Saturday, March 01, 2008

Fat Chance That You'll Ever Want To Meet Up With Mr. Phoney Baloney


The following sounds extreme, but it has happened and will happen in our cyberworld.


Sometimes a make-believe relationship is better than the real thing.
By Q. Allan Brocka


From The Advocate March 11, 2008

I knew my new boyfriend was fake right from the start. It was obvious: He had unbelievably sexy pictures, a modeling career, obscenely rich parents, an Ivy League education, and a brand-new record deal at a Big Label -- all at the age of 26. OK, maybe I could buy all that. But add the fact that he wanted to be with me and it was too good to be true.


Our romance began with an online message. He said something snarky. I said I liked his moxie. My jaw dropped at his too-hot-to-be-real JPEGs. Our one-liners continued as he sent a wide-enough range of pictures to convince me he was an actual person. Not that it mattered, with him in New York and me in Los Angeles.


HIM: This sucks, let’s talk on the phone.
ME: If you mean phone sex, not my thing.
HIM: Don’t be retarded.


He had me at retarded. He was charming, funny, and had a sexy voice and impressive vocabulary. I lay in bed and we talked for the next three hours. His name was Josh Alexander.* (*not his real name) (**not that he used his real name) (But it could have been Buzz or Bolt)


Josh spent seven years traveling the world as a fashion model. He’d invested his earnings well, and with his inheritance he was set for life. He had a knack for songwriting and sometimes performed at friends’ parties. (THE BULLSHIT IS PILING UP AT THIS POINT) (BUT WAIT,THERE'S MORE)


That’s where he was discovered by a music exec from Big Label, which was throwing tons of money behind him and his debut album. In fact, Big Label’s chairman was personally grooming him to be a rock star.


He enjoyed the fuss but ultimately didn’t give a shit about fame or the music business. His real dream was to open a Cuban-style catering company in Northern California. He wanted kids, a house, a giant kitchen, and me.


When we finally hung up, I was buzzing with that incredible high you can only get from a really good conversation. I smiled and thought, He’s totally fake.


The next day we chatted for two more hours. It became a nightly ritual. Over the next two months we shared every detail of our lives, the exciting to the mundane.


His stories ranged from his first runway job when he had no idea what the hell he was doing (as Giorgio Armani himself stitched him into a suit) to the time LL Cool J propositioned him in Paris. I knew how his parents met, about his father’s affair, his immigrant grandfather who built their fortune from nothing. I knew about his childhood, his brothers, and each of his ex-boyfriends. I knew more about Josh than most of my friends.


I decided, as long I didn’t spend money and wasn’t turning down actual dates, I had nothing to lose. When I’d tell him he was fake, he’d laugh and list attributes that made me seem too good to be true. I told you he was charming. Sometimes I’d ask random questions to test him. He always gave an impromptu but riveting answer. Then he’d bust me: “There, now do you think I’m real?”


One night he announced, “Guess who you’re having dinner with in three weeks?” Josh was finally coming to L.A.!


A week later he stopped calling and his online profile disappeared.


I called and e-mailed repeatedly. No response. I thought our finale would be more dramatic. Maybe I’d find proof he was fake or we’d have a disastrous first date.


But he simply vanished. When a friend randomly mentions he’s buddies with the founder of Big Label, I tell him my story and he offers to look into it. Turns out there is indeed a Josh Alexander, some guy in Florida who once submitted a demo to them. That’s it.


My friend suggests that Josh Alexander isn’t my fake boyfriend in New York. My fake boyfriend is likely someone who’s obsessed with Josh Alexander, because psychotic con artists tend to appropriate other people’s identities. And now that he knows all about my life, there’s a distinct possibility he’s pretending to be me with someone else.


It’s crazy, but despite the big fat lie part, my connection with my fake boyfriend still feels more substantial than most of my real relationships. Maybe it’s because I gave him chances that are hard to give when you’re looking someone in the eye. Maybe I finally heard the things I wanted someone to say. Or maybe I’m just into psychopaths, because, sad as it is, if my fake boyfriend called, I’d probably take him back.


NOT!!! Guys you are too smart to fall for such a set up. When a guy seems too good to be true, then maybe it's a sign to stand back. Hell, all of us have met this type of guy. Some of them are so transparent. Others are merely pathetic.


So just don't fall for the sweet talk and the pretty face. Like the commercial used to say, "Always Rely on Genuine GM Parts from Mr. GoodWrench". A guy that is handy with his toolbox is a guy to keep around. WOOF. Mega hairy muscle hugs and Happy March.


3 comments:

TOS said...

Way back when, long before my sweet, hairy Boo, I had a faux relationship (for like a week) with a guy I met on Manhunt. He was (from his photos) very cute, hung (:-), and seemed really genuine. We talked a bunch by phone and email. I have no doubt that he was both a real person and most likely just as his photos looked.

What was weird was that he would NEVER want to meet up. I wasn't even looking for sex, just coffee - he seemed like the dateable, "catch," type. He'd play coy and even flat out ignore any possibility of meeting up.

I think he wanted to play ball longer but Mama didn't raise no fool - I stopped talking to him... what was the point! If even he eventually wanted to meet, the writing was on the wall... HIGH maintenance :-)

hot, hairy hugs from humid DC!

Leonard said...

Awww....well at least he knew the guy was fake, so he probably wasn't to upset. I had a guy email me from gay.com (which I log on to maybe 3 times a year) and he was from Russia and we exchanged a few emails. He was handsome and seemed real, but when I questioned how come he never answers my specific questions, he quit writing. Then a few days later I got an email from another Russian with the same domain name in his email addres. I just let that one go. I'll stick to meeting people in real life! ;) peace

Robguy said...

I've chatted with someone that has multiple people's photos that he says are him. They look very similar but there are enuf details that the story falls apart. We talk about general day to day things - he doesn't know anything about my family or work or things that could be used for identity theft. We live on different continents and are both in relationships (at least his character is). It wouldn't matter what he looks like, he's still nice to chat about the weather with.