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More death threats -- Woman take video of her walk through New York

So, they hired a pretty actress with nice assets and had her walk for 10 hours in a very crowded city and all they got was 1.5 minutes of footage of men who are most likely willing to throw their money and energy to get her, giving her a plethora of sexual options. So this woman is a victim? Being a very attractive young woman living in a Western country where many men are willing to give half their wealth just to please you is a victim? This woman is a victim?

"How you doing beautiful"
"Whats up beautiful, have a good day"
"How you doing, good?"
"Have a nice evening"
"How are you doing today?"

Young attractive white women are the victims of the world. Don't get me wrong sexual harassment does exist but I didn't see it in this video. Granted some men were a little bit too aggressive then I would have liked but this is one cause I will not donate my money for.

This was a small clip of what she endured. I am not surprised by your minimizing of the situation. I am sure it is a cultural difference for you. It wasn't simply saying have a nice day and you know it? All those guys were hitting on the girl.
 
I was being more aggressive last night. A Jazz blow out and a few scotch's got to my head. But my opinion stands regardless.

This is why people are reacting the way they are. You're arguing that tact and courtesy and respect be extended to all women, but you've made your argument without any of those things.
 
Did the men in the video ask her if she was straight before hitting on her?

Also, you're a big guy... you have no idea what it's like to exist in a threatening atmosphere as a small woman.

This is what I meant. I've met fish, if he came up to me like these guys did I would be scared.
 
This whole "seeing women as objects" thing.

My actual quote was "men seeing women's bodies as objects for their amusement/pleasure". It incorporates the notion that men have some sort of claim on women's bodies, which is absent from "seeing women as objects".

Men desire women. (exceptions obviously exist) They desire sexual intercourse with women. Women, likewise, desire men. Acknowledging that fact does not turn women into objects anymore than it turns the man into an object. But in reality, we are all objects. So to say that has me scratching my head.

You seem to be associating my arguments with being sex negative; I associate them with being sex positive. What's happening in the original video is not sex or even men seriously looking for sex; that's what they are using as a rationalization.
 
Wait, did some posters say that they were offended by women? I hadn't seen that yet.

Wait, so some people react to things differently than others? You don't say

I said none of that. You just did and I disagree. I was just providing my wife's reaction.

I was being more aggressive last night. A Jazz blow out and a few scotch's got to my head. But my opinion stands regardless.

As for your opinion, it has some good merit. Many men are way to aggressive, rude and derogetory in how they approach women and that is not ok.

However, seeing a (in our own opinions) beautiful woman in public and trying to engage her is not a bad thing, imo. As long as you repect any answer given, are not vulger/rude and are a gentleman about it.

I see no problem walking up and saying "Hi, I think you are very beautiful and I wanted to know if I could have your number/take you to lunch?". If she declines then Apologize for bothering her and move on. No following, whistling, cat calling, comments about a physical feature, rudeness, aggressive behavior...

Edited: as no need to beat a dead horse.
 
Ya don't know unless you try.

Considering the extremely low hit ratio when approaching a woman who has signaled no interest initially, there are better uses of your time if you are really trying to have sex with someone.
 
You did so in a rude, intolerant way. Then you proced to defend yourself when others call you on it. You have a problem with calm discusion any time an opinion is different than yours.

As for your opinion, minus the idiocy, it has some good merit. Many men are way to aggressive, rude and derogetory in how they approach women and that is not ok.

However, seeing a (in our own opinions) beautiful woman in public and trying to engage her is not a bad thing, imo. As long as you repect any answer given, are not vulger/rude and are a gentleman about it.

I see no problem walking up and saying "Hi, I think you are very beautiful and I wanted to know if I could have your number/take you to lunch?". If she declines then Apologize for bothering her and move on. No following, whistling, cat calling, comments about a physical feature, rudeness, aggressive behavior...

Ok. I'll disregard your rude jabs in this post and call it even then. In all honesty, the one poster I was really going after deserved it and and I would do it again. **** that guy.

What you described is not what I have issue with and I think it would get you some tail.
 
My actual quote was "men seeing women's bodies as objects for their amusement/pleasure". It incorporates the notion that men have some sort of claim on women's bodies, which is absent from "seeing women as objects".

You seem to be associating my arguments with being sex negative; I associate them with being sex positive. What's happening in the original video is not sex or even men seriously looking for sex; that's what they are using as a rationalization.

I would argue that this is very prevelant in American women towards men as well. It is not as vocal and public as men towards women but it is still very much there. The ways of expressing it are different but it is still there.
 
Ok. I'll disregard your rude jabs in this post and call it even then. In all honesty, the one poster I was really going after deserved it and and I would do it again. **** that guy.

What you described is not what I have issue with and I think it would get you some tail.

Already edited and removed as it was already addressed.

It does, quite often actually. Women tend to respond positively towards well dressed guys with good hygeine, manners and clean speech.

In my experience some facial hair and tattoos don't hurt lol.
 
Not that I agree with the approach of these men, but when did it become wrong to try to talk to a woman, or flirt with one, or make any sort of romantic advance?

There's a big difference between saying "hello" and harassment. Only one time did I see an instance where I felt the comment was ok...just a simple greeting - but then the guy ends up following her for 5 minutes. Don't think this happens in LA or the anywhere in the West. There is a time and place for talking with or flirting with a woman. Her trying to walk down the street isn't one of them. If I were a woman, I would hate living in NY and having to put up with that crap.
 
Hilarious - white guy walking through streets of NYC for 10 hours. And as a white guy who grew up in New York, I can confirm this is totally accurate.

[video]https://www.funnyordie.com/videos/8aeb78deb2/10-hours-of-walking-in-nyc-as-a-man
 
I read that. It didn't have a lot to do with my point. I know you talk as though you never interacted with people in a normal social way before,

It's so interesting to keep repeating that social context matters, that all of this is about interactions, and then be told that I'm talking as if I don't interact with people.

so sometimes it's hard when what people are doing is pointing to their very normal everyday experiences as proof and you want them to demonstrate facts in a way you can compute...but, I've been to parties and stuff. I've seen women go off with a guy who was puttin in work trying to get her to consent.

I've been that guy. Except, I wasn't putting in work, I was sharing who I was and taking in who the woman was, I only did this with women who were receptive, and parties are about being social with other people. Again, context.

From my perspective, especially being the guy who basically took no for an answer and often enough didn't even ask the question, when looking back I could have gotten a hell of a lot more action than I did, simply because I basically believed what you are saying in this thread. I thought I was "respecting" women who actually would have been perfectly happy having sex with me.

Perhaps these women felt you were more interested in playing with their bodies than in intimacy.

So anyway, you can point to articles about gender roles. That's kind of besides the point. I said that being bold and persistent yields greater success for someone looking to have sex. If that's not true, that'd be one thing. But it is true. So, based on how highly these men prioritize having sex with strange women walking down the street, they are playing what appears to be a winning strategy.

Again, I think it's a mistake to characterize these interactions as being about sex.
 
There's a big difference between saying "hello" and harassment. Only one time did I see an instance where I felt the comment was ok...just a simple greeting - but then the guy ends up following her for 5 minutes. Don't think this happens in LA or the anywhere in the West. There is a time and place for talking with or flirting with a woman. Her trying to walk down the street isn't one of them. If I were a woman, I would hate living in NY and having to put up with that crap.

This happens in SLC, often.
 
Oh gawd...

anybody interested in a female's perspective on this?

(here it is, like it or not... since I'm inserting my thoughts into something some of you may feel is your personal male domain, feel free to consider this as "harassment" - - it's my own form of revenge...)


Shakespeare wrote a play for this, I think he called it "Much Ado About Nothing" or something like that


Six hundred minutes of video condensed to less than two - - yeah, I definitely agree with what a few others have posted, it certainly paints a picture that is not completely reflected by reality.


The guy who "harassed" her by "following" her for 5 minutes, says "Hello, good morning" and follows-up with "God bless, have a good day" (it occurs at around the 1 minute mark) - after his comments were ignored, he basically seemed to ignore her - - any chance he might have just been going in the same direction?


And what a perfect confluence of events - an organization looking for publicity and increased donations, and a free-lance photo/videographer who's looking for funding to produce a video - aren't they lucky they found each other. Win-win for both!


I thought the comment by Siro concerning cultural relativism - how men in different cultures behave differently - makes a good point. And as was pointed out by Candrew, the video was edited - and it looks like she was passing through predominantly black or ethnic neighborhoods though much of her walk. Could some degree of cultural difference have been at work as well? I didn't see much of her walking in the financial district or mid-town.

And please, I'm not saying that bad behavior should be excused because of cultural differences, but I do believe that those differences should be taken into consideration before judgement is passed and the sentence is handed down.
 
I would argue that this is very prevelant in American women towards men as well. It is not as vocal and public as men towards women but it is still very much there. The ways of expressing it are different but it is still there.

I agree.
 
There's a big difference between saying "hello" and harassment. Only one time did I see an instance where I felt the comment was ok...just a simple greeting - but then the guy ends up following her for 5 minutes. Don't think this happens in LA or the anywhere in the West. There is a time and place for talking with or flirting with a woman. Her trying to walk down the street isn't one of them. If I were a woman, I would hate living in NY and having to put up with that crap.

I agree with your whole post except for one point: it happens everywhere in the US.
 
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