Saturday, October 6, 2012

Appropriately Filtering Your Facebook

Facebook is good for a lot of things. Seeing which popular kids from high school got fat (almost all of them), mild to moderate internet stalking of your ex, sending YouTube clips of kittens to friends and acquaintances, etc. Otherwise, it's bad. It's very, very bad. There are ENDLESS opportunities in which you can make an ass of yourself to all of Internet friendship. Thus, let's all consider filtering our shit. Now, I can guarantee I will not do this, because of lazy, but I'll give y'all this unsolicited advice anyway.

Family Members

What they can see: Uh, nothing. Maybe like profile pictures where you look cute and aren't double-fisting two bottles of wine and statuses talking about how well school is going or how you love your job. In other words, nothing.
Make sure to hide: Nearly every tagged picture (or, god forbid, video) of you. Anything you post after 1 AM. Your Spotify history ("Who is ______, a rock group?" "Why do you have a playlist called 'Ladies Getting Head'? Who is Lil Wayne?"). Check-ins that are 98% bars.


Exes

What they can see: Keep in minimal. The less it looks like you're on the Internet, the cooler it makes you seem. Or it makes you seem kidnapped and murdered, which is super intriguing and will make them sad or something. Win/win!! Just kidding, but actually just emphasize how attractive you are and everyone you hang out with. Also, look worldly. What I'm saying is, learn Photoshop. Check-ins at concerts. Statuses about dates you're going on that totally aren't made up.
Make sure to hide: The status you posted about how you were listening to the "Ladies Getting Head" Spotify playlist while you were getting ready and eating cold pizza and you stabbed your eye with mascara so your eyes started watering so it looked like you were sitting on the floor, crying and eating cold pizza, crying to Lil Kim's "Suck My Dick". Don't tell them that.

Employers

What they can see: DON'T DO IT. NO. BAD.
Make sure to hide: EVERYTHING, THIS IS A TERRIBLE IDEA.

Friends

What they can see: Everything, man. They already like you. I mean, real friends, not just Internet friends. The ones who, if they see too much Taylor Swift on Spotify, know you're probably crying in the shower with a glass or six of wine and that they should come over and help. The people who will not judge you for your drunk statuses saying "HEY ANYONE WANNA CUDDLE" that you delete as soon as you're sober. The ones who understand that the Internet is hard, and life is hard, and feelings are feelings.
Make sure to hide: Apparently, some assholes think it's funny to 'like' every time a certain person (read: it's me, I'm the person) listens to her "Booty Bumpin Beats" playlist when this person is just trying to jam out.


Crushes

What they can see: Cute profile pictures, cute photos of you having an appropriate non-alcoholic amount of fun with attractive friends, but no one who is way more attractive than you. Witty Facebook statuses, nothing after 1 AM. Links you post to trendy~* music. Spotify listening that isn't Taylor Swift.
Make sure to hide: Most of what you say, because it's not as funny as you think to most people. Maybe text your friends your hilarious anecdotes until you have tricked crush into liking you back, then it's fair game. Hide pictures of you double-fisting drinks and cupcakes.


  Acceptable:
Serious. Posed. Showered. Homeboys wanna date the hell outta that (in theory).


 Unacceptable:
Why is there more than one photo in which I have a drink in one hand and a cupcake in the other. WHY. Like, I get why it happened, but photos do not need to document this. 

Wednesday, September 26, 2012

Serious Boyfriend Potential: Pt. 3

RECAP: Pt. 1Pt. 2Laaaaadieeees

Candidate #11:
Name: Penn Badgley

Profession: Actor, apparently singer

Top skills: Gossip Girl has made him maybe the acting game's top brooder. Good hair. GG keeps him pretty covered in ~*emotional writer*~ layers like sweaters and tears, but Easy A revealed that homeboy has a torso to be applauded and valued by all humans. ALL. HUMANS. Also, he plays Jeff Buckley in a movie coming out soon, and he sings in it. Like, pretty well. Also, aforementioned brooding comes into play big time. 

Favorite couple-tivities: Since I assume he basically just is Lonely Boy from Gossip Girl (seasons 1-3 until my hormones calmed down and I realized that show was real bad, y'all), I'm guessing a lot of coffee shops and writing about feelings.

Why it doesn't work out: Too many feelings. At first the constant caressing was really cute, and he's got that "great torso" going for him, but shit got real weird real fast. You have to break eye contact sometime. Also, he dated Blake Lively, so, like, you KNOW you'll never be hot enough. Unless you are her.

Candidate #12:
Name: Aaron Paul

Profession: Jesse Pinkman, he is Jesse Pinkman forever

Top skills: I don't know if it's a "skill", but he has eyes so pretty, the chances they'll ruin your life is 100%. To be honest, if he just looked at me hard enough, I would do meth. I would get addicted to meth. I'm assuming that's how he got the role on Breaking Bad. All of the sudden, I would be doing meth, my underwear would be gone, I'd be blind, probably because of meth (I don't know what drugs are), and I would REGRET NOTHING WOULD YOU LOOK AT HIM.

Favorite couple-tivities: He keeps talking on his Twitter about his "fiance" or something, so I guess that number one thing would be hiding from his fiance. After that, fashion shows and yelling about science.

Why it doesn't work out: Meth makes you ugly. :( :( (Or aforementioned fiance thing works out.)

Candidate #13:
Name: Jack Huston

Profession: Ol' Half-face from Boardwalk Empire

Top skills: Dude, I still thought this guy was attractive before I even saw his whole face. I don't know what that says about me, but this isn't about me, it's about this hot guy who even comes with a whole face. His character has one of the best memes on the whole internet. His aunt or some shit is Angelica Huston, aka Mrs. Zissou/Mrs. Tenebaum/everything cool. Marry into that family.

Favorite couple-tivities: You can do SO MANY activities when people have whole faces. I refuse to limit them here.

Why it doesn't work out: He uses his Richard voice in bed, which you'd think you'd be into, but it is actually just terrifying and you are terrified. 

Candidate #14:
Name: Colin Firth

Profession: Mr. Darcy, Oscar winner, professional sweater-wearer

Top skills: He literally only ever plays different versions of Mr. Darcy. Kings Speech? Probably Mr. Darcy. Love Actually? Mr. Darcy, in sweaters. He can really wear a sweater, y'all. The only time he wasn't Mr. Darcy was in Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy which is when he was a TOTAL BADASS so that works out. But, seriously, next time you're drunk just google "Colin Firth in a sweater" and nod solemnly at your phone/computer and tell me that you feel me, because I know you will.

Favorite couple-tivities: He just did an audiobook, so probably sit and listen to audiobooks. I feel like he'd like chess. And fireplaces. Sweater shopping.

Why it doesn't work out: "Age ain't nothin' but a number" can't last forever. One day you're just playing chess and the next day you're doing math and realizing the first time he did Mr. Darcy via BBC miniseries, you were like a toddler or something. Math ruins everything, just like it always does.


!!!BONUS ROUND!!!


The first time I saw this commercial, I literally went mute for a week. This kind of shit should be illegal. I still have no concept as to what this ad is for, but if it's claiming that whatever it's selling will make other humans even half as attractive as these humans, I implore everyone to buy it. But, like I said, way too distracted to figure out what the hell they are selling. Just look at 'em. Well, goodbye.


a Fictional Thing

For my creative writing class, our first assignment was a fiction short story. I never write fiction, but after infinite critiques/editing help from my angel friend Jenny, I am pretty happy with how it turned out. Sorry if you were hoping for more about fake ~*celebrity boyfriends*~ (that's probably the next post, don't worry). In the meantime, here is a fictional thing I wrote:


My mother’s room always smelled like her. This seems like an obvious statement, but I’ve never met anyone else with such a distinct scent. She smelled like lavender and lemongrass and laundry and tobacco and peroxide and brandy and she smelled like this all the time, not just sometimes. I spoke about this at her funeral, but it turns out I was the only one who noticed, which I suppose isn’t very surprising, since I was the only one who noticed a lot of things about my mother.
            I thought she was perfect my entire childhood: the smartest, most beautiful woman in the entire world. Maybe most kids think that about their moms, I don’t know. I don’t know most things about what a regular childhood is like, it turns out. Relating to other people’s memories of youth is often a difficult thing for me. So what I guess I’m saying is, let me tell you about my mother.

            I didn’t know anything about how she grew up until well after she died, which was fifteen or so years ago now. I realized that I knew countless details about her, what hair color she used and how she took her coffee (Platinum Blonde #105, black with a shot of brandy), her favorite Beatle and the TV weatherman she had a crush on (George and Wayne Baker from Channel 5). From all these countless details, I figured I knew her better than anyone, when it turns out I knew all the trivia of a mother and none of the facts of a woman. She never had a lot of friends or ran in the same circles for very long, so it took a while for me to learn more about her. I had to find old boyfriends and coworkers and I’ve had more comfortable and easier pastimes, but I had to know about her.
            My mother was born Christina Jacobs at her parents’ home just outside of Omaha. She was named after some aunt she had never met, I could never really get a clear answer on that. I do know that she hated the name and went by Chrissy by the time she was three. She was stubborn and strong-willed and had a personality far too big for the farm town her family lived in. I wanted to be like her. I still do, I think, even after I know everything I know.
            She was the popular girl in school, if you can say that about a school of maybe a hundred. She was bright and quick-witted, and had every cliché dream of leaving for the big city. She actually did it, though, as soon as she turned 18. Didn’t even wait to graduate high school. She never did get that diploma, at least as far as I could find.
            When she left home, she went to Las Vegas. I think she was looking for the brightest place she could find, and boy, did she find it. I spent my first few years with my mother in Vegas. We lived in a tiny apartment way too close to the strip that I thought was endearing at the time, but looking back it was probably just unsafe for the two of us, always walking alone at night. My mother decorated it in such a way, though, that there was no question of who lived there. Cramped at kitschy, with walls too dark and somehow too bright all at the same time. She never was a trendy woman, my mother.
            Before I was old enough to be in school, it was just me and her all day long before she went to work. She never kept the same job for very long, but she always worked at night, waitressing at one place or another. During the day it was just the two of us. She made me cereal and turned on cartoons so she could sleep longer; I was always an early riser, still am. When she got up for the day a few hours later, I would sit and watch her get ready for however long it took.
            I say that last part because my mother viewed everything as a performance, so sometimes her getting ready took a very long time. I was a captive audience. She would waltz around the apartment singing with her curlers in her hair. Her favorites were Billie Holiday and Patsy Cline. I think she genuinely thought she sounded like them when she sang, and I never corrected her. I sat on her bed and watched and listened. When she was done with her hairbrush, I would pick it up and try to mimic her motions. Her hair was smooth and blonde and short like a 50s movie star, and mine was mousy and frizzy, so the effect was never even close. I wasn’t the star, though, she was.
            “Ya know, Patsy Cline would’ve been much prettier if she were blonde. It’s just a fact, Sadie,” she would remind me every time “I Fall to Pieces” came on her Greatest Hits record. It was our favorite song, and it was getting worn out and would skip.
            “Would I be prettier if my hair was like yours?”
            “No, honey, we’ll have to figure something else out for you.” She would laugh and kiss me on the forehead and put on her lipstick, a shade called “True Red” we got at the drugstore, a new tube every month. My mother was the star of the show, and I was there to be the audience. I did a really good job at being her audience.

            It wasn’t until I started school that I realized that I was living a life anything less than ordinary. Mother would go to work at night and I would fix myself a TV dinner and read until I went to sleep. I only took a shower or two a week, maybe, and wore mostly hand-me-down clothes she got from other girls at work. I went to my first week of school looking dirty and dressed in mostly boy’s clothes.
Teachers would ask me questions about my mother, my home. The first time she came to my school, she won them over, though. She always won people over. My mother was the most magnetic person most people had ever met. No one could fault her for anything, no matter how much they wanted to before she walked in the room and sucked all the energy right out of it. The world was her stage and she relished in every moment of people trying to be upset with her. Having an audience made her stronger.
Even after I saw how other kids dressed and what other kids were allowed to do, I too never faulted my mother. How could you be mad at someone so beautiful? Our daily routine changed slightly with me being in school, but I was still home before she left for work, and I was still her audience, and I did a really good job at being her audience.
When I was a junior in high school, I was going to school and working at a diner. I wasn’t home as much, and it really bothered my mother. I think that’s when she started drinking more, or maybe that’s just when I figured out what brandy smelled like. I’d get home from work, and she still hadn’t left for her job yet. She’d ask me where I’d been, get upset, and I’d put her to bed by nine. Our daily routine had changed, but we still had one.
I loved school. I was a good student, always enthusiastic, had my work done on time and done well. I really excelled at math, and was seriously looking into some good colleges. I had saved up some money from my job, and was applying for scholarships. I could never understand why my mother wasn’t excited about these prospects for me. My friends’ parents were all happy for them, and even showed real enthusiasm for my future. My mother just appeared cold and bitter. She still looked beautiful, but just harder.
When I started receiving acceptance letters, my mother would throw them away before I got home. I didn’t find out about that until the admissions department of one of the schools called for me. That was the first time I was ever truly angry with my mother. After years of what was clearly questionable parenting, she had gone too far, and was losing her precious audience. I was eighteen when I finally figured out that my mother loved herself far more than she would ever love me.

            Everyone reacts to profound realizations differently. I reacted by making my first act of defiance against my mother: I left her. I left her alone, without an audience, to perform her act. I lived with friends until school started, which was only a few months, and then I was out of state, far from her. I think she stopped trying to call after a month or so, which I wish I could say was surprising. But it was never about me, it was about her, and she must have figured something else out. Maybe she got a boyfriend or a new job or something. I never asked, and hardly could even make myself care.
            When I found out that my mother died some ten years later, I wasn’t surprised. You can’t live a life like she did without paying the price at some point. From what her doctor told me, she just wore herself out. That was maybe the only surprising part. She always seemed like someone who would die in a much more theatrical way than “get sick”, but I guess everyone has to die somehow.
I wasn’t surprised either that I was the only one around to take care of things. I planned the funeral hastily. My husband told me that I should speak at the service, and I did, reluctantly. I talked about how my mother smelled, and how she took her coffee, and how she was beautiful. After all those years, even dead, she was still beautiful. Apparently it was a good speech. People got choked up. I didn’t feel too much of anything at the time, honestly. I didn’t know, and I still don’t know, how you’re supposed to feel when this kind of thing happens.
            Sometimes loving someone isn’t a choice, I think. My mother may not have loved me like she should have, but I do think she still did. Even in my anger, my years of bitterness, I know I loved her too.

            It’s been years, now. After a while, I realized that I could learn everything about my mother and ask everyone she had ever known any question, and I still would never truly know her. That’s the thing about being a performer all the time, no one ever really knows you. I think that’s what she wanted, though. She was a great performer and I, for a very long time, was a really good audience.

Tuesday, August 21, 2012

Serious Girlfriend Potential

In an effort to be an equal opportunity blog, I offer this: ladies I would like to date, thank you. I'm equally shallow toward both genders, do not fear.

Candidate #1:
Name: Aubrey Plaza

Profession: Actress/Dark Angel/Gothic Princess


Babest quality: Girl makes people so uncomfortable that they feel compelled to write a character for her. Her deadpan delivery and the fact that she is clearly the weirdest human makes her the babest babe. Also, her face.

Research Material: Parks and Rec, forever. Safety Not Guaranteed, where you will be forced to feel feelings forever. Music video for "Hollywood Forever Cemetery Sings" by Father John Misty. Any late night interview she participates in.

Candidate #2:
Name: Jenny Lewis

Profession: Singer/Ginger

Babest Quality: THAT VOICE, ugh. Her songwriting ability is amazing, no matter what project she is working on, though I prefer the country twang Lewis. Also, whatever voodoo she does as a petite woman to make it look like she has legs for miles.

Research Material: I personally recommend "More Adventurous" from Rilo Kiley, and her first solo album (with the Watson Twins) "Rabbit Fur Coat".

Candidate #3:
Name: Amy Poehler

Profession: Comedian/Actress/Writer/Director/Literally Everything Cool

Babest Quality: Smart Girls at the Party. Amy and two of her best friends made this internet show that interviews girls who are passionate about everything from hip hop to yoga to basically everything. It encourages girls to be themselves, and that being unique is actually awesome and doesn't make you lame. I may or may not have teared up at an episode or four. Amy also does advice videos, and they are equally precious. There's all that, and I would argue that she's the funniest woman of ever. There, I said it.

Research Material: ABOVE LINK. All her SNL characters (esp. Kaitlin). Any interview she does with husband Will Arnett. Just everything.


Candidate #4:
Name: Carey Mulligan

Profession: Actress

Babest Quality: When she's on screen, it's impossible to take your eyes off her. Basically, she's a suspiciously good actress and suspiciously able to pull off any hair style really, really well. THUS, her babest quality is clearly whatever witchcraft she practices, because it is WORKING.

Research Material: An Education, which may or may not still be on Netflix. Never Let Me Go. Like... any picture of her face.

Candidate #5:
Name: Lizzy Caplan

Profession: Actress/JANIS IAN FROM MEAN GIRLS

Babest Quality: Soso funny, soso versatile. I would argue some of the best comedic timing in film/TV. She was in Mean Girls, which I didn't even realize until well after I had established myself as a straight up fan. Also, her drugged-up sex scenes in True Blood included swimming in the air through a mystical forest, so that was... a thing. Then all of Party Down.

Research Material: All of Party Down. Her couple of episodes on New Girl. Mean Girls, three times in a row. Season one of True Blood (then just stop watching).

Tuesday, August 7, 2012

Who Will Narrate Your Life

EDIT: I FORGOT CATE BLANCHETT
Holy shit, if you want Cate Blanchett you narrate your life, that means you are AWESOME and like ADVENTURE and the ELVISH LANGUAGE and if you cry, your cry ELEGANTLY. I am so pissed I forgot this. You are also vaguely terrifying!!! Well, bye.

Morgan Freeman
What it says about you: You cocky piece of shit. You think your life is awesome enough that [someone that played] GOD should narrate it?! No. I used to think I was good enough for ol' Morgy Boy, but then I looked down and saw the pizza sauce on my shirt and realized that Morgan Freeman is too good to narrate me trolling Reddit for four hours. Two hours, maybe, and if I washed my shirt, but there's a line, and I am usually way over it. Frankly, you probably are too. Lower your bar, friend. Lower your bar.

Alec Baldwin
What it says about you: Understated, but still has a certain level of gravitas. Likely chosen because he narrated The Royal Tenenbaums, but acceptable just because the voice of a 1950s newscaster who has been smoking since he was a toddler. The Wes Anderson connection makes me think you may be a wee bit pretentious, but I get it. Live your life.

Martin Sheen
What it says about you: If you see "Martin Sheen" and go straight to The West Wing, stop reading now. For who's left: God bless you forever for wanting the narrator of Ken Burns' The Civil War series to narrate your life. You are the coolest. Don't let anyone or any empirical evidence let you believe otherwise.

Tyra Banks
What it says about you: You are a flamboyant gay man.

Bill Nye
What it says about you: SCIENCE. This choice is only appropriate if you are a super enthusiastic person, because I imagine Bill Nye says everything like it's written in CAPS lock with an exclamation point at the end. This is based purely on his show made for youths, the fake Bill Nye Twitter account, and a dream I maintain in my heart.

Lindsay Lohan (circa Mean Girls)
What it says about you: Dramatic, breathy, yet sarcastic. You probably view things slightly more over-the-top than need be, but you're pretty and aren't drug-addled yet, so good job! 2004 was a good year.

Sarah McLachlan
What it says about you: If you think this is an acceptable choice, you clearly think I am referring to her lovely singing voice and not her evil, evil PAWS commercials showing abused dogs. Lady, I'm just trying to watch Swamp People, and now I'm sobbing. I assume if you want this bitch narrating your life, you like making yourself and other people cry. You are a bully. Feelings are hard.

Wednesday, July 25, 2012

Serious Boyfriend Potential: Pt. 2

If you need a recap on Pt. 1. Pt. 2 is short and sweet, you're welcome.

Candidate #7:
Name: Patrick Fugit (preferably circa 2002-06, if time travel is an option)

Profession: Actor/teen crush of this blogger

First date: Since I assume he is 17 forever, he will likely pick you in his mom's minivan. You'll get milkshakes and drive to a parking lot so you can watch him do cool skateboard tricks. It will be boring, but since you just recently got your braces off and boys just started talking to you, you'll be into it. Plus, he has long hair, so he's alternative.

Length of relationship: 3 weeks. He says it was getting too serious, but you are fairly certain his mom just wouldn't let him borrow the van so much. 

What you learned: Names of cool skateboard tricks, that starring in Almost Famous so young likely left Mr. Fugit with a very skewed interpretation of dating.

Candidate #8:
Name: DRACO MALFOY (Er, Tom Felton)

Profession: Evil, actor, peroxide addict

First date: Since I assume he just is Draco in real life (movies are real, right?), there's probably a lot of hexing involved. Dark wizard-tivities, silent curses, audible curses. Romance, mostly curses.

Length of relationship: 2 months. You realize that he has been using your toning shampoo and replacing it with water.

What you learned: So, so many spells. There can only be one blonde in a relationship.

Candidate #9:
Name: Peter Dinklage

Profession: Actor, wearer-of-armor

First date: Fine wine, discussion of literature, trying to slip Game of Thrones quotes into conversation without him noticing.

Length of relationship: 4 dates. You get too drunk and start chanting "HALF MAN HALF MAN HALF MAN" which is apparently offensive, though it's just a reference to his Emmy-winning role. Whatever, bro.

What you learned: You're apparently an incredibly offensive person.

Candidate #10:
Name: Justin Townes Earle

Profession: Musician, country stud

First date: Dinner, too many drinks, likely some light heroin.

Length of relationship: No way of actually telling. Tumultuous, on-and-off for a while. So much heroin. You want to "fix him", realize that's stupid, and the cycle continues.

What you learned: You can't actually "fix" a human, heroin is bad, tall people are tall.


Thursday, July 19, 2012

Serious Boyfriend Potential


Candidate #1:

Name: Father John Misty (Josh Tillman)

Profession: Musician, former Fleet Fox

What he offers: Good face parts and vocal chords, the dance moves of your drunk dad at a family wedding, the ability to look good with long hair and beard and the smarts to know when to cut that shit off and look better.


Why your parents won't approve: His Twitter is mostly about the procurement and usage of drugs. If your parents figure out the internet enough to see this, they will likely not be pleased.

Why it doesn't work out: Following the age-old playground tradition of "dibs", he's mine, ladies.

Candidate #2:
Name: James Franco

Profession: Actor, writer, painter, all this shit

What he offers: Free mediocre-to-average paintings, infinite taxidermy, you can finally wear that "I BANGED JAMES FRANCO" shirt you've had for years and it will even make sense.

Why your parents won't approve: It's awkward to tell your daughter that her boyfriend is like, WAY prettier than she is. Also, there's no way this dude isn't a total douchebag. Doesn't he go to like eight Ivy League schools at once? Are there even eight? Is the Ivy League like a lame Justice League? Too many questions.

Why it doesn't work out: He finds the "I BANGED JAMES FRANCO" shirt.

Candidate #3:
Name: Jack White

Profession: Musician, likely a vampire

What he offers: The voice of a creepy, twangy, dark angel, endless Catholic trivia, will never get melanoma, connections to the country goddess Loretta Lynn, the speed and strength of vampire lore.

Why your parents won't approve: Unless your folks are the Goth family of the Sims or keep bottles of blood on hand, they will likely be frightened by Mr. White's visage.

Why it doesn't work out: He used too much of your hair product. Also the pet crows.

Candidate #4:
Name: Michael Cera

Profession: Actor, prime candidate for friend-zoning

What he offers: Finally, someone as into Scott Pilgrim fantasies as you are! He may be on the verge of being too into it, since that was clearly the only time he has ever been or will ever be even a little bad ass, poor kid.

Why your parents won't approve: He won't stop cowering in the corner when he meets them. Never actually makes eye contact. Won't stop crying.

Why it doesn't work out: You accidentally call him George Michael too many times. In your guilt, you friend zone him, though there's no way of knowing if her actually understands, since he only communicates in whispers.

Candidate #5:
Name: Christian Bale

Profession: Actor, loud person

What he offers: HE IS BATMAN, rides in Batmobile, is cracky enough to agree to let you punch Anne Hathaway just to see what it would feel like (answer: great), has some sort of accent (type irrelevant), will talk in ridiculous Batman voice in exchange for snacks and sexual favors.

Why your parents won't like him: They've seen American Psycho.

Why it doesn't work out: You see American Psycho.

Candidate #6:
Name: Joseph Gordon-Levitt

Profession: Actor, Musician

What he offers: THOSE DIMPLES, will sign your Third Rock From the Sun DVDs, can do that thing where you run up to a wall and do a back flip, explains Inception to you, good winkface, can pull off a shaved head.

Why your parents won't like him: He hypnotizes them with his borderline creepy charm and goddamn dimples. They choose him over you when you break up.

Why it doesn't work out: Charm is almost too much. You suspect he is a Craigslist Killer.