<![CDATA[Gawker: modern love]]> http://tags.gawker.com/assets/base/img/thumbs140x140/gawker.com.png <![CDATA[Gawker: modern love]]> http://gawker.com/tag/modernlove http://gawker.com/tag/modernlove <![CDATA[Will Modern Love: The Romantic Comedy Save the New York Times?]]> American may be making its way away from the print version of the Gray Lady, but perhaps its past time for her to make her leap from newsprint to big screen star.

Columbia Pictures announced today that they are acquiring the first look rights for film adaptation to the Sunday Styles Modern Love column. That astoundingly marks the second development deal Modern Love has inked lately. Earlier, HBO announced plans to develop a series about a fictional editor of the column.

Variety reports that since signing a representation deal with ICM, the Times has closed "north of 20 option deals for film or TV projects, including the recent sale to Lifetime and Sony TV of the article At an Age for Music and Dreams, Real Life Intrudes."

That story told of a young violinist in Ohio, struggling to find the means to pursue her symphony dreams.

Among some of the other recently optioned journalismisms:

Sensing a pattern? After all this talk about internets, and opening up the media conversation and aggregating vs. reporting, it all comes down to what people want is quirky kids' stories. A few dozen of those a year, feeding directly via ICM into the Hollywood machinery and the Times will be able to shut down those printing presses once and for all and give everybody bonuses to boot! Throw in a couple wacky contemporary romance ideas and the whole Times building can take the day off to go yacht shopping.

However, looking at the Times homepage today, it seems like there's a more than a few reporters on the beat who don't want to be millionaires. Everywhere you look you see, "Pope Sets Plan for Disaffected Anglicans to Join Catholics" and "Hopes Fade for Comprehensive Climate Treaty." Sorry to break the news to John Broder and Rachel Donadio, but that is not what we call entertainment.

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<![CDATA[Modern Love Investigation: Do Old People, Like, Do It?]]> Ah, Modern Love: the New York Times' intellectualizing of chemicals that float between us. Many are awful, some are wonderful, and most are uncomfortable. Today's no different, as they answer an..age-old..question: are old people fucking?

Come on! You know you've wanted to know if your grandparents ever take the dentures out, put them on the nightstand, throw some Count Basie on the gramophone, and get bizz-ay with the sizz-ay. And you know you've always wanted to read something about it the started like this:

I sat on the examining table in my urologist's office...

Woah. Stop it right there, GRANDMA. Is that an ass-doctor you're talking about in the lede? [Ed. No?] Let's get to the good stuff! Are. You. Sexually. Active? Let's see here, blah blah blah, friends joking about not getting laid, it's funny, ha ha, words words words, sharing the same urologist with your husband, blah blah blah, hmm. I don't see anything, ah, wait! We might have a winner...

Physically, cuddling is high on our list. Back rubs are important. Holding hands on walks and in the movie theater is automatic. Yes, we are active - actively involved in each other and in our love of our life together.

BOOOOO.

Yes, We Do. Even at Our Age. [Modern Love]

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<![CDATA[Mrs. Santorum Is a Very Lucky Woman]]> The image associated with this post is best viewed using a browser.Former Pennsylvania Senator Rick "Santorum" Santorum thinks Barack Obama's date with his wife was probably a bad message to send The Black Folk.

I think he has to realize that flying to New York is self-indulgent. Go down to the corner bar and have a drink, a shot and a beer. It does not matter where you go with your wife, is that it's with your wife. That's really the point... I would make the argument, the simpler the date, the more normal it is.

Rick Santorum, love doctor [Salon via The Awl]

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<![CDATA[CNN Reporter's Love Child Due March 25?]]> Jeffrey Toobin, the married CNN legal reporter, could very soon have a child with his rumored mistress, if the woman's friends are correct.

According to Page Six, the purported mistress, Casey Greenfield, hasn't told friends who the father of her unborn child is, even though the baby boy is due March 25 (judging from Amazon's baby registry). The pals have only guesses: "Everybody thinks it's Jeff," one told Six.

And while Toobin is, bizarrely, as active as ever on his beloved Facebook, reaffirming his marriage to his longtime wife, Greenfield withdrew her picture and contact info.

Not that Toobin was on her friends list to begin with. Apparently there's literally nothing Greenfield can do to get an "add" from him.

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<![CDATA[Jeff Toobin Updates Status to 'Married']]> CNN analyst, New Yorker writer, alleged affair-haver, and big Facebook fan Jeffrey Toobin recently updated his Facebook status to "married." He's actually been married for years! Click through to see the outpouring of interest:

The current rumor is that Toobin got Casey Greenfield, a younger lawyer and the daughter of CBS' Jeff Greenfield, pregnant. She is not his wife. So you could be forgiven for interpreting this as some sort of public affirmation of commitment.

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<![CDATA[Benoit Denizet-Lewis Cannily Combines Sex, Addiction]]> Former Gawker hottie Benoit Denizet-Lewis is still riding the addiction train to literary success! The America Anonymous author and unveiler of Down Low culture is writing about his sex addiction, luckily for pervs like you:

Where better than a god damn "Modern Love" column to let it all loose? He drove 130 miles to hook up with guys he met online—two nights in a row! He couldn't quit the chat rooms! He lost jobs and relationships to porn, cheating, etc.! Finally he went to sex rehab and got 'sober.' But not before this:

I never kept my addiction secret from guys I had relationships with, and I was surprised by how little it seemed to faze them. When I told one boyfriend, he said, “Oh, aren’t all guys sort of addicted to sex?” It was only when I cheated on them for the third time, or slipped out of bed while they were sleeping to have phone sex with a stranger in the kitchen, that the seriousness of my addiction sunk in for them.

Interesting (?).Now you can never say you don't know quite a bit about the sex addiction of Benoit Denizet-Lewis. [NYT]

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<![CDATA[The NYT Discovers Xanax Lit]]> Chick lit is tired! We predict Xanax lit in 2009. In this week's Modern Love, we learn the perils of what happens when a breast-cancer patient cops an unauthorized Xanax in the waiting room before a biopsy.

When I saw my nurse again, I had a definite buzz, but suddenly couldn’t recall if the drug she had suggested was Xanax or Valium. Could be trouble. What if Xanax was not allowed, and I would have to come back for the procedure another day? I dummied up. Two minutes later it occurred to me that I didn’t want to find out too late that the pill I had swallowed would interact with the anesthesia, even if I had updated my “pull the plug” document.

I caught the nurse’s eye. “Uh, remember you told me about taking something? For relaxation?”

She nodded.

“I just took a Xanax.”

We can't wait for the sure-to-happen "My Xanax, My Self" anthology. [NYT]

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<![CDATA[Get 'Shitfaced' with Anne Hathaway For the Low, Low Price of $12,000]]> Anne Hathaway's "type," as it were, is something of a going concern around the Defamer office these days. One man is doing hard time for essentially stealing a jet-setting lifestyle they could share, and yet another made his big gossip-page debut smeared as little more than a skirt-chasing social-climber. And in between are the principled ones who just come out and ask her: "Will you take $12,000?"

And now, the day after the Cracked X-mas Fundraiser where the actress auctioned off a drinking date with herself and a few of your close friends, we know that's as good a pick up line as any:

"I'm not usually very forward, but I thought if there was ever a crowd for me to do something like this, this is my crowd so I would like to auction myself off," Hathaway announced, "for drinks somewhere fabulous and basically get you totally s—- faced. Tell me what I'm worth." [...] Hathaway, 26, was embarrassed when her price kept going up. "I'm blushing," Hathaway said during the bidding process. "Wow, I feel really good right now."

Enjoy it while you can, Annie, before a troop of FBI agents arrives at your door, waving a search warrant and the sharing the heartrending disclosure that the proceeds intended for a "crisis helpline for LGBT" youth were diverted instead to some skeevy underground phone-sex empire. Not the same thing! Worse yet, you didn't even get a John McCain boat ride out of it! We hope we're wrong, of course, but we — and you, God knows — have seen this one before. Tread carefully.

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<![CDATA[The Saddest TV Show In the World]]> Would you like to watch a TV version of Modern Love, the column in the Sunday Styles section of the New York Times? It's usually about heartbreak, divorce, death, infertility, or cancer. Page Six says it might be optioned for TV—so you have that to look forward to, along with your next breakup. ("Can I guest star in the one that was about my ex-boyfriend (but that I didn't write)?" asks a tipster. [NYPost]

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<![CDATA[Who Is the Clumsy "Indie Rock Dreamboat" Heartbreaker From This Week's Modern Love?]]> This week's Modern Love, the column in the NYT's Sunday Style section, bucked a trend. It's supposed to be about modern love, duh, but it's usually about adopting babies and cancer. This week, it actually was about modern (text-messaging) luv, with an essay by a young woman about her awkward flirtation with a frustratingly immature but totally cute indie-rocker boy in Brooklyn. Title of essay: "Was I On a Date or Baby Sitting?" HEY OH! "I asked my musician friends what they knew about him. Joanna, a singer, summed him up: 'He's an indie rock dreamboat. His voice is transcendent and he writes lovely lyrics. He has a nice face, he has a kid and he tours a lot. He's a star in his world.'" Oh, perfect: the conveniently unavailable guy who "goes on tour" a lot. Of course, we'd all love to know who the dude is and what band he is in. Thanks to a tipster, now we know!

"The classy text messager in the column in Matthew Caws from Nada Surf and he's still with the girl he broke up with the first for." HEY OH! You'll remember Nada Surf for their 1996 joke hit about high school, "Popular." (The album totes didn't sell and Nada Surf was dropped from their label; they went indie and made more records. Amazingly, they're still a band.)

Excerpts of dating classiness from the man whose hit song included the lyrics, "Don't put off breaking up when you know you want to... prolonging the situation only makes it worse":

A CUTE guy from a rock band sent me an e-mail message out of the blue. We had a friend in common, and he saw me sing "Christmas Wrapping" by the Waitresses one night in Brooklyn, at karaoke.

He continued, in all lowercase, to introduce himself. I scrolled over his rambling exposition, waiting for the payoff. Was he going to ask me out? He didn't. "i'm at home absolutely spazzing out because we're leaving in a few days to make a record and i have to/really should finish a long list of songs. so, waving hello and/or re-hello! all the bestest."

My enthusiasm waned. A hot guy in an indie band waved me hello and/or re-hello mid-spazz-out?

Still, he was cute, so they went on a "date":
He took me for a walk around his neighborhood. I'm always suspicious when a guy takes his date on a walk, because it reeks of poverty and an inability to plan. It seemed as if he was taking me on a stroll of his estate, and from the way people on the street greeted him with questions about his tour and album, it was as if he was the king of his neighborhood.
Careless behavior followed and certain parties ended up getting hurt, per usual. The essay's author, Julie Klausner, concedes that, "I would soon learn a lesson men have known for years: that it's possible to be attracted to somebody you don't like."

Yes. Yes it is.

[Photo: Michael Schmelling for NY Mag]

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<![CDATA["P.S.: I Knew I Loved Him From the Moment I Met Him"]]> For our last Gay Modern Love essay contest winner (a response to the overwhelmingly straight NYT relationship-essay column), we're going to leave you with something short and sweet, titled "Gay Boy Love Story":
"I hooked up with this guy twice over the course of a year. It was really good and over the course of the year or so we kept in touch. We got together again a couple of months ago and we are now completely and deeply in love with one another. From hook up to boyfriend in a year- that's great progress right? (p.s. knew I loved him from the moment I met him)."

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<![CDATA[How Mundane Is Modern Love?]]> Modern Love, the Sunday column in the New York Times, has occasionally been enlivened by strippers, fatties and leukemia sex. But the fact remains that the weekly dissection of modern relationships is overwhelmingly conventional. As shown by our exhaustive analysis of themes since the series launched in 2004, Modern Love protagonists are preoccupied above all by their parents; and children, prospective or wailing. Same-generation passion: bleh. TABLE »

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<![CDATA["I Met a Marine with an Extensive Doll Collection"]]> In response to recent allegations that Modern Love, the popular relationship essay column in the NYT, has always been a bit hetero and bland (babies and divorce, basically!), today we're publishing real-life relationship essays from the Gays. Our next Gay Modern Love essay comes from commenter BettyCrocker, in which he emerges from dating hell to fall in love - with a cop! "Late winter 2002 could pretty much count as an "Annus Horribilus" - I was laid off from my i-banking compliance job, I dumped my BF of 2 years, and my prospects for meeting someone nice seemed well-near impossible. I met an ex-Marine with an extensive doll collection, followed by an amiable bearish type who pounded 6 cocktails and jumped merrily into his car to drive home. Things were looking grim..."

Then one day in an AOL chat room, I came across an interesting profile. "Have a sense of humor, cause with me your (sic) going to need it." The attached webcam picture showed an attractive man en deshabille - wearing jammies and barefoot, unshaven, and with seriously rumpled hair. Unlike many gay men, he seemed to be saying "This is me in my natural state."

He said he found me attractive, but it was a long time before our first date. On St. Patrick's Day, 2003, we met for coffee, which became dinner, since he cleaned up very nicely. His kind eyes were the color of polished mahogany, his shoulders went on for days, and his khakis were crisp. I was a little confused by the clunky Timberlands and flannel shirt, but it was pretty cold outside. He said in his amazingly thick Brooklyn accent that he liked my table manners, which frightened me: did his friends spew flakes of halibut across the table at each other during meals?

I soon saw that my initial assumption was correct. He was a cop with 17 years on the NYPD. Our backgrounds were very different: two years of college vs. law school, small urban flats vs. verdant suburban split-levels, his loud Italian parents vs. my orderly WASP/Milanese combo.

It's probably fair to say that the die was cast before the creme brulee arrived.

He moved in 3 months later, taking a loan from his pension to help me with the mortgage on the condo and pay off the car loan on my silver VW Passat. With his support, I shortly landed a sweet job at a Swiss i-bank. That Christmas, without plan or discussion, we gave each other rings. Mine is channel-set diamonds, his is a white-gold copy of a 15th-century ring from The British Museum that says "Yours Onli" inside.

We joined a local Episcopal church. I met his friends - all in law enforcement - and was instantly inducted into a vast fraternity/sorority of boundless warmth, kindness, loyalty, and stunningly creative profanity. I met his family - all good people.

On her first visit to our newly merged condo, Mike's mother said: "Is it always so neat and clean in here? That's going to be an adjustment!"

"Not for me!" I sang out from the kitchen, and Mike shot me a look that would have stopped a perp from perpetrating. He's a little neatness-challenged, and I'm a little OCD. This has led to discussions during home improvement projects he takes on that included me wondering if he learned to paint a bathroom from Jackson Pollock, and him telling me that he doesn't know who Jackson Pollock is, but he planned to kick both our asses as soon as he was done.

I hired a pair of cleaning ladies who come twice a month to keep up with the worst of the mess, he agreed to pick up after himself more, and I agreed to relax a little more. A tenuous detente has been reached, though every once in a while I'm compelled to call a friend and wail into the phone: "It wasn't supposed to beeee this way! I was supposed to be in a little cottage in Munsey Park with Ben Roethlisberger!"

That aside, it's been a pretty fantastic journey so far. I got to show him places he had never visited: Long Island's Gold Coast, Boston, Montauk, Amagansett. He taught me to be more forgiving. I put him on my life and health insurance and I make sure that our doctor and dentist appointments are all double-dates. He redid our main bathroom all by himself. I held his hand through the pain a kidney stone. When we were exploring an abandoned North Shore estate and I slid down a short flight of ice covered steps to spin around like a breakdancer in a snowdrift, he rushed to my rescue, carefully extricated me, and determined that I only had a small bruise on my behind. Then he threw back his head and laughed that laugh I've come to love until the ancient beech trees rattled.

For my part, I have the memory of him talking baby talk to our two kittens: "Who da kitty? You da kitty!", then falling asleep with one on his chest and the other on his head.

The future beckons. Recent case law in New York has held that the state will recognize our marriage if it is validly performed in another jurisdiction. And so, instead of going to Montauk for my birthday, I believe we are bound either for Boston or Montreal later in the year.

Sometimes, in the right light, I can see what Mike will look like when he is very old. In my vision, he looks a lot like his AOL picture, perhaps a little worn and rumpled, but still proudly him. And I know that when I'm a shuffling duffer myself, that's what I want next to me. He's already proven his mettle when I've fallen and I can't get up.

A lot is sure to happen between now and then. It may not have supposed to be this way, as I say to my friends when I find a mountain of dirty clothes and uniforms in the laundry room.

But I'm glad it is. [BettyCrocker]

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<![CDATA["Sort of Oriented Toward Bareback Punchf**king": This Essay Might Actually Get Author Laid]]> The Gay Modern Love Essay Contest continues, and a last-minute entry might very well double as a performance-art project. We're taking bets on how Rod's Valentine's night will unfold... "All I really know is that Craigslist has a personals section, but I'm not really familiar with it..."

So I wake up after having this dream about going to dinner for a date. It was mostly a dream about this guy I met from Tel Aviv last year that was just so totally my type other than the whole living in Tel Aviv thing. But it made me long for something more.

Taking fifteen minutes after I woke up... Wait. That's a lie; let's start again.

After jerking off, I switched the webpage from Xtube to Craigslist. (If you're noting the fact that I didn't clean up after masturbating, I don't care about your judgment.) All I really know is that Craigslist has a personals section, but I'm not really familiar with it. So I spend fifteen minutes writing the posting and let it go out into the Internets.

Around lunch there are several responses, one of which I find acceptably well written. With an acceptable picture. Criteria are being met; it's exciting. Giddy with the results. I check back to re-read my ad. At this time I sort of learn: Craigslist m4m? Sort of more oriented toward bareback punchfucking than a dinner date. But I'm happy with my result and make dinner plans for last night.

Can you hear it? Can you hear the wake-up call that is about to ring?

In my giddiness, I'd agreed to go to the Upper West Side. I hate the Upper West Side. The well-written emails? How could I not recognize that they were basically my own words repeated back to me? And should I not have recognized that the resolution on the picture indicated that it was at least three years old?

But I'm not an asshole. I agree to sit and eat. "How about we just get appetizers? I'm not super-hungry," is the first clue I throw. The conversation is mostly about me. I've already forgotten my date's name. I'm staring at other men at the restaurant. The longer this continues, the more of a lout I may become. At last the check arrives and is paid.

Around one corner he mentions owning his place on 75th, and although the inner gold-digger in me is very briefly intrigued, the clothes on this man remind me that he bought it fifteen years ago when it was cheap. I wish him well and start texting away on the iPhone to single friends making plans involving scotch. Good scotch.

The emails from that ad are still coming in. And I haven't deleted it. But dating just to have a date on Valentines? Contrary to my waking dream-state thought, it's a concept that can suck my cock. [Rod Townsend]

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<![CDATA["We sat in contemptuous Issey Miyake-soaked silence."]]> Our Gay Modern Love Essay Contest continues! In this essay, by Gay Matt, our hero finds, and leaves, love on a Newark-to-Los Angeles red-eye: "My twenties were about as romantic as taking steel wool and rubbing it on your balls, then soaking them in grain alcohol. Sure, I had a long-term relationship, but it ended with even more than the usual gay drama..."

Though my relationships didn't flourish, my career did. Now that my income has finally caught up with my attitude, I am much more relaxed and easygoing than you could ever tell looking at my travel attitude. Traveling is a huge part of my job, and I find myself on a plane four times a week.

Being an accustomed road warrior, I have OCD travel idiosyncrasies akin to the manic behavior of our beloved Brit-Brit. I sit in seat 1A on every flight. I have a vodka tonic prior to take off, and water with lemon with my plane fare dinner. I have had about 210 people sit next to me in 1B in 2007. Normally, I don't even look at them.

Then today's 1B came along. I was flying from LA to Newark, and was already in a bad mood because I hate LA, I hate red eyes, and I can't even remember where I parked my car because I've been on the road for two weeks. Early in my travel days, I used to pray to the travel gods for the hot guy to sit next to me. Unfortunately, that never happened.

500,000 frequent flyer miles, it did. I ordered my vodka tonic, and noticed that someone was putting up a Tumi computer bag identical to mine. This of course, piqued my shallow interest, and I looked up to see a tanned wonder in True Religion jeans putting his luggage away. Not that I'm totally one of those standard label queens or anything. He of course, had my vacuous Valley Girl side at Tumi.

He had the cutest smile, which was enough for me. He sat down, gave me a cute half smile like the one Katie Holmes used to sport before she went apeshit crazy and married that freak. Then he promptly ignored me. I returned a "bitch please, you ain't all that" with my eyes and we sat in contemptuous Issey Miyake-soaked silence. I leaned over as to see what silence he was steeping in, and it was Prada Amber. Figures.

Preparing for flight, I reached down into my flight bag stashed illegally next to my seat and pulled out my latest trendy travel book, The Average American Male. I heard a "hey", and looked up to see 1B with a goofy smile on his face holding up a copy of the same book. It was actually endearing, and enough to crack my facade and make me smile warmly, losing the whole bitch armor.

We treated each other like old friends from that point on. We giggled so much we were getting dirty looks from 2F. We didn't touch our food when it came, we just coyly pushed it around and batted our eyelashes, it was just like Lady and the Tramp, that Disney love shit.

We talked about our lives. He too was in my industry and worked for a partner company, so we talked about our clients, what we did, where we were from. Hell, it was better than any planned first date I had ever been on. He felt the same way.

A few hours into it, we were whispering as not to wake the sleeping passengers. I told him more than if I was coked out at an ecstasy party. At 30,000 feet, I had no more dating inhibitions and was the most honest and open I had ever been, and it felt great. We talked and laughed the entire flight, even though it was a red eye.

I looked down and noticed we were passing PA, and that we would descend soon. We intertwined hands and, no words spoken, we kissed, up until the scary last call lights came on. It was the sweetest, most romantic kiss I ever had, even after being in the air 6 hours. It was gentle yet strong all at once, and it communicated to us just as much as it would if we were talking. Or lesbians. It was definitely my first "I'm wishing a U-Haul was waiting outside" kiss. It took my breath, and manhood away. We didn't say a word. There was nothing to be said.

We landed, knowing we both made the connection of a lifetime, but knowing it didn't fit into our schedules. My client is in Oklahoma and his is in Kentucky. He lives in Connecticut, and I live in Philadelphia. We de-planed, pulled our matching Tumis down and walked silently down and out into the terminal. We got on the AirTrain, rode it to P4, and loaded up our quintessential German rides. Mine Audi, his BMW, both new, both fabulous.

We smiled that unrequited "What the fuck do we do now?" smile, and left each other. At 30,000 feet, we were soulmates. On the ground, we had lives, deadlines, awful travel schedules.

Every flight since my heart skips a beat when I remember that night and I sit wistfully every week, a part of me hoping that the possible potential love of my life will light up my world again with his half smile. Yeah, I puked a little too. Get over it.

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<![CDATA["Whatever Homo Tendencies I Have Are Basically a Minor Health Problem."]]> It's V-Day! We prefer to think of that as Venereal Day, as well as the day we publish the winners of our very first Gay Modern Love Essay Contest! The first essay is by The Gay Recluse: "Thanks to Stephen, I came out twice. First as gay, then as a recluse..."
"It's late November 1998. I'm 30 years old and a total closet-case: it's past midnight and I'm scrolling through the men-seeking-men listings of Web Personals. During the day, I still like to tell myself that—although I'm not exactly a virgin in the same-sex department—whatever homo tendencies I have are basically a minor health problem; in short, as soon as I meet the right girl, I will be "cured" of the desire to say, head out to Prospect Park at 11:30 on a Tuesday night or—as I have been doing more and more as the days grow shorter—take a walk through the virtual hallways of the internet..."

There are three categories to choose from: relationship, friends ("as if") and sex. (Guess which one I go for.) Among the ads that catch my attention (and this being 1998, there are no photographs) is one from a 41 y.o. GWM, 6'3", 240lbs and hairy. Although I'm somewhat deterred by the "G," I imagine a strong and vaguely angry-looking man with a buzz-cut and receding hairline. Moreover, he doesn't use the term "bear" but "linebacker," which appeals to the hockey player in me. Why this gets me going is an unsolved mystery at this point, but it most certainly does; in an agitated state, I send off of a reply: 30 y.o. GWM 5'11"/175 looking for...(whatever the equivalent of NSA was in 1998). It's the first time I've ever used a "G," and while part of me doesn't like it, I figure if it gets me what I want, nobody else will ever have to know.

A few days later, I get a response in my secret "Gay-O-L" account. Stephen suggests we meet at a diner in Hell's Kitchen. For me, the intervening days and then hours are marked by repeated mental games of "what the fuck am I doing" and interludes of queasy anticipation. When I arrive and look for someone matching his description, I am nervous—what if he lied?—and generally relieved that it's five o'clock and already completely dark outside. But to my astonishment, when we find each other, he is not only all of the above—as if molded from my dreams—but has the most intense green eyes; one glance leaves me more naked than I've felt in my entire life. My head is filled with an onslaught of distortion and melody; for once I am living one of my all-time favorite Hüsker Dü songs. My fingertips—the same ones that have memorized every note of Zen Arcade over the past decade—itch with anticipation. I try not to dwell on the implications of this, and think only of the night ahead.

Inside we order coffee and spend a few minutes talking. It turns out his "linebacker" description was a bit of a red herring; though he looks the part, his knowledge of sports is nil. Moreover he works as an opera director; not coincidentally, he has been out since the beginning of time. I don't initially respond to this as we marvel at the power of technology, which has brought together such an unlikely pair. We ceremoniously thank the internet and imagine ourselves as circles on a Venn diagram with infinite degrees of separation.

"And what about you?" he finally asks, expressing (at least as I read it) a mix of real curiosity and—if not disdain—coy skepticism. I'm sure he knows that my "G" was a bit of a stretch. For the first time ever, I'm actually bothered by not being out. I feel ignorant to have worked in a record store for five years without knowing one thing about opera besides "Pavarotti." (And worse, that I have done this in the wake of graduating from NYU Law School.) I think it might not be so cool to share an apartment with 1000 of my Brooklyn friends and cohorts, even if we did build a sound-proof rehearsal room in our basement that's home to an equal number of indie-rock bands; or so impressive that my own band has five records and tours, or that we made the top-thirty on the CMJ radio charts last summer.

I finally decide to answer him directly: Nobody knows. (That is, except a few anonymous strangers.)

"Not even your mother?"

"Are you kidding me?"

"What about your friends?"

"Nope—no one."

He nods slowly and I try not to think how this must look. To my relief, his beautiful eyes remain placid, forgiving and even desirous. After all, I remind myself, it's only sex. I change the subject. "Where did you say you live?"

"Uptown—Washington Heights." Once again I have no idea what he's talking about, but decide not to make my usual quip about never going above 14th Street.

I ask him what led him to move there.

"I'm a bit of a recluse," he says, before explaining that it's cheap and that he doesn't mind being an outsider; sometimes he even prefers it. Unlike me, he has only a few friends he sees rarely and is not particularly "close" to his family. As I listen to this, my mind begins to race as I picture myself in his shoes. What would I do without my friends? (Where would I get drunk?) If I came out, would they forgive me for selling so many years of lies? And my family! All of my older brothers and sisters, married with children, what would they think if I ever described our relationship so perfunctorily, with such distance? Equally disgusted and intoxicated, I could suddenly see myself like Stephen—a recluse—obsessively devoted to the most queenly pursuits of silverware, mid-century modern, Schopenhauer and alpine gardening.

He laughs as he considers me, and seems to understand what he represents in terms of both yearning and doubt. "So—do you want to come over?" He places his hand over mine for a second and removes it.

"More than anything," I say, and now—ten years later—his is a destiny I am happy to call our own. [The Gay Recluse]


[Illustration: Cristy C. Road]]]>
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<![CDATA[3 More Days for Gay Modern Love Essays!]]> Don't forget to enter our Gay Modern Love essay contest, detailed here! We've been getting some great entries so far. The deadline is February 13th at midnight, and we'll run the best ones on Valentine's Day! [Gay Modern Love]

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<![CDATA[Send Us Your Modern Gay Love Stories]]> "Boys with the boys...girls get with the girls... it's only right and natural," the Frogs once sang. As evidenced, Modern Love isn't going to run your stories of gay l-u-v anytime soon. So we want you to send them to us! Hey, it's almost Valentine's Day, and we'll publish the best ones. You can be all Manhunt-y, or get totally earnest and weepy. Or swoony. We want it all! Try to keep it under a thousand words, though. It's the internets, and our attention spans are pretty much shot. Send your stories to: sheila@gawker.com, by February 13th.

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<![CDATA[Modern Love: Not Gay Enough]]> Continuing our obsession with Modern Love, that guilty-pleasure landmark of Relationships Today in the NYT's Sunday Styles section, we present some evidence. The Gay Recluse explains the column's Problem with the Gays: "In what is arguably the 'gayest' section of The Times, more women have written about gay men than gay men have... openly gay writers almost never appear, and even less frequently describe a romantic relationship." And he's done the math! Click for the tally.

Straight Woman on Relationships iiiii iiiii iiiii iiiii iiiii iiiii iiiii ii (37) Straight Woman on Family iiiii iiiii iiiii iiiii iiiii iiiii iiiii (35) Straight Woman on "Looking for Love" iiiii iiiii iiiii iiiii iiiii iiiii ii (32) Straight Woman on Breaking Up iiiii iiiii iiiii iiiii iii (23) Straight Man on Relationships iiiii iiiii (10) Straight Man on Breakup iiiiii (6) Straight Woman on Gay Men iiiii i (6) Straight Man on Family iiiii (5) Straight Man on "Looking for Love" iiii (4) Gay Man on Family ii (2) Gay Woman on Relationship i (1) Gay Woman on Family i (1) Gay Man on Self-Hatred i (1) Gay Man on Prom Date i (1) Ambiguous/Nurse on Drugs i (1)
So: while the Gays have broken into the wedding announcements, they have not yet broken into Modern Love. We think a frenzy of essay-writing is in order!

[Photo: Defekto]

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<![CDATA[Modern Love's Happy Marriages]]> If you are fortunate enough to have your overlong, overshared essay of thwarted l-u-v chosen for the NYT's Sunday Modern Love column, you might very well land a book deal. That's what Doree Shafrir finds in the Observer this week—no fewer than nine have been signed so far. (Not everybody finds the column an irresistible recruiting opportunity, however: "I read the Styles section religiously, but my eyes glaze over the Modern Love column," said an editor at Random House. "I assume it's going to be a woman getting over her divorce.") But those make the best books! [NY Observer]

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