What's on my mind: (11/14/01)

For those who care and those who don't

One of my favorite entertainment columnists is Jeffrey Wells from Reel.com. Anyway, he wrote something last week about Shallow Hal that I thought was really interesting. Let me quote from it. It talks about the movie, and I don't think it gives too much away, although I haven't seen it so it's hard to say. Anyway, here's the snippet:

Maybe you think that's offensive and whatever, but what I liked about it is that it was honest and blunt. And, maybe you'll hate me for this, but I kind of agree with it.

Parts of it, at least. Here's what I agree with most - that "ugly" people are not necessarily nicer, kinder people inside.

I'm pretty sure I wrote about this before. But I've always rejected being "cool" and that whole "cool" culture and intentionally preferred people who weren't "cool". And what I used to think in junior high and parts of high school was that the non-cool people were better. They didn't do all that stuff (smoking, drinking, sex) that "cool" people did and weren't into other stuff like gossip, materialism, and whatever like cool people. Yeah, I know, this "cool" hangup is one of the defining marks of my childhood.

But anyway, I was seriously disillusioned. I can't quite remember what it was that did it. But what I realized was that non-cool people aren't necessarily different. The only difference is that they lack the social know-how to do what cool people do. Could they do what cool people did - good and bad - they'd do it. They're no better. It seriously disillusioned me.

So yeah, ever since then, I've totally not been on the people on the bottom are better than the people on top thing, in its myriad forms. Like the idea that ugly people are necessarily better people. I'm really against Marx also. If I understand it correctly (I "read" the manifesto frosh year) his basic idea is that the lower masses were better than the upper, more noble, more good and whatever. I think that's completely wrong. Just, the foibles of the upper are magnified because they're in control. But they're equally bad at heart.

So yeah, I heartily reject any notion that says people below are necessarily better people than those above.

Maybe I'll get in trouble for this but I also agree with the stuff he says about women. I dunno, it's just my opinion, but I feel like in general, girls who are attractive kind of are less developed in a lot of ways because of that, be it character or whatever.

For some reason, beauty is more important for females than it is for males. It's not really fair, but that's the way it is. Like, look in a "men's" magazine (like Esquire or those Playboy-lite mags like Maxim) and you'll see pictures of half-naked women. Look in a women's magazine and you'll see pictures of half-naked women. I dunno, to me this just shows that there's a much greater emphasis on female beauty than on male beauty.

What I feel is that oftentimes girls who are attractive consciously or subconsciously realize that they can fall back on their beauty so they don't develop in other ways. Like, I dunno, a friend was telling me how he went clubbing and it's frustrating because it's impossible to find an attractive girl who's nice at a club. I think there's something to that.

Dunno if you ever heard this but there was supposedly some survey done by a magazine and it was saying how Stanford women were ranked low on the list, but Stanford men not so low. No idea if it's true. And that obviously doesn't describe me and my male friends, since pictures of us look like promo shots for the Addams Family (I'm Fester). But I kind of believe it. Just (and don't kill me, I'm just repeating what I've heard), you don't expect to find tons of attractive women at places like Stanford or Harvard. They're there, just less than at "lower" schools.

I dunno, what I think is, in general, guys aren't allowed to fall back on their looks and are pushed more, including academically. That guys are generally pushed more than girls by their teachers is actually an observed phenomenon according to my psych classes. That's actually a really interesting subject - the effects of priming and education but whatever; point is, studies have shown that guys are pushed more in school. Not fair, but that's how it is.

Girls are pushed less academically and my claim is that attractive girls are pushed even less. Just, less is expected of them. And, generally, less of them get into the "top" schools. It's not that they're any less intelligent. It's just that they haven't been pushed as much to develop academically. I dunno, I'm getting into big trouble here but that's just what I think.

Anyway, yeah, you can slam me if you want, but I tend to agree with Wells, at least as it applies to maybe academic development. The top ones tend to be the ones that rate in the middle in attractiveness, whatever that scale is. I think there's some truth to the character thing that Wells talks about also.

But yeah, there are tons of exceptions. Notably Jieun, whose character I admire more than anyone's and who is hotter than habanero. Yow.

Here's one thing I hate. It's when people say generally something is true and make particular judgments based on that. I don't know if that makes any sense. But specifically with marriage. Like, sometimes people will say, this group of people is generally like this, which I don't like, so I will definitely not marry someone from that group.

Maybe it's not that black and white but it's something like that. I dunno, I'm totally against that because it makes no sense. You don't marry a group of people or a generalization, you marry an individual. And no individual exactly matches a group generalization. Some are total exceptions. So you can't make sweeping decisions like that because in the end, you marry an individual, not a group. If that makes sense.

I guess what I'm saying is that if you told me 7 years ago that I'd be marrying an L.A. Korean I would have laughed and/or spit in your face. Just, many Korean girls from L.A. are a certain way that's not necessarily bad, but just something I don't jive with. But yeah, Jieun's not like that at all. Just superficially, she never says "sooooo" seriously. She can survive outside of L.A. And she stopped pronouncing my name "Denny" a while ago. She's perfect for me, and years ago, given where she's from, I never would have expected that.

So yeah, you can say all you want about how you can't marry someone from so and so group because whatever, but in the end, you marry an individual, not a group, so who knows who you'll end up with.

Anyway, yeah, it's kind of hard being an attractive girl. As for guys, it's a lot more consistent. All guys are slime and immature. I have yet to find an exception to this rule.

I'm going to get slammed hard for this entry, I know. Everyone thinks I'm an elitist, sexist jerk. Oh well. You win some, you lose some. No idea what that means.