Tag Archives: online dating

What Would You Do? Tell Them to Go to Hell, I Hope

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Debbie says:

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Tom Cush was catfished by ABC’s What Would You Do?, a show its network describes as a “journalistic endeavor.”

Not being an online dater myself, I had to look up “catfished” in Urban Dictionary, which defines the term as “being deceived over facebook as the deceiver professed their romantic feelings to his/her victim, but isn’t who they say they are.”

That both is and isn’t what happened to Cush. What Would You Do? sounds like a cross between Candid Camera, a show from my younger days, where people were put in implausible or embarrassing situations and caught on camera, and sleazy contemporary “issues journalism.” ABC says the show (on network since 2008)

establishes everyday scenarios and then captures people’s reactions. Whether people are compelled to act or mind their own business, John  Quiñones reports on their split-second and often surprising decision-making process.

Note, because it will be important later, that the show is about the reactions of people seeing these “everyday scenarios,” and not about the people in them. The implication is that the people in the scenarios are actors. Not so, at least not this time.

Cush is a little person, i.e., as he says, he was born with dwarfism. He uses online dating sites to find “average-sized” women who are comfortable dating him. He sounds frank, open, and honest in his approach to the women he meets online.

Unfortunately, “Jess” was not frank, open, nor honest. Using a false photograph, she put a lot of pressure on Cush to meet her at a specific place at a specific time, and wouldn’t take no for an answer. When he got to the pre-arranged meeting, the woman there was not the person he had seen online.

I realized that I would have to be the one to address the very obvious cause for the awkwardness between us. Jess was not the woman pictured in her Bumble profile, and I said so. As she laughed nervously, she suggested that the photos of her were merely dated.

“The pictures I have on there are old,” she said apologetically. “I look a little different now.” Blown away by the suggestion that I simply had not recognized her, I pulled out my phone and brought up her profile page.

“I’m sorry, can we just forget about it?” she asked, the embarrassment of her lie now clear in her voice. “Let’s just forget about it. What do you want to drink?” But I wasn’t having it—it was too uncomfortable to me to pretend like I hadn’t been purposefully deceived, and I said as much.

After a pause, thick with the tension between us, I took some of the hostility out of my voice. “Look, humor is really important to me, and you’re funny,” I told her. “Be honest next time, and you will find you the right guy. It’s not me.” I told her I was going to leave and got up from the table.

That’s when the cameras came out. 

The situation brought Cush into a panic attack. To his enormous credit, refused to sign their releases, despite substantial pressure. (“Jess suggested that if I didn’t feel comfortable, I should sign the release form anyway, and could tell them I ‘changed my mind’ after the fact.”)

Do I need to say that no one should ever tell someone to sign something before they’re sure and maybe back out later? If I had a shred of respect left for the people involved in this incident, that would have made it disappear.

Cush writes very cogently about the show’s blurring of bystander/participant/protagonist roles, the ways in which the show tries to trap people, and more. But he doesn’t address one aspect I thought was important:

This story would be horrifying if Cush was not a little person. It would also be very familiar, except that generally the person in Cush’s role would be female and the person in Jess’s role would be male (and the TV cameras would likely not be a factor). One thing Cush’s account reveals is that the producers and paid participants were attempting to feminize and trivialize a non-normative man. There wouldn’t be anything inherently wrong with feminizing someone … except when “feminizing” means playing on their insecurities and vulnerabilities, and attempting to remove their agency.

They assumed (at least somewhat accurately) that because he is a little person, and because he’s looking to date women who might stereotypically be uninterested, they could lure him with aggressive responses, and get themselves good footage. They took advantage of his vulnerability, and it’s only by luck and Cush’s good judgment under extreme stress that they didn’t get someone vulnerable enough to fall all the way into their trap.

Almost certainly, they were also banking on extra humor value from how he looks; they had the opportunity to take advantage of stereotyped expectations around an average-sized woman and a little man. The camera angles would have been designed to accentuate those differences. Again, there’s no inherent reason that a dating encounter between a man who is maybe 4’10” or so and a woman who is maybe 5’7″ or so is funny, unless cameras, commentary, and pre-existing stereotypes are used to pull laughs out of people accustomed to the casual cruelty of contemporary television. Have you watched America’s Funniest Home Videos recently?

So my question for John Quiñones and the staff of the show is “What would you do if someone called you out as the tricksters, cheaters, and hypocrites that you are?” Would you admit it? Would you do it on camera?

 

Make Love Not Porn, Cindy Gallop’s Voyage of Discovery

Lynne Murray says:

I found Make Love Not Porn: Technology’s Hardcore Impact on Human Behavior as a TED Book and was captivated by Cindy Gallop and her story. As an advertising executive, she signed up with an online dating service as part of her research for a client.

cindy gallop on the Ted talk stage

The rest of my team were all married, living with partners, or dating, and so they created fake personas online in order to conduct this research. I was the only one who was single. Since I needed to do this for my job anyway, I thought, why not do it for real and see what this whole online dating thing was all about?

When I registered my profile online, I was completely honest about everything, including my age. To my surprise I received an avalanche of responses … 75% of those responses were from younger men. The majority were much younger than me (I was 42 at the time – I’m 51 now). For them, I was a fantasy come true: an attractive older woman willing to have a no-strings-attached relationship….

So I proceeded to date younger men … and had an absolute whale of a time …

I gradually began to notice, however, that having sex with younger men often involved a number of interesting dynamics (and, if you like, sexual memes) that felt increasingly recognizable. Those modes, those facial expressions, that particular modus operandi seemed familiar. And had not heard those accompanying verbal expression somewhere before? Eventually, it struck me that what I was encountering, very directly and personally, were the real ramifications of the creeping ubiquity of hard-core pornography in our culture.

Gallop quotes research data showing that the average age at which a child now first views porn online is 11, that the fourth most popular search term by 7-year-olds and under is “porn” and that more than 80% of children between the ages of 14 and 16 regularly access hard-core pornographic footage on home computers or mobile phones.

Gallop suggests that “today, there is an entire generation of boys and girls growing up believing that what you see in hard-core porn is the way that you have sex.”

Gallop concludes that because of parental embarrassment around sex education,

[H]ard-core porn has become, by default, the sex education of today.

That’s not a good thing.

So when I realized the nature and recalls of what I myself was encountering, I decided to do something about it.

She decided to make a fun and funny educational website contrasting “Porn world vs. Real World.”

She uses ten stories from her own experience of “what can happen when technology enables unparalleled level of access to porn, which then informs and drives real-world human sexual behavior.”

Her first example contrasts how in porn actors must “open up” for the camera, which provides visibility, but minimizes skin-on-skin contact when you try it in real life. She realized that her young sex partners were performing joined only at the genitals as they had seen in porn films:

I found myself having to do a certain amount of, quote, “Hey, come here, Mister” — literally pulling my partner into an embrace to get as fully tactile as I’d like.

Her graphic examples of how porn differs from real life will be familiar to anyone who has experienced enjoyable sex and then cringed at such popular porn favorites as the inevitable semen facial bath, instant female orgasm with no foreplay, and women begging to be “deep throat” gagged by giant penises.

Gallop had not intended to launch her website at the Ted conference, but there was a call for short talks, and her proposal was welcomed once she reassured the conference organizers that, “it would employ words and graphics only, as opposed to anything that was triple X rated.”

The reaction to her TED talk was dramatic:

I think it’s safe to say that 30 seconds after I began, you could have heard a pin drop in the auditorium. One Twitterer reported that this was “probably the first time the words ‘come on my face’ have been heard six times in succession on the Ted stage.” But the ripples of laughter in (mostly) the right places told me, the audience was on my side.

The traffic to her website was so dramatic that it nearly crashed when it first went live, and continues to resonate with both women and men. Gallop says her inbox for MakeLoveNotPorn is pretty much gender equal. She provides samples of correspondence that often poignantly illustrate the confusion and lack of information about actual sexuality that trails in the wake of the porn industry.

Gallop makes a point to say that her site is not skewed intentionally toward “heteronormativity,” but simply because she hasn’t had the time or money to expand it.

Addressing this issue she says:

I do want the next iteration of MakeLoveNotPorn to encompass the gay/lesbian/queer experience of all of this and in canvassing all those who talk to me about this further suggested quote porn world versus real world” scenarios to incorporate going forward.

Visitors to the site can participate in forums.The area where participants can view and/or share short personal videos of real world sex is in beta test.

I love Gallop’s unfazed attitude and unflappable determination to shed light on how and why so many people can be starving for pleasure in a banquet of titillation and performance-oriented raw footage. MakeLoveNotPorn is not anti-porn but it is pro-humanizing porn. Gallop may be making some progress towards reconnecting people with what genuine sexuality looks like–and feels like.