Alex Louis Armstrong might count as this, although there's only one incident in the whole manga that goes even as far as innuendo about his sexual orientation.Though he might be more of a Camp Gay character depending on how you interpret him (he even cross-dresses from time to time and has an over-the-top feminine walk). Garfiel, the burly automail mechanic who takes Winry as his apprentice.Though there is a small chance he may just be a crossdresser. In Bleach, one of Barragan's fraccion is the very flamboyant, yet very muscular Charlotte Cuuhlhorne.More exactly, a Macho Bisexual who loves to flirt with not only girls but with his friend Marron, a very girly-looking Bishōnen. Borderline case: Gateau Mocha from Sorcerer Hunters.Parodied in the Fanservice showdown in Aoi House In Love!.It even goes so far as to give these men their own version of the ending once. The show has plenty of Censor Steam in the form of elephants on top of all this. Keita is on the receiving end of most of it, and is respected among the fetish and Macho Camp communities. Despite the large number of cute girls in the show and Keita's clear interest in them, Inukami! has plenty of manservice in the form of Macho Campers disturbingly so.As if calling a Macho Camp character "okama" weren't enough. Besides the leather getup, his psychic ability is crotch beams. In Japan, the stereotype has been named "Hard Gay". Almost always Played for Laughs, such characters are often introduced to be Plucky Comic Relief, or to hit on the straight guy who can do little to stop it.
This stereotype is somewhat more common in East Asian cultures (where it has become the default gay stereotype, as fashion-conscious pretty boys are more associated with heterosexuals there) than in the US, but is still seen in Western media ( Ric Flair being a well-know example). These types tend to be prone to flexing and talking about how macho they are, all the while being a rather obvious gay stereotype. Though the trope usually involves campy behavior, such characters are also often portrayed as being so overly manly that it becomes impossible to take seriously. They do have muscles on muscles, after all. Some are in the Transparent Closet, and vehemently deny their gayness, while others are quite open about it, and sometimes it's just never addressed, but one thing's for sure: it's really not something you want to tease them about. Macho Camp is what you get when a campish character looks large and muscular, most often to bodybuilder level builds. In most Western media, a man who is Camp Gay is usually of thin or average build.