Anonymous wrote:Warren Beatty's tried and true line was "Make a pass at me." But then, he's Warren Beatty.
Anonymous wrote:Short version for those not up on the discourse:
Bill Ackman, a 6'3" billionaire Harvard grad with a pretty good head of hair, claims "May I meet you?" was his go to line when out and about in his single days. He encouraged single men today to try it.
A normal guy field tested it and was brutally laughed at, not just by the woman he approached, but all of her friends as well.
How terrible is this line? Or is it not that bad and just depends on who delivers it?
Anonymous wrote:My sole comment for the discourse:
I hate that the actual line is being picked apart. His general advice to put yourself out there and risk rejection for the chance of an authentic, fulfilling relationship is one we should be celebrating, not micro-nitpicking the actual line being used.
I am 48 with two teenage boys. I had some success and a lot of rejection when I was a teen and young man, despite being a conventionally attractive, division 1 hockey player who went to a good school.
In my experience, the line doesn't matter as much as the sincerity of trying to say hi and doing so in a non-threatening way that gives the woman an opportunity to politely decline. I have told my boys this. I have also told them that unfortunately, there are a lot of rude, judgmental people of both sexes that will react to your earnest attempts by laughing at you, or ridiculing your intro. And to be thankful you were rejected by them at the outset and dodged that bullet.
Anonymous wrote:It is really weird. It doesn’t make sense.
Anonymous wrote:He's like 60. If he tried this 35 years ago, that was in what, 1990? It was a different time then. People are much more casual now. Less class now. So people laugh at formality.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He's like 60. If he tried this 35 years ago, that was in what, 1990? It was a different time then. People are much more casual now. Less class now. So people laugh at formality.
That's not how people spoke in 1990. Or 1890, for that matter. Agree with the others that it's AI-ish/robotic/weird.