Remember that time the Gos broke up a New York City street fight and almost a million people watched the video evidence of his chivalry?
Yeah, that didn't exactly hurt his image. And they'll be presenting it on the Internet, which is the true game changer, according to Swami. It makes global sex icons and definitions of beauty possible. It created the singular view that Ryan Gosling is attractive, globally. Attraction isn't a set thing. So they're not static in any way.
And if you met him in person, you would probably like him even more. The more you get to know a person, the more attractive you usually find him to be.
This upsets my friends not because they subconsciously sense there is something wrong with my taste. We just don't like outcasts, generally. But I won't—at least on Gosling. I do believe I can like Gosling if I really wanted I interviewed his lookalike , and I thought he was just great and the nicest—personality working! Shirtless abs do help.
My differences are kind of vital though. Everyone rated how attractive they found the person pictured for a short- and long-term relationship. Both genders rated the person pictured as more attractive for a long-term relationship when they were described as a volunteer — but the effect was stronger for women rating men. In a study , researchers at the University of Liverpool and the University of Stirling took photos of 24 male and 24 female undergrads.
They digitally manipulated half of the images so the subjects appeared to have facial scars — for example, a line on the person's forehead that looked like the result of an injury. Then the researchers recruited another group of about heterosexual male and female undergrads to rate all the people pictured based on attractiveness for both short- and long-term relationships.
Results showed that men with scars appeared slightly more attractive for short-term relationships than men without scars. Women, on the other hand, were perceived as equally attractive regardless of whether they had scarred faces. A study — from researchers at the University of California, Berkeley, Stanford University, the University of Texas at Austin, and Northwestern University — suggests that we're more attracted to people who display expansive body language.
In one experiment included in the study, the researchers created profiles for three men and three women on a GPS-based dating app. In one set of profiles, the men and women were pictured in contractive positions — for example, by crossing their arms or hunching their shoulders. In the other set of profiles, the same men and women were pictured in expansive positions, like holding their arms upward in a "V" or reaching out to grab something. Results showed that people in expansive postures were selected as potential dates more often than those in contractive postures.
This effect was slightly larger for women selecting men. A University of British Columbia study revealed a curious finding: Heterosexual men and women prefer different emotional expressions on potential mates. In one experiment included in the study, researchers had nearly North American adults look at photos of opposite-sex individuals online. The researchers were specifically comparing people's perceptions of expressions of pride, happiness, shame, and neutrality other people had already identified the emotion behind the expression in the photo.
For women evaluating men, the most appealing expression was pride, and the least appealing was happiness. Read the original article on Business Insider UK. Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies. Want to bookmark your favourite articles and stories to read or reference later?
Start your Independent Premium subscription today. Look for the universal signals of flirtation. Use open body language in your online dating photo. More about Psychology Today cosmetic surgery George Clooney. Already subscribed? Log in. Forgotten your password? Sometimes we feel Hollywood is brimming with such heartthrobs and hotties. But then what would you do without them?
Who would be the hero of your dreams? The Prince Charming of your fairytale? His Dean in Blue Valentine is funny and gentle - but also fully capable of being cruel and manipulative. Raising a daughter whom he knows isn't biologically his, Dean gives us the welcome chance to see a man who can love what he didn't make. Contra the stereotype that American men are haunted by the thought that their children might not be "theirs", the dark nightmare fueled by episodes of Jerry Springer.
Fighting hard for a marriage that was grounded more in impulse than in love, Dean lacks the vocabulary that so many men lack.
In the final scene of the film, as Michelle Williams' Cindy demands a divorce, Dean pleads to stay together for the sake of their daughter. From the PDF of the shooting script :. DEAN I know. Baby I'm just fighting you know, fighting for my family. I don't know what to do, I don't know what else to do. Tell me what to do, tell me what to do. Many of us who've been in tempestuous long-term relationships will recognize ourselves in these heartbreaking lines, recognizing the longing that so many men have for a script that they can follow, recognizing women's frustration both that their boyfriends and husbands need a script and that they aren't able to provide one.
Gosling's Dean is a modern Everyman here, charming in courtship, desperately inarticulate in relationship maintenance, torn between tenderness and rage. Gosling's sexiness is unmistakable, but his real appeal lies in his pitch-perfect embodiment of contemporary masculine conflict. Combine that with his earnestly egalitarian and progressive political views, his penchant for relationships with strong and slightly older actresses Sandra Bullock and Rachel McAdams , and Gosling - both on and off-screen - offers us a chance to see something we so rarely see: an unmistakably feminist, unmistakably hot, unmistakably multi-faceted young man.
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