How technology has changed romance.
That was made pretty clear last week when reality TV star Kristin Cavallari had to defend her fiancé, Chicago Bears quarterback Jay Cutler, from those who poked fun at her story of their second engagement.
"I was in the airport, leaving Chicago," Cavallari, 26, tells E! News
in an upcoming reality special about her nuptials. "We had just spent
however many days together and we were texting and somehow it came up,
like, 'Oh, shall we get married?' We're like, 'Yeah, OK.'"
The couple were first
engaged in 2011 but split up briefly before reconciling that same year.
Even so, Cutler faced criticism over what many saw as a too casual
digital proposal. Cavallari later pleaded on Twitter for people to "stop
bashing Jay" because he had proposed earlier in Mexico "and it was very
romantic."
In the digital age, technology isn't killing courtship. But for many young couples, it's redefining what romance looks like.
These days we often text
instead of speak, use FaceTime instead of having face-to-face
discussions and zip through online dating profiles with the same speed
it takes to order a pizza. Convenient, sure, but "The Notebook" it's
not.
These habits have many
wondering if technology is getting in the way of real romance. But let's
be honest: How many of us have gotten into a heated, or just plain hot,
text exchange with a love interest? Chances are, many of the messages
saved in your phone are more intimate than your standard pillow talk.
From AOL to OKCupid
Since the early days of
the Internet, we've used tech as a tool to broaden our prospects for
meeting others and finding romance. We've come a long way since those
AOL chat rooms, and even traditional dating sites are giving way to
smartphone apps that can do the matchmaking for us. Using your phone's
GPS feature, mobile social apps such as Blendr, Grindr, Are You
Interested? and Plenty of Fish help you zero in on potential dates, or
hook-ups, right around the corner.
For the daring, OkCupid recently launched a Russian Roulette-style app called CrazyBlindDate, which sets users up on short notice with someone they know almost nothing about.
It's not exactly the
romanticized version of a fateful meeting, wherein you find your soul
mate at spin class or in line for a movie matinee.
"Those really romantic scenarios are kind of diluted nowadays," said Philip Wang, co-founder of Wong Fu Productions,
a new-media production company based in Southern California that
creates short films and video blogs. Wang and his colleagues created a video series
called "Technology Ruins Romance," which makes light of the ways
technology could easily solve dilemmas that have been held up as
"romantic" obstacles.
The idea came from
watching "rom-coms where you're sitting there thinking, 'things could've
been totally solved if he took out his cell phone, or just messaged her
on Facebook,'" says Wang, 28. "I understand that movies are meant to
escape reality, but even just for fun, you could say, wait, why isn't he
just calling her instead of showing up outside of her door and
surprising her?"
A lot of the mystery we've typically associated with romance is "not as strong as it used to be," Wang said.
The power of Facebook
Some young single people
today would rather have information than mystery. When Jason Austin, a
29-year-old IT professional, was skeptical of a potential date he'd met
online, he did what anyone who's seen an episode of "Catfish" (or just
has plain common sense) would do: He turned to Facebook.
"I wanted to know
something about her, I can't say that I'm not nosy," said Austin, who
lives in Pontiac, Michigan. "I didn't feel comfortable with the
information she was telling me. I would text her, possibly when I get
off work, I would give her a call and she wouldn't answer, [but] she
would text me in the morning and say 'Hey, how was your day yesterday?'
It made me kind of suspicious. So in that particular situation, I
Googled her."
On her Facebook page,
Austin could see "friends of friends," which allows one to see so much
more information, he said. "If you read the comments, you can find out
details about that picture, which tells you details about that person."
There can be drawbacks
to this Facebook sleuthing, said Dr. Corinne Weisgerber, an associate
professor of communication at St. Edward's University in Austin, Texas.
Brushing up on someone's background pre-date means you could skip over
some of those foundational moments of discovery in person, she said.
But for Michelle
Granoski of La Grange, Kentucky, digital tools enhanced her courtship
with Shawn Granoski, the man who would become her husband.
She came across Shawn's
profile on dating site Plenty of Fish and warmed to his photo, which
showed him wearing a Mario T-shirt under a black blazer. She messaged
him to strike up a conversation.
He is not a big phone
person and only wanted to talk over AOL instant messenger. Granoski, 26,
went along with it after looking him up on Facebook and liking what she
found.
"I Facebooked him, and
it actually did help. ... If I were to discover his favorite color
online, I don't think I would've had any different reaction than I
would've had in person," she said. After chatting online for two weeks,
Shawn drove down from Louisville to meet Granoski while she was a
student at Western Kentucky University. Soon they were taking turns
driving to see each other, and tied the knot three years later.
Romance, on Skype
Although meeting in
person will always be essential, the concept of romance has evolved to
the point where weeks of instant messaging or e-mailing can plant seeds
of a relationship.
That's been the case for
20-year-old Cristina Lara, a Cornell University student who relies on
Skype and e-mail to nurture her long-distance relationship with her
boyfriend, Joshua Mbanusi, while he's working in North Carolina. From
the beginning, their courtship was carried out through digital means.
Lara's boyfriend, a
Cornell alum, asked for her e-mail address instead of her number at
first. While some might have taken that as a hint of disinterest, Lara
recognized that the frequent, friendly e-mails were his way of showing
he liked her. Eventually, he asked for her number, and they went on
their first date about a month later.
"A lot of our
relationship has been e-mailing and texting and Facebook messaging,"
said Lara, adding that she's kept as mementos a lot of their e-mails and
texts -- some of which were unfortunately erased. The couple spent
copious amounts of time together, giving their virtual courtship a
real-world backbone.
So, when her boyfriend revealed that he loved her via text, it wasn't ideal. But it wasn't a deal breaker, either.
"Before class started I
got a text from him that said, 'I love you,' " she said. "He wanted it
to be as organic as possible. It's unfortunate that it happened when we
weren't physically together, but what are you going to do about it?"
His text was,
interestingly enough, sparked by a lengthy letter Lara had handwritten
and left in his apartment. She believes that a handwritten note can
communicate things an e-mail cannot.
When it comes to
romance, "I think there's a level of flirtatiousness that helps to
sustain a relationship, and that's what I had every day with Joshua in
person," Lara said.
Now that they're long
distance, the pair makes an effort to fly to see each other when they
can. But in the interim, "for me and Josh, being romantic is having one
night a week where [we're] eating together on Skype," she said. "I think
that's really romantic."
Is technology with its inherent danger good for romance/dating? I know it has worked out for some people while some have been unlucky.
Is technology with its inherent danger good for romance/dating? I know it has worked out for some people while some have been unlucky.
Techie love is cool but there is nothing like physical one on one interaction between two people who love themselves. Time stands still whenever they are together.
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