Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a dude, that other thread shocked me. Multiple women saying they don't know a single handsome man?
The question wasn't even 'do you know any gorgeous men?'. It was just handsome men.
I'm a guy in my mid 40s and I see other men that I would think would qualify as handsome almost every day.
I'd be really curious to see what some of these women look like themselves, to think that they aren't any handsome men around.
But to answer your question, no, I think think most things end up pretty equal. Same amount of attractiveness across genders
Are you straight? Because the guys that my H thinks are handsome are not. For example, he was telling me he doesn't get why his friend is still single because he's handsome. He's a nice guy but handsome? Far far away from it. The opposite is true too. I personally think that Cara Delevingne is gorgeous in a very striking way and he doesn't think so.
Anonymous wrote:I would say that people who date men are generally more attractive than people who date women. Women look for a lot of other qualities, but men are pretty focused on looks.
I used to live in a community that had a high concentration of gay men (the short north in Columbus, OH), and most of the men there were attractive, worked out regularly, dressed well, etc.
By contrast, the women were nearly as conventionally attractive as straight women.
Anonymous wrote:In general do you see more attractive women then men in the DC area? Or in the US in general? The other thread about attractive men made me think - I probably have only met a handful of truly attractive men in my life. Sure after getting to know them they become more attractive but stop me in my tracks attractive only a few. But I see attractive women a lot. Is that because they put more effort into keeping themselves up? Thoughts?
Anonymous wrote:As a dude, that other thread shocked me. Multiple women saying they don't know a single handsome man?
The question wasn't even 'do you know any gorgeous men?'. It was just handsome men.
I'm a guy in my mid 40s and I see other men that I would think would qualify as handsome almost every day.
I'd be really curious to see what some of these women look like themselves, to think that they aren't any handsome men around.
But to answer your question, no, I think think most things end up pretty equal. Same amount of attractiveness across genders
Anonymous wrote:With enough money and right consultant, anyone look good. All it takes is a plastic surgeon, a dermatologist, a dentist, a fitness coach, a make up artist, a wardrobe stylist/personal shopper and kaboom, your attractiveness can go from 1-7 in 3 months.
Anonymous wrote:With enough money and right consultant, anyone look good. All it takes is a plastic surgeon, a dermatologist, a dentist, a fitness coach, a make up artist, a wardrobe stylist/personal shopper and kaboom, your attractiveness can go from 1-7 in 3 months.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Probably because it is more socially common for women to do upkeep around hair and nails, get Botox, wear makeup, etc. Easy for a few small touches like that to take an average woman to above average.
LOL! Botox is not common. I wouldn't put that in the same category as makeup.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. Attractiveness is a social construct, so it's impossible to say who is truly attractive.
It is to a degree, but there are some common traits that are considered attractive across the globe (symmetry of features, proportionate morphology, clear skin, hip to waist ratio in women and height in men, etc.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This may be a function of me living in suburbs but I used to take the VRE and I didn't see a single attractive person at my stop (approximately 50 people) nor on the train (I would usually walk through one or two cards to find a seat). I never noticed anyone particularly attractive when I got off at my stop either although to be fair there are a ton of people getting on and off and I was mostly focused on wading through a sea of people.
I have not noticed anyone attractive where I work either. Everyone just seems like they're in boring office attire and a fair number of people are overweight.
Try working in a big federal building. It looks like the Star Wars Cantina scene.
Anonymous wrote:Probably because it is more socially common for women to do upkeep around hair and nails, get Botox, wear makeup, etc. Easy for a few small touches like that to take an average woman to above average.