
Last week I blogged about why women have sex. This week I’m going to write about whom they choose to have sex with.
I found this CNN video that asks the age-old question: Why do women find “bad boys” so attractive? As you’ll see when you watch it, the three youngish women who appear early in the video are asked about Don Draper, the character in Mad Men, a new American TV drama series. Draper is supposed to represent the archetypical “Bad Boy,” and the three drool all over themselves as they talk about him. They refer to him as “mysterious,” “confident” and “magnetic.” One says (I’m paraphrasing) that he is the type you know you should avoid but can’t.
So I did a little follow-up Googling and found tons and tons of articles that claim that women love such men and find them irresistible. What I didn’t find, though, are serious research pieces that attempted to quantify this phenomenon. For example, I didn’t find anything–it may be out there but I just didn’t see it–that talks about the percentage of women who find these sorts attractive. Is it all women? Some women? A majority? A few?
Even Dr. Gail Saltz, the psychiatrist who appears in the video, keeps talking about ”women” when she discusses this issue. By saying it this way, she gives the impression that this is a universal attraction, that ALL women feel this way about ”bad boys.”
OK, I’m not a psychiatrist (nor do I play one on TV) but my gut tells me that some women find these types of men attractive. Some don’t. Some prefer “good boys” in the same way some women prefer blonds to brunettes.
My instinct tells that there’s something very harmful about thinking of women in such broad-brush, simplistic ways because if there’s one thing I can be certain about, it’s that all women everywhere, are complex.
I hope that doesn’t make me sound like a typical male chauvinist.
Tags: Women's Issues








































