This week on The Handsome Hour, the guys start with a movie clip about a bitter would-be matchmaking client and spiral into a full episode about dating delusion, status anxiety, insane standards, Bumble profile triage, and Star Wars prequel theology. Also, one of the hosts reveals he once dated a woman who did four years for murder.
First, Wes, Cody, and Stony break down a scene from Materialists and the kind of dater who treats romance like a prestige shopping list: height, hairline, age, salary, "boxes," and the offense of being rejected by someone you considered beneath you. It turns into a sharp conversation about ego, entitlement, what people think they "deserve," and why dating can become a brutal mirror for your real market value.
Then, one of the guys tells the story of dating a woman who served time in prison for murder — with a whole side discussion about self-defense, prosecutors, prison, and why exposing yourself to unusual people and experiences can teach you more than a safe dinner date.
The back half is a live workshop on Bumble profiles: what women write, what men respond to, why so many profiles are painfully generic, and why leading with your role on the liver and kidney transplant team may be less sexy than you think. The guys debate humor, originality, filtering, visual imagination, and the difference between saying something harmless and saying something memorable.
Finally, the fellow wrap up with a serious argument about Darth Vader, Qui-Gon Jinn, the Star Wars prequels, and whether having a good take on Episode I makes you more attractive to women.
In this episode:
- Why people are furious to be rejected by someone "below" them
- The difference between standards, delusion, and status panic
- What "deserve" does to your dating life
- What it's like to date a murderer
- Why most dating app bios are boring, anodyne, and useless
- How to make your profile more distinctive without being cringe
- Why "kidney" and "liver" might be bad branding
- Did Obi Wan have an arc?
First, Wes, Cody, and Stony break down a scene from Materialists and the kind of dater who treats romance like a prestige shopping list: height, hairline, age, salary, "boxes," and the offense of being rejected by someone you considered beneath you. It turns into a sharp conversation about ego, entitlement, what people think they "deserve," and why dating can become a brutal mirror for your real market value.
Then, one of the guys tells the story of dating a woman who served time in prison for murder — with a whole side discussion about self-defense, prosecutors, prison, and why exposing yourself to unusual people and experiences can teach you more than a safe dinner date.
The back half is a live workshop on Bumble profiles: what women write, what men respond to, why so many profiles are painfully generic, and why leading with your role on the liver and kidney transplant team may be less sexy than you think. The guys debate humor, originality, filtering, visual imagination, and the difference between saying something harmless and saying something memorable.
Finally, the fellow wrap up with a serious argument about Darth Vader, Qui-Gon Jinn, the Star Wars prequels, and whether having a good take on Episode I makes you more attractive to women.
In this episode:
- Why people are furious to be rejected by someone "below" them
- The difference between standards, delusion, and status panic
- What "deserve" does to your dating life
- What it's like to date a murderer
- Why most dating app bios are boring, anodyne, and useless
- How to make your profile more distinctive without being cringe
- Why "kidney" and "liver" might be bad branding
- Did Obi Wan have an arc?