Saturday, March 10, 2012

5 Reasons Why (I'm Pretty Sure) Internet Dating Sucks

As someone who is post-college and who works from home, I very rarely have the chance to meet new people. This includes people of the opposite sex whom I may occasionally want to mash faces with. Internet dating has lost quite a bit of the social stigma that always pigeon-holed users as fat, nerdy virgins and lying douchebag assholes.

So I tried it. I signed up for an account on OKCupid since it was free. I talked to a lot of nice people, and even met a few in person. And I can honestly say that we don't need to worry about the old stereotypes concerning internet dating because they are, for the most part, completely untrue.

However, there are a whole bunch of new problems that you should probably be aware of before you enter this mucky new territory...

5. It's the Internet, People. C'mon.

In case you haven't met the internet, most of the people you will interact with there are frightening. It has something to do with distance. If I were walking down the street and overheard someone say that they don't like Star Wars, I would not interrupt their conversation to explain, in detail, how genius it is with archetypes and Harrison Ford. I would not scream at them or call them names.
Mostly because such people deserve no warning.
Were I on an internet forum, however, I probably wouldn't think twice about posting my vociferous opinion, along with several uncouth and anatomically-impossible suggestions for the dipshit that happened to disagree with me. The thing about the internet is that you can be a horrifyingly honest person about your bigotry, hatred, lust, violent tendencies, etc. without reserve because there's such a huge distance between you and the people you're conversing with. You never have to feel bad because you're not looking anyone in the eye.

Unfortunately, the same is true for internet dating. Yes, when you're trying to get matched up you want to know the answers to questions like "Is it important for your sexual partner to lick butter off your toes while wearing a leather collar?" but is that really one of the first things you want answered about a person? People reveal really private information voluntarily because it's easy to just fill out a survey about yourself, addressing no one in particular. It's a lot harder when you meet a date face-to-face for dinner and realize that now they know that you're into S&M and that you've had over 100 sexual partners.
Although apparently that works for some people.
I think internet dating is good in theory, because you're not doing the scatter-shot approach of the bar scene, where everyone is skeazy and gross and just looking for drunken hook-ups. But while society is being really vocal about how internet dating isn't just for the losers anymore, we're all still kind of thinking it. Because, c'mon, it's the internet, where all the chicks are actually dudes and all the dudes are incredibly creepy.

For example: I had someone send me a message on OKCupid that was slightly icky and entirely too suggestive. When I ignored him, he decided the best way to get a response from me was to write another message saying "I'll give you vagina butterfly kisses if you message me back."
I'm assuming this is what he looked like while typing that.
Now, to me, while really fucking gross, that is not the worst thing he could have done. What would have been worse is if he had acted in a gentlemanly manner at first. Had I simply read about his interests and conversed with him a bit, I might have been duped into seeing him in person. I'm assuming that at the end of that date I would have found myself in a surprising cameo on To Catch a Predator.
Not that predator. Think douchier.


4. You're Self-Representing

There are two totally separate downsides to having to represent yourself in a profile, and you never know how you're going to come across to anyone looking at your site. Being unable to talk to a person face to face means that you rely on what they have to say about themselves, leading to one of two problematic groups:

The first group is the hardest to figure out. They shall henceforth be referred to as "The Stans" (regardless of gender) because of the way their brain functions seem to switch off when dealing with members of the opposite sex.

Pictured here.
These are the people that are probably pretty cool but have no idea how to talk about themselves without worrying that they're being self-degrading or self-aggrandizing. It becomes this incredibly awkward little apology on their profiles that mostly consists of, "Um, it's really hard to sum myself up. Just ask me, I guess. I like Crocodile Dundee, I guess, and some people think I'm funny? Maybe you won't."
"Here's a recommendation from my mother. I'll be in the corner."

Because they don't know what to highlight or how to sell themselves, The Stans focus on the totally inane ("I like cheese, lol") or just freak out entirely ("Something private about myself that I'm willing to admit? Well, it's private, okay? Why would I tell you?") The Stans feel that they can't say that they're great at philosophy and rhetoric because they don't want to seem pretentious, so they'll say something like "I'm great at breathing and blinking at the same time" and hope that it's funny.
It's not.
Which leads us to group two. These are the people that are total twat-chisels, but have absolutely no self awareness. They'll post things like "I'm really funny and good at making people laugh. I'm super sarcastic, lol. I know you're not supposed to say you're smarter than other people, but sheeple are stupid, and haven't read Nietzsche, and if they have they don't understand it like I do."

The self-important dickwaddery is one thing, but mostly the problem is that it's showing rather than telling. These are the sort of people who buy T-shirts with clever or sarcastic one-liners on them. They don't realize that by doing so, they are not actually being funny, and that mostly they're making themselves look dumber and lazier in comparison.
This girl, for instance, is completely brain dead. But you knew that already.

The problem with this group is that there's no way to tell if they can back their claims up, so they look clumsy and ridiculously transparent. They think they're just being honest and suave, like so:
I shall never tire of posting pictures of this man.
Tragically, however, they're just caught up in a fantasy of perceived awesome, that comes across like this:
"Ladies."
That's right. Group One are The Stans. Group Two are The Star Wars Kids. At some point, someone looking at your profile is going to picture you as one of those two. Try not thinking about that during a date.


3. Multiple-Choice Matching (Is Weird or Dishonest)

Sites like OKCupid match people based on their answers to multiple choice questions. Some of them are fairly straightforward. I would like to be matched with people that answer "yes" to "Should homosexual couples be allowed to marry?" and "no" to "Do you like to set small puppies on fire?"
The big ones are a better source of fuel, anyway.
But there are some weird-ass questions floating around in there, and some that just don't have a multiple-choice answer that works for you. For instance, one question wanted to know if I was outgoing or introverted. I wanted to write down that I'm a fairly outgoing introvert, but that was not a choice. Then I was asked to choose between ridding the world of all the dumb people or else all the unattractive ones. Unfortunately there was no "WTF" option for that particular question.
Okay, but yeah, fewer dumb people. Totally.
That led to the question of honesty. There were a lot of questions that I hesitated about answering because of the way I felt it would portray me. I untruthfully answered "Yes" to the question "Do you shower everyday?" because hygiene is important, and I don't want to be perceived as a filthy hippy. But let's face it, sometimes you have an Arrested Development and pancake day, and showering just does not happen.
The story of this man's life.
Total honesty leads to some weird reactions. I met a very nice man and I almost didn't talk to him at first because he'd answered "Yes" to the question "Have you ever eaten food out of the garbage?" It turned out that the food had been candy in a sealed package and he had known beforehand when and where it was going to get chucked. Multiple choice did not allow for that sort of elaboration. So I was left with the initial impression that he was one of the following things:




Okay, that last one was adorable, but you understand. This guy was just trying to be honest, and I don't think it was working in his favor. Which leads me to believe that either everyone is lying and therefore rendering the system pointless, or that the people who are being completely truthful are going a little overboard.


2. It's Not Helpful


I like to think of myself as a fairly logical person, who wants certain things out of a relationship. I like to have interactions with people who are intelligent, well-read, funny and into Star Wars. I've always figured that people who fall into those categories are people I will get along with well. Online dating thinks along the same lines: if you can narrow the parameters of your search to shared interests, you'll find someone you'd want to date.

But really, who are you kidding? You go out with people because you're attracted to them. I'm not saying they have to be what you usually think of as typically attractive, but there has to be a spark, and it very rarely has anything to do with the fact that their favorite movie is also Weekend at Bernie's.
"I can just tell that we have so much in common."
If we all went out with people based entirely on shared interests and the fact that they were really nice and funny, there would be no such thing as the "Friend Zone" and cancer would probably be cured or something. At least in a bar, before you even talk to the person you can tell whether or not you find yourself attracted to them. That matters.

The other problem is that knowing someone's likes and dislikes doesn't really tell you what kind of person they are. There are a lot of people who share my beliefs when it comes to religion, social policies, music, movies and literature whom I absolutely loathe. Sometimes it's because they're just too much like me, which causes us to clash, and sometimes it's because our personalities just do not fit well together.
Or they're my evil doppelganger.
At least when you get set up on a date through a friend you can trust that your friend knows the two of you well enough to believe that you'd be a good fit together. There is no such guarantee with internet dating. Your matchmaker is a computer (that has probably never known love, I might add) with a weird idea of compatibility.
"I set up the two of you because of your mutual preferences for light whipping and Atlas Shrugged."


1. Expectations


To be clear before I start this section off, I am not talking about the expectation that you will sleep with someone after a certain number of dates. That is a disgusting, shallow policy that is only rigidly maintained by sitcoms, for reasons that are unknown to me.
Friends: collectively responsible for all the STDs in New York.
First, there's the shallow sort of expectation, which is the expectation that your date will in some way resemble the picture they have posted to represented themselves. I think guys and girls have to deal with very different sorts of ruined perception in this case. The problem with guys' profiles is that they are filled with what single men think are cool: close-ups of tattoos, pictures of them shirtless, climbing trees, wearing hats/sunglasses, fighting bears, etc. This does very little to accurately portray what this man will actually look like.
"This is my best angle."
Guys have to deal with a totally separate problem when it comes to women. Women hate pictures of themselves as a general rule, and so will mostly post pictures of themselves that will be considered flattering. Maybe a high angle shot to slim the face, or the clone stamp tool to remove blemishes, etc. They tend not to be terribly honest photographs. I'm not saying that this is what really matters, but you go into a date expecting a person to look a certain way, and adjusting suddenly can make the whole thing more difficult. Especially when you think you're getting this:
"OMG, I'd just woken up and hadn't even brushed my hair, lol, what a bad pic."
But you actually end up meeting this:
"Buy a girl a drink, sailor?"
Mostly when I talk about expectations, though, I'm referring to premature full disclosure.

Internet dating is different from meeting people at bars, coffee shops or parties in one important way: you have already announced your intentions. You can meet someone through friends or work and spend time with them. If you like them, you make it known and proceed from there. If they make a move and you don't like them, no hard feelings, you're just not looking for a relationship right now, or whatever cliche you feel like offering to soften the blow.
"It's not you, it's me; I hate you."
With internet dating, though, your date already knows that you're looking to get married and procreate with the next creature that isn't completely brain dead and doesn't make you vomit in your mouth. So you're expected to like them and if you don't like them then you're expected to say it. It's like having to break up with someone you don't even know.

So with all of that on your shoulders, I say screw it. Just nut up and ask out that cute girl at the coffee shop. It's actually way less stressful, and there's only like a 5% chance that she's actually a man.

Monday, March 5, 2012

Things You Need To Stop Doing (Like, Right Now)

In case the title put you in an an incredibly hostile attitude toward this article, let me begin by saying that I am not just launching into a tirade about things that annoy me that other people do. I'm launching into a tirade about things that make no sense that other people do. Don't worry, the whole switch from "And also with you" to "And with your spirit" thing isn't on here because I don't want to be excommunicated from the Catholic church unless it's for something really good.

Like stealing the Popemobile.
No, these are just things that people do that they are, for some reason, not ashamed of or attempting to conceal from the public, like nose-picking or enjoying the Twilight books. These are things that people are inexplicably smug and/or vocal about:

4. Lambasting Networks For Cancelling TV Shows

This is a rather specific irritation of mine, but it's a problem I have because I am guilty of it all the time. Two of the greatest shows of all time were cut down in their prime because of FOX network, which is unmistakably the Devil. Firefly, the glorious product of a passionate liaison between Joss Whedon and a parallel universe featuring Cowboy Han Solo, was cancelled after only one season, instead of the planned seven.
And at his age, Cowboy Han Solo still isn't as awesome as Malcolm Reynolds.
The magnificently filthy, dysfunctional show Arrested Development was aborted after a scant two and a half seasons. Let the stone-throwing begin! Let's start with how Fox news totally screwed over Firefly by showing episodes out of order and not advertising it correctly. And how it ruined AD by changing the time slot and squishing the last few episodes together.

Except...

The people at FOX aren't trying to hurt us.

Well, not all of them
TV networks just want to make money. They're going to keep on shows that have high viewership and drop the ones that are expensive to make and that are not bringing in enough revenue. Firefly had some obstacles in front of it, but come on, this is a project from frickin' Joss Whedon, who poops better ideas than I've ever had. He had a strong fan base from Buffy and Angel and that should have been enough to kick-start the phenomenon.

We could have voted for Firefly to stay on as it was being aired. But we, as a country, voted with our viewership.

"I'd say this is easier than political voting, but honestly it's about the same."
So with our viewership, we collectively voted for the Sarah Palins of TV--that is, the flashy, moronic ones that feed our love for scandal and people saying idiotic things. Also, murder and public humiliation, respectively.

In 2002, the season Firefly died, it ranked 125th in the country with just over 4 million views. The top-ranked show at the time was CSI with over 26 million. And that's a show that is trying to make science look dangerous and exciting while still focusing on a doughy and possibly Asperger-y William Peterson looking constipated for 45 minutes.

"Do I do a one-liner and take off my sunglasses now? Is this the right show?'
Arrested Development was even worse off. It went under in 2006, when the number one show was American Idol with 36.38 million viewers. AD had 3.3. (Million, but still.) The funniest show on television, that trusted it's audience to following a plot line with inside jokes, that defied traditional narratives, and we didn't want it. Audiences found the characters unsympathetic and the inside jokes alienating.

I can't imagine why.
Fortunately, both shows had a huge revival due to DVD sales, and both projects got movie deals out of the whole thing. Why? Because television producers like money. It's not a secret. We shouldn't be blaming them for taking these shows off the air. It was our fault, not theirs. Just because we pulled our heads out our collective asses and finally appreciated these gems doesn't give us the right to feel superior to those douchebag executives.

And if you're just waiting to insist that you were one of those select few who was totally on board with those shows from the very beginning, that leads me to my next point...


3. Saying "I was there/thought of that/liked it first!"

This is the age of the internet, where posting "First!" in the comments section is loathed by everyone but the person who posted it.

Sort of like Facebook statuses about people's kids
The competitive need to have done something first is an understandably human drive, but why are we, as grown adults, so proud of it? Because the thing is, it isn't attractive behavior. Let's say you're having a conversation with a bunch of people, and someone says something like, a second before you were going to say it. Do you say "Oh my God, I was literally just thinking that!" or "Dude, I said the same thing in my head, only better."

What you want is for people to understand that you were quick and clever. And maybe you were. But there's no way to prove it. You might as well have claimed that Die Hard was your idea first. It doesn't matter, because you have no proof to support your argument.

No, don't show us the napkin. We believe you.
The problem with this behavior is that it's gateway douchebaggery. It leads you from the soft stuff that is just little dickish behavior ("I liked Arrested Development before FOX shut it down!") to the really hard, hipster fuckrake behavior ("I liked Arrested Development before any of you liked it. Now it is so overplayed, and I don't think anyone really understands the Oedipal themes anyway.")

So don't be that person. Because in your incredibly unnecessary, aggressive tirade about how you so totally read Harry Potter the second it came out before anyone recommended it to you, you think that you're this:

"First to the top of Everest, bitches!"
But you're actually this:

"Dude, Native Americans whatever, I was totally here first. Tell your kids."

2. Bragging About Not Being Cold

Quick survey: how often do you hear people boasting about how tall they are? How awesome their eyes are? How thin or thick their hair is? Okay, I'm sure there are some people out there that are vibrantly aware that they have great genes and are just really pleased about it, and want to let you know.
We get it. Stop rubbing it in.
Okay, but those are people who are just fascinated with themselves and marveling at the lucky hand they were dealt. How many of those people are boasting about their height because they think that being tall means that they tried harder than short people, or that it was a personal accomplishment that they managed to grow a whole lot?

People on acid do not count.
I personally have never witnessed this behavior. You know what I have noticed, though? A lot of people are awfully pleased with their ability to withstand the cold. Like, really pleased.

The next time you are walking outside with someone (and somehow it's always someone from the Midwest,) and you mention that you are cold, you have just made the other person's day. You will immediately be regaled with how where they come from "This is shorts and T-shirt weather," how they once ran through eight feet of snow in subzero temps in a bikini (guy or girl) and how they love the cold so much because it has no effect on them at all (other than arousal, apparently.)

"WINTER IS COMING AND SO AM I!"
This behavior isn't irritating just because it's sheer one-upmanship in the face of a casual statement or complaint (although that is really fucking irritating.) What's so irritating is that this is not something that the person has any control over; nor do they have the right to brag because of it. Note that they are not saying, "Why yes, it is cold, but I am enduring the cold and overcoming my pain, for I am man and I shall not show weakness by allowing my teeth to chatter." I could deal with that. I could go bear fighting with a person like that.

No, what that person is saying is, "This does not feel cold to me." If I put my cold, frozen hands on your bare skin and you say "Holy shitballs, why would you do a horrible thing like that??" it is because you now understand what it is like to be me. I was not being whiny. You were not being brave. You were just not perceiving the cold.

The fifth of Jack Daniels probably helped.

1. Being really offended by some accents (but not others.)

This is a tricky one to nail down, and an especially hard one to address as a white writer with a fairly bland northwestern accent (I'm not sure how it's different from standard American dialect. We say "beg" instead of "bag" apparently.)

And "Hi!" instead of "Fuck you!", which is what differentiates us from New Yorkers.

However, I recently noticed something. There's a small, confusing subset of racism that we, as Americans, are still a little unsure about, and that is the realm of accents. And we're just not sure what's offensive. I've figured out that for the most part, it's cool to mock and mimic Russian, Scottish, Irish, French and German accents. I have never seen anyone get upset over someone going "Is Russian. Is funny. I like." It's mocking the way Russians speak English, but it isn't a problem.
Violence is often implied.
 Okay, so you've got a really good drunken/violent Russian bit going. Then you switch to an Asian accent, or a Spanish accent. Let's say you launch into "Oh, tank you vedy much. You want flied lice with that?" Suddenly the room is awkward. Maybe a few people find it funny. Some people are pissed. And a few people are looking around anxiously. Is Engrish funny? Is it offensive? It seems offensive. You're pigeon-holing a whole culture and mocking the way they speak. This is just from the accent, too. It's not like you're making jokes about stereotypical behavior, food or appearances.
You're not doing this, is what I'm saying.
So what makes the "Engrish" accent offensive but the Russian accent not? Is it because Russians tend to be white and also not horribly stereotyped in America? Possibly. But if you try a Trinidad accent ("Hey, mon") or an Indian accent ("Thank you, come again") you're not going to get any flak. Who decided the rules for this, and when did we all accept them?

I'm not saying that any of these are/aren't offensive, since they don't directly affect me. No one is mocking the way that I speak (except when I tried to say "street" and "road" and it ended up "stroad.")
I'm totally over it now.
I'm just saying that it makes absolutely no sense to get upset and offended at one accent over another if the intent in both cases seems to be "Haha, accents are hilarious!" Be offended by all of them, or none of them, but don't get on your high horse without really thinking about it.

Or just go back to your bragging, I guess.