Because some
people refuse to get it. Of course it is completely OK and natural to disagree,
but finding it creepy or unlikely seems a bit over the top, since the couple
they deem creepy is fictional, have only a 17-year-gap between them and well…we’ll
get to the reasons why they make a good match.
Ask any woman
whether she’d hook up with a guy she found really hot who was really into her. Let’s
suppose he is smart, nice, gorgeous, exciting, interesting, and they have tons
in common. And he’s not rich, neither is she.
Now tell her
he’s 15 years older than her. And see how many women would say no. I know I
wouldn’t.
In high school,
we used to joke that Mel Gibson and Richard Gere would be very attractive when
they got older. We were wrong about Gibson, but Gere...that man owns the
description of aging gracefully.
And it is not to
say I go for older guys as a rule or due to some deep Freudian issue. I have
liked and found attractive tons of guys who are my age/a couple of years
older/a couple of years younger.
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Alex Pettyfer in I'm Number Four. Image via scifiscoop.com. |
While I was
watching I’m Number 4, I couldn’t believe Alex Pettyfer was born in 1990 (making
him 6 years younger than me). He looked way older, and oozed a certain appeal
baby-faced actors lacked. But winning over in the charm department was Timothy
Olyphant, who tends to look younger than his years (despite being born in 1968.)
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Timothy Olyphant. Ditch the greys, and he can easily play 30-somethings. Image via michaelmay.blogspot.com. |
To me, it doesn’t
make sense to complain about age differences within TV/movie pairings They
happen quite often in real life too, so it is only art imitating life.
When I say Jon
Bon Jovi is hot and some girls disagree with me, it is because they aren’t into
blondes. I haven’t heard “Yuck, he is so old/(er).” from another female yet.
The Richard
Gere-Winona Ryder pairing in Autumn in New York didn’t work, but it wasn’t
because of the age difference. It was because the story was horrible. Besides,
cheating on the supposed love of your life don’t belong in romantic dramas.
Older or younger.
Now on to Perception, Eric McCormack’s Daniel & Rachael
Leigh Cook’s Kate
Apparently some
viewers find it “creepy” that Rachael Leigh Cook’s and Eric McCormack’s
characters have romantic feelings for each other. OK, what’s not to get? The
guy is gorgeous, and I don’t know which 49-year-olds they were looking at, but
aside from Dylan McDermott and Tom Cruise, not many look like that! And it’s
not just me.
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Eric McCormack as Daniel and Rachel Leigh Cook as Rachel.Image via assignmentx.com. |
During one recent interview, the male presenter asked McCormack: “Just in what
attic is your painting aging?”
Now, leaving
aside from his looks, Daniel Pierce has an adorable style and brains, he is
nice, unique and he cracks intricate cases. Kate (Rachel Leigh Cook) used to be
his student, so there’s tons of respect/admiration going on.
It’s about being
a match on many levels.
I might very
well end up with a 40something that remained single because he didn’t want
kids- because I don’t want kids. It’s about what you want in life – and being
in the same place.
Kate did date a
guy (Jamie Bamber) 10 years younger than Daniel. Also cute, also a professor.
He just wasn’t that interesting or attractive to her.
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Jamie Bamber as Michael Hathaway. |
So it’s all
about the relationship feeling good and being fine. Are you both grown enough
to know who you are and what you want? Do you like each other? Give it a go.
Who the hell cares if there is some age difference?
And P.S. If Daniel Pierce asked me out, I’d jump at it.
So no, the
writers aren’t being creepy. Or delusional. Or discriminative. They are just
writing the obvious.
It might be a
cliche that a former student would have a crush on a former professor, but it’d
be a lot less believable if she didn’t. Especially if she wants someone unique,
and really good-looking.
My Favorite Couples with Age Differences: Movies, TV Shows & Real Life:
(P.P.S The pairings include older women-younger men as
well)
- Awake: Jason
Isaacs (1963)-Laura Allen (1974)
- Perception: Eric
McCormack (1963) – Rachel Leigh Cook (1979)
- *Lie to Me: Tim
Roth (1961) – Kelli Williams (1970)
(*Though Roth's and Williams' characters never
dated, it was often implied, and sometimes outright stated, that they were in
love with each other)
- The Vampire Diaries:
Ian Somerhalder (1978)- Nina Dobrev (1989). They are also dating in real life.
- I Could Never BeYour Woman: Michelle Pfeiffer (1958)-PauL Rudd (1969)
- Bull Durham: Susan
Sarandon (1946)- Kevin Costner (1955)
- Missing: *Ashley Judd
(1968)- Sean Bean (1959)
(*Ashley Judd’s
real life husband is 5 years younger than her.)
- The Island: Ewan
McGregor(1971)-Scarlett Johansson (1984)
- *Liam Neeson and
whoever you pair him up with. He looks good with any pretty actress you put him next to,
probably because he looks great taking every single villain down in the films.
(*Neeson’s real
life wife Natasha Richardson was 11 years younger than him, and they were
married for 15 years – until she died in 2009.)
…..
The list goes on.
As long as there are on ulterior motives
(money, status, career advancement, manipulation…) and no abuse of
power/authority, and both sides are of legal age, you should just go with the
flow and enjoy it.
But I am not
without my own double-standards. I have to draw the line at having a generation
in between. And by generation, I mean the age difference shouldn’t really be
over 20. Especially after 25, if we are talking about serious relationships, it
kind of makes the growing old together concept tricky, don't you think?