Cleavage Cacophony

So I’m sick of this incessant talk about Cleavage-gate and the non-stop press about a one-off incident of a dipping neckline. Gosh, America is so prudish. On the one hand we have Hustler and Playboy and Girls Gone Wild, yet a peeping breast, let alone a protruding one sends the whole nation in a FCC-phoning and complaining tizzy and a media frenzy. There are some good men and women being thrown into the Iraqi version of Hamburger Hill and we don’t spend our time thinking about how we can get them safely home. But the media goes ga-ga over a sexegenarian’s breasts. There ends the future of the Fourth Estate.

I think Jay Leno put it best when he said, “Those are not the boobs in Congress you should be worried about!”

Too true Jay, too true.

Three more things you can do when you’re surfing the web

The Houston Clear Thinker himself, Tom Kirkendall recently linked to my blog off his blog without me having to ask or as more likely in my case, pay him copious amounts of money on a periodic basis. I actually read his blog quite frequently myself and it’s a wonder I haven’t linked to it before. I have decided that today I shall remedy the situation and consequently you shall see a brand spanking new link to Houston Clear Thinkers on the blog roll to the right. Tom talks about everything, kinda like me though he is far less Joycian stream of consciousness than this blog overwhelmingly tends to be. Which is probably why more people read his blog then mine.

In addition to Houston Clear Thinkers, an old friend Anora W. sent me two brilliant links to sink my virtual teeth into:

1. www.TED.com

2. www.WeFeelFine.org

www.TED.com or Technology, Entertainment & Design is an alarmingly fantastic nexus of genius. That’s all I can say to describe it. Check it out for yourself.

www.WeFeelFine.org is a remarkable thought experiment about collecting data on what people feel via their blogs and manifesting that data in a visually appealling and interactive form. I suggest taking a gander at the creator’s page and see some of the other brilliant bits of work they’ve come up with.

The chappies at www.WeFeelFine.org understand that words are simply constructs of thought and the way you arrange words and manipulate them have a profound effect on their reception. This reminded me of a day long ago when I read about the telepaths in Alfred Bester’s The Demolished Man. I’ve had the tune stuck in my head for 15 years:

Four, sir; three, sir;
Two, sir; one!
Tenser, said the Tensor.
Tenser, said the Tensor.
Tension, apprehension,
And dissension have begun.

        - From The Demolished Man by Alfred Bester

Dating: An economic perspective

While many of my fellow students are in the throes of hedonism as part of their spring break and others are trying in earnest to eradicate the beast that is law school papers ( a la Ana ), my spring break has sunk to new lows because I am filling in an online dating profile. What makes it even worse is that it isn’t even for me. I don’t know how I get stuck with these gigs but somehow my Rasta friend sweet-talked me into writing her profile because she isn’t too keen on writing those things. As if anyone wakes up in the morning and thinks to themselves, ” Gee today I’m going to write the best darn dating profile in the world”.

I guess this really is all my fault. When she asked me to look at her profile and tell her what I thought, this crazy brown boy did just that. My response was just that it didn’t sound like her and what was the point of putting something out there if it wasn’t even going to be a good reflection of her person. After I descended off my soap-box I got a firm “well if you don’t think it sounds like me, then you write it” and me being the fool that I am said ” And just maybe I will”.

So here we are.

The closest thing to an online dating profile I’ve ever written was my statement of purpose for law school. I know, dear reader, that you may find that to be a rather noxious thought but I think the approach worked ( well I am in law school you know). Here’s why. Online dating, like statements of purpose or any other partnership transaction is an effort of one party to tender goods ( in this case the person or commercial entity ) under terms that would be acceptable to the other. I realise how awful this analogy is and how much my law class on Contracts has completely pervaded my brain. Indeed I am a lost cause. Light a candle, say a prayer.

So this leads me to my next assertion that isn’t this whole dating thing a glorified marketplace? Aren’t we all ( us single + you philandering allegedly-committed types) just tendering ourselves up to the most viable buyer? Aren’t we all just in a modified version of the ancient bazaars that tantalise shoppers with attractive facades and hollow promises of long term worth? Suddenly the notion of meat market is not too far off.

Consequent assertion: Things like online dating and matchmakers etc. even though they might seem expensive could actually reduce the overhead and transactional costs associated with traditional “go out there & mingle and fend for yourself” dating.  Dare I say it, online dating is remarkable in its economic efficiency. Let’s work the numbers. Let’s say that average brown boy goes out on the town trawling for viable co-conspirators in the game of life. Through random searches and expensive weekends at clubs etc. spends say $150 per week in search efforts. Say that at the end of 4 weeks avg. brown boy nets 2 good possibilities. 6 dates later ( assuming 3 dates a piece) and $210 later ( assuming $35 a date-which we know is on the low end-), avg. brown boy still might not be any closer to intended goal. Compare with the likes of online dating sites which at least help you separate the wheat from the chaff where one would at least, as the website claim, have more first dates and better second ones. ( Speaking of wheat & chaff I wonder if one engaged in that date-filter process on the weekend, would that count as not keeping the Sabbath? Good question for Rabbi Love…) And I’m tempted to believe most online dating sites cost far less. I’m unfamiliar but I don’t think they are more than $100/month. Fundamentally though the hypothesis that online dating is more efficient is predicated on the fact that their ’success’ ratios, whatever ’success’ is defined to be has to be greater than or equal ( and if the site is cheaper maybe even slightly less) than traditional dating methodology.

The more I think about things, I realise that market & economic theory can be used to explain a host of things. I’m really tempted to dive into more of this stuff academically. I shall have to speak with BelleWeather about this because this is absolutely her bag.