I've done some strange dates in my time. However, without doubt,
this was the strangest evening thus far.
It all started quite promisingly. My friend Martin, who
writes about science and things for the Guardian, invited me to this scientist
dating thing.
The idea was it was a speed dating event, for scientists. As
well as the dating, there were a series of quite fun sounding experiments in
human relationships. You were going along to simultaneously meet people
interested in science and do science at the same time.
So, for example, once they'd done all of the speed dating
blindfolded so things were completely based on your conversation; another time
they'd done a thing with motion capture suits and body language. It sounded
like a fun, interesting night out, and maybe a good way to meet the kind of
intimidatingly intelligent lady I'm attracted to. Ideally a doctor - I mean,
what better way to make my Jewish mum proud?
It was being held in a Trade Union Working Men's hall in
deepest darkest east London. I probably should have looked at the phrase
"Trade Union Working Men's Hall" and realised this probably wasn't
the event for me.
I got off the tube and started to wend my way through the
narrow streets. The bustling markets gave way to deserted streets, which gave
way to row after row of boarded up terraced houses. The neighborhood was like a
demilitarised zone.Eventually, after about 15 minutes walk, I got to the
working mens club. It was like a bunker - huge oak doors reinforced with steel,
steel bars over all the windows. Inside it was a glum place, all peeling paint,
tattered home-made flyers for discos in 2010 and fused sets of fairylights.
Downstairs, in the basement "Ballroom", there were
a set of plastic chairs, a bar where a burly barmaid with a beehive was serving
beer, and a gigantic heart, crudely fashioned out of tinsel. Not the most
promising venue. It had the air of a Butlins holiday camp in a fallout shelter.
And not a ritzy fallout shelter either.
Two cheery, exceptionally enthusiastic women greeted me,
checked my ticket, and gave me a massive sticker with my name on it. Because
nothing says cool like name labels! A few minutes of chatting to them revealed
to me this wasn't just going to be fun, it was going to be SCHEDULED FUN! You
can't have fun without a timetable, right? It was about this point that Martin,
demonstrating the renowned reliability of Guardian journalists, texted me to
cancel. I was on my own. Fucking lefty bastards.
People started drifting in. There were a bunch of pretty
attractive women, and a bunch of male scientists. I'm not saying they lived up
to a particular stereotype, but there was only one other bloke who looked like
he, rather than his mum, bought his clothes.
Anyway, looking at the schedule, we had a half-hour lecture
on the psychology of dating from an expert, then an experiment invoving looking
at objects we'd brought with us that summed up our personality, then the speed
dating. We took our seats and our man with the PhD got started into his
lecture. Not only did he habitually clear his throat to such an extent I thought he might be trying to pronounce words in one of those Eastern European languages that Stalin banned, the material he delivered was a straight lift from the pages of the Game.
It went a bit like this:
"Hruumphh. Ummmm Hi. I, ummm, I'm like, writing my PhD on
the secrets of Ahhruumphhh....ruurummppphhharrhhhmmmmppph a group of
fascinating geniuses. Men who describe themselves as Ahhrrruumpppphhhh pickup
artists."
<Pause, flip through dense Powerpoint slides, pause to
visibly rub himself, continue>
His PhD was in looking at the bible of the
Rape Jedi and seeing if it was true. He described women like fish
in a Jack Cousteau movie - strange, mysterious, unknowable creatures of the
deep - and I could tell there hadn't been a lot of field research on his part.
It was so strange, for the first five minutes I thought it
might be character comedy or performance art. There was no analysis of whether
all the tricks to attract women were true or not, just verbatim repetition of
the Rules of the Game, accompanied by a Powerpoint covered in spangles and
glitter. The Powerpoint was incredible - the sort of thing an eleven year old
girl might design after an afternoon of watching My Little Pony while overdosing on Skittles.
After that five minutes, it dawned on me that he was TOTALLY
SERIOUS. He wasn't pretending to be a weird academic
studying a self-help book as though it was Marx - he was the real deal. There
was no diversion into what might work for women on men, despite the 50/50 male female ratio. Just half hour an
hour of how to manipulate and deceive the ladies, delivered by a man who had
"I want a Fritzl dungeon" written all over him. I was seriously
worried that at any moment he might flip to a slide of the glittery suits he'd
made from his victim's skins or something.
Despite the horrified looks from the organisers and most of
the audience, he ignored signals to stop, and just plowed on with the full
lecture. At the end, he got to the end of his presentation, and asked
"Ahhrhahhhump...Any questions?"
There was a moment of silence, and I put up my hand. He
pointed to me, and I asked "Isn't this - and the whole pickup artist scene
- all just weird misogynist bullshit?" He didn't really get a chance to
answer as there was a spontaneous round of applause from the ladies. We then
broke for drinks, where everyone expressed shock and dismay at the guest
speaker's performance, then we all launched into looking at the objects we'd
all brought with us. The men looked at the women's objects, and vice versa. I'd brought my BBC issue flak jacket, which was misidentified loudly by someone as a "fishing vest". Wrong kind of rugged manly appeal.
This might have been interesting, but mid-way through this,
a group of rowdy seventy year old working men insisted on pushing into the
venue, and sat in the corner in a group, drinking bitter and heckling the
nerds. One had his wife with him, who sat at separate table, playing patience.
Maybe married life isn't all it's cracked up to be.
The one object that really caught my eye was an old school
mix-tape. I hadn’t actually seen a cassette tape in ages; and for people of a
certain age, mixtapes are the sweetest gift. I picked it up, and was pleased to
see that the person who had brought it had superb taste in late 90’s Britpop. The game was afoot.
Finally, the speed dating kicked off, and we started to
rotate around the tables. The women were all interesting, but seriously
underwhelmed by the quality of the men. “It's like dating the characters, rather
than the cast, of the Big bang theory”, said one woman.
After a bit of hunting, I found the mixtape lady. We sat
down, got to chatting. She was impressed I'd guessed hers was the mixtape, and she'd pegged the flak jacket was mine right away. She was a teacher – observant, pretty, interesting, great taste in
music, but regretting coming to the scientist dating thing immensely. I asked
her why and she replied “The last bloke was picking his nose and his bum at the
same time as he walked over.”
That’s not a bad epitaph to the night as a whole. As soon as
the speed dating was over, everyone rushed for the door, despite the fact that
a really good comedy duo, Robin
and Partridge were booked to play. I think everyone was desperate to avoid
being stranded in the mutant haunted wastes of East London before the last tube
left. I stayed and watched the desultory spectacle of two great comedians
performing to an audience of grumpy drunk heckling old men before I left.
As I sat slightly shellshocked on the train home, I totted
it up. I’d gone to a science experiment in a bunker, where the MC was a misogynist
obsessed with glitter, which had been gate crashed by rowdy pensioners. Still,
I lived in hope that the mixtape lady would email me and we could go on a date
for more than four minutes.
Sadly, she didn’t get in touch – but these days, I'm pretty relaxed about not being everyone's cup of tea. For all the
strangeness, it wasn't a bad ego boost – I realised that compared to some men
out there, I’m quite the catch…
As a weird academic studying the bible of the Rape Jedi as though it were Marx- what was this PhD guy's name?
The event was organised through Science London - he was an American. My notes are a bit smudged, but it was something like Osch or something like that?
I've got no problem with studying The Game etc per se, but the presentation was just a dreadful short version of the tips in it, rather than any sort of analysis of whether or why they worked. I found it vaguely astounding that with a 50% female audience, it was all about how men could seduce women.
Dr. Nathan Oesch
(http://senrg.psy.ox.ac.uk/people/n_oesch.html)
http://science-london.com/home/?category_name=past
^ If it is Nathan Oesch, then his LinkedIn profile reveals he doesn't have a PhD - he's just a PhD student, with no other qualification yet that would give him the title of "Dr" yet.
He has also written this paper - http://www.epjournal.net/wp-content/uploads/EP10899909.pdf - in which he appears to come to the conclusion that the strategies espoused in The Game are totally legit from an evolutionary point of view; people should be careful using the strategies because they *might* lead to sexual/physical abuse; and that manipulating women is OK because they are already manipulating men through the use of "perfume, cosmetics, clothing, liposuction and cosmetic surgery", so really The Game is just leveling the playing field and increasing people's chances at long-term relationships, so it's totally ethical in all respects. Good to know.
Hello Willard,
I thought you might like this:
http://www.lrb.co.uk/v34/n20/emily-witt/diary
Any thoughts?
Cripes. Fills me with hope that they'll let me do a PhD at Oxford...
Good grief I forgot to check back at the time and this only sprang back into mind on hearing that Willard had posted here again, thank you all for the info. I sense this fellow and I are coming from totally opposite perspectives, since a) I'm a feminist and b) I don't care if it works, since I'm not super invested in proving to everybody that it works(especially not that cow Jennifer who turned me down when I asked her to prom), but since there is a severe dearth of credible material on this subject matter I'm trying to follow up whatever I can.
Love piece of writing there, Willard! One of the best reads on here yet.
Matt