Szabo’s coach, Tamas Csokas,
who said that Szabo had family financial problems that "seemed to be
solved by the offers of pornographers. That is why he said yes to their
request," Csokas said. "Gergo is not homosexual. He just needed
money, but he has already been sorry for his mistakes."
The article reported that Szabo’s team has confidence in their
teammate, who gave up gay porn to compete fulltime. "His results are
really important, because Hungarians have never had such successes in this
category before," Csokas added. "The whole team fights for Gergo.
They love him."
Despite such support, in May 2004 Gergo Szabo was forced off the team
after a decision from the Hungarian Wrestling Federation. Szabo was one of
the first athletes in porn to make Hungarian headlines, yet his isn’t an
isolated case.
An innocuous 1995 softcore video called Wrestle featured men of the
Hungarian wrestling team grappling naked. Greenwood Cooper Studio also
produced Gymnastikos, which featured members of the Olympic gold medal
Hungarian Men’s Gymnastic Team.
Those delicate beginnings may have sparked what Hungary’s media calls
a huge gay porn industry that includes prostitution, the secretive
compliance of officials in Hungarian athletics, and the desperation of
financially strapped athletes.
According to a www.Blikk.hu article, Hungarian journalist Laszlo
Menyhert Meszaros’ book Plastic Stars reveals "the dirty secrets of
Hungarian media moguls and superstars, leaders of TV channels, who use
their positions and their programs to hunt for young musclemen, offering
them jobs, publicity, and careers in return for sex and gay porn
activities."
The Hungarian website www.nyugat.hu covered the porn/athlete connection
in a series of articles about bodybuilders who moonlight as prostitutes,
including Mr. Ukraine/Mr. Universe/Mr. World 1991, Attila Szabo.
Attila Szabo’s coach and mentor is Istvan Kovacs, founder and owner
of Budapest’s renowned Koko Gym. The first Hungarian gay hardcore video,
Knock Out, was shot at the Koko Gym.
Another video, Ambassadors of the Ice, was shot in December 2002 on an
ice rink and in locker rooms at Szekesfehervar’s Alba Volan Ice Hockey
Bowl, home of a national championship team. The rink was rented for a week
at 100 Euros ($124 USD) per hour. Management claimed they were told a TV
commercial was being shot.
The www.Blikk.hu article quotes "Ricardo," who performed in
that video and found the official’s lack of knowledge "very
strange, because employees of the ice hockey bowl lurked around the
performers, out of curiosity." When Ricardo and his costars needed
anything, the rink’s staff were entirely at their service.
I spoke with a representative of Pacific Sun Entertainment, the
Southern California company that distributes most of director Csaba
Borbely’s videos. He asked to remain anonymous, and was unable to
arrange an interview with Szabo. But he did say that his company no longer
works with Borbely, and that porn gives the athletes quick cash.
"The economy in Hungary made it very tempting for them," he
says. "Besides, the whole labeling system of straight, gay, and
bisexual is not prevalent there. A lot of them don’t have a problem with
it."
The revised 2003 disciplinary code of the Hungarian Wrestling
Federation gave orders to investigate Szabo’s porn past for the previous
two years. Yet supporters of the wrestler say his disqualification was not
legitimate, because he had not made any videos since 2001.
Tamas Gaspar, secretary general of the Hungarian Wrestling Federation,
in a January 2004 interview in the Hungarian Szines Mai Lap, said,
"We have never had such a scandalous affair in our sport. A public
figure must keep certain rules. It is not our business if somebody were
gay. But if he did gay porn, that is a quite another story."
Yet no sports officials accused of having financial ties to the porn
industry have been investigated.
The hypocrisy of Hungarian sports officials who allow the taping of
porn videos at sports facilities, then shun athletes who perform in them,
leaves that country with a conflict-laden erotic export—and without an
accomplished, if not misguided, athlete to represent them in Athens.
Jim Provenzano is the author of the novels PINS and Monkey Suits. He
can be reached at