I'd like to sit here and tell you looks don't matter. That "what's on
the inside" is all other people value in you. That true love happens in
a vacuum filled only with snuggles and cuddles, void whatsoever of
receding hairlines and breast sizes.
I'd also like to tell you the women on the The Girls Next Door, the
reality show about Hugh Hefner's three girlfriends, are hideous because
they're cosmetically and surgically altered.
But in both of those cases I'd be lying. I'm an American -- show me some skin
and then I'll decide if I like you. (And by the way, how much money do
you make?)
All humans are fixated by both money and sex. Some cultures, like those
we tend to go to war with, try to make money and sex as scarce and
limited as possible. But in America we combine money and sex, turn it
into a reality show and then send parents across America shuffling
their kids out of the room when it comes on. (No worries, the kids will
catch it later on DVR.)
A show featuring nice blonde women who don't seem to like wearing
clothing is fine with me, especially when that show occasionally airs
in my living room because my girlfriend, weirdly, finds it amusing.
But the American money-sex machine gets a bit creepy when a T-shirt
recently on sale at Abercrombie & Fitch -- a store aimed squarely
at the way-under-18 set -- had these words across the front: "Who needs
a brain when you have these?"
Part of America thinks Hugh Hefner seems so old and innocent in his
robe, could he and his quaint magazine really be that bad? But the rest
of America connects Hugh Hefner to Abercrombie to Paris Hilton, because
it's really not that much of a stretch, and it scares them so much they
stay up at night worrying about their children's future.
The question is whether it's normal that looks -- particularly women's
looks -- are pretty much the most important quality an American
(particularly a female American) can have. Is this human nature? Or
have we just become obsessed with skin?
It has been assumed since Darwin's days that it's natural; that our
brains are hard-wired to find the best-looking mate in order to have
attractive -- and therefore most likely to survive -- offspring. We're
inherently egomaniacs, and we want to live forever.
Some recent research has confirmed this. The University of Essex
studied 84 speed-dating events throughout England and found that every
inch of a man's height increased his chances by 5 percent of women
wanting to meet him.
Meanwhile, clinically overweight women were picked by 70 percent fewer men than average-sized or clinically underweight women.
Other researchers, according to the Woodrow Wilson International Center
for Scholars, have found human beauty triggers the same section of the
brain activated in drug addicts when they're about to take a hit.
Two-month-old babies have been observed looking longer at more
traditionally attractive faces. And mothers of less attractive babies
spend a disproportionate time looking at other people in the hospital
room instead of their own babies.
But other evidence shows it's not natural at all, that we have
artificially inflated the importance of looks. The University of Texas
did a study every 10 years and found the value of good looks has
increased tremendously for both men and women. In 1989 men's looks were
more important to women than women's looks were to men in 1939.
But wait! Men shorter than 6 feet and women over the 100-pound mark can
take heart. Biologists have identified a number of animals who don't
pick mates based on attractiveness. That peacock with the fancy
feathers doesn't necessarily get more peahens than the peacock with the
lame feathers, as originally thought.
And other studies show women base their opinion of attractiveness not on looks, but clothing.
Yes, I guess that's still shallow. But at least a nice suit or skirt is
cheaper than hair plugs or silicone. And that means you'll have more of
what really, truly matters in life and love: ca$h.
This column appeared in the Courier-Post and Gannett newspapers nationwide.
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