Easy Talk: Dating customs |
Honesty, truth on a plate |
But it's too late. He's gone. To be replaced by a slightly paunchy middle-level manager from Chongqing.
"C'mon, Chongqing," I whisper. "You can do this. Works for a foreign company, yep that'll play well ... close to your family, uh huh, and, no! Don't tell them you like cycling, you idiot! These girls hate that!"
It's a mystery, but it seems that as soon as someone wheels a bike out, the stage goes almost black.
Admittedly, there are times when even I just can't get behind the hapless chaps. Like the man who had an entire video describing his love of eggs. No one wants to go home with someone who has one minute to tell you about himself and they focus on omelets.
But what makes the show such compelling viewing for me is not the saccharine sentimentality, but the blunt honesty of the contestants. The women often reject a man on the basis of weight or height, telling him that he doesn't look like he can "protect them". (From what? Hidden dangers lurking on the streets no one has mentioned to me? )
And it's not just the girls: A man once plainly described himself as "stubborn and narcissistic". He could have chosen to say "headstrong and confident", but why sugarcoat it?
It's this sort of bluntness that makes the show so popular in Australia, where viewers gasp in shock at the upfront nature of the participants. It may also explain why the short-lived Australian version of the show, Taken Out, didn't last.
It's quite entertaining to watch someone be told they look too "weak and childish" to date, but having to observe someone being told that they seem "very gentlemanly" but "I'm, err, just not getting a vibe" is excruciating. Give me the cold hard truth over faux politeness any day.
So when I meet a friend for dinner who points out I look tired, have a soy sauce stain on my top and asks if I've put on weight, I just laugh it off. After all, at least they are being honest.
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