to Tom, as I said earlier, on paper and by society's standards, Sydney may seem like a better deal.
Sydney Sweeney is a better deal for Tom Brady. It might have been a one night stand between the two or nothing substantial might have happened. Many men want to have sex with Sydney Sweeney because of the size and shape of her breasts.
Sydney is almost 20 years younger than Tom. If I had an option with a 22 year old right now, I would find that appealing.
attraction/chemistry/connection isn't about some arbitrary list we check off like the right age, the right amount of money, right amount of
hotness, status etc.
It's about human emotions and mutual energies connecting which are intangible and impossible to define.
This is a valid point of view. I think there are a lot of men and women that use arbitrary lists in seeking romantic/sexual interactions. White women in the United States are well known for their arbitrary 6'0" height standard. There are memes about this and women's perception of the difference between 5'11" and 6'0".
Now I will go on to stuff about the move
Against All Odds. You had some good quotes there. I appreciate you bringing it up and I think this is a good conversational piece. Despite the plot holes that I am about to expose here, I think it was an entertaining movie and I enjoyed watching it. It seems like you liked the movie as well. For those who haven't seen this movie, I have plot spoilers below in it.
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I don't think she "created" the triangle, circumstances being what they were, it became a triangle.
It is a key plot line in the movie that an attraction triangle existed between a nightclub owner/bookie, the daughter of a professional football team owner, and an aging football player who had played in the NFL 10+ years. Both a nightclub owner and a long time professional football player have sexual abundance. While sexual abundance would have been different in 1983-1984 than in the internet era of 2000-present, it still existed then. It's somewhat of a stretch to believe that a triangle would have formed based on circumstances. Both guys would have had options with other women. The nightclub owner/bookie isn't going to care about some spoiled brat biatch. He's going to move on with his life because he'll be able to have sex with other women easily due to being a nightclub owner who drives a Ferrari. Even if one thinks that he wouldn't have moved on as easily I think he would have, other circumstances would have prevented the formation of the triangle.
In order for those circumstances to emerge, one would have to suspend belief on a number of circumstances that are highly improbable based upon how NFL teams operate personnel matters now and even operated those matters back in 1983-1984. The TLDR version of this is that it would have been essentially impossible for Jeff Bridges' Terry Brogan character to end up in Mexico seeking the ex-girlfriend of a nightclub owner and daughter of the team owner that employed Brogan.
1. There's a scene early in the movie where Brogan is criticized by his coach during practice for missing a block in the previous Sunday's regular season game. It is inferred that this is an early season regular season game (probably somewhere between Weeks 1-4 of an NFL season). Brogan was supposedly protecting his shoulder, which was likely injured during the previous season and he likely had offseason surgery for it. This is an issue that would NEVER have come up early in a regular season. It is something that would have been dealt with during the offseason or in pre-season games. Additionally, Brogan likely would have had contractual protections against an incident like this happening in the regular season. It's unknown what his contractual status was heading into that season, but one would have to suspend belief in some important parts of the NFL business to believe a player with 10+ years of seniority is going to be released from the team during the regular season without significant compensation and without options from other NFL teams immediately. That significant compensation would have covered his bills until next season, thus preventing his interaction with the nightclub owner/bookie from becoming reality.
2. After Brogan is cut from the Los Angeles Outlaws, he is seen calling his "agent" Steve Kirsch from a pay phone near the Outlaws locker room. While Kirsch was once his agent, Kirsch is now a legal counsel for the Outlaws. It is LIKELY that Brogan would have been informed of this change prior to it happening. He would not have needed Kirsch's secretary to tell him to call that other agent named Hal Schumacher. Brogan would have called Hal Schumacher immediately. The scenes between Brogan and Kirsch prior to Brogan departing for Mexico (crucial scenes in creating reasons why Brogan went to Mexico) have no basis in reality based on the NFL business model of the time or even today.
3. Even if one could suspend belief in items 1 & 2, there's a scene where Brogan ends up face-to-face with Mrs. Wyler, who has inherited the Outlaws team as a result of becoming widowed from Mr. Wyler. At the Riviera Country Club, Mrs. Wyler offers Brogan his roster spot back on the Outlaws. If things even got to this point (unlikely based on 1 & 2), there's a 100% chance that Brogan re-joins the Outlaws when Mrs. Wyler makes this offer. When that happens, there is no Mexico trip, no attraction/sexual triangle, and no movie.
Despite her being somewhat rude to him when they first met, I still felt the tension between them.
There's a case that there was tension there when they first met in Mexico, but I proved that Brogan would never have made it to Mexico. Without that context, that's a valid interpretation.
HE even yelled out after she sarcastically said CYA while driving away on her motor bike - "you sure about that?!
the mutual attraction was definitely there despite her bytch shield.
Agree
I mean consider how HE spoke to her? Not exactly kind or nice was it? In fact when she showed up at his hotel room unannounced, he was borderline nasty!
But yet at the time he was wildly attracted to her, that was obvious at least to me.
Jess felt it too! Despite his less than enthusiastic welcome.
And she ended up asking when he was leaving the island, gave him her address and directions and said "Don't leave without saying goodbye."
Attraction isn't always polite. Or "nice." In fact sometimes it can be just the opposite! It's a byproduct of the tension early in.
So in that sense. I thought that whole scene was quite realistic!
Your take on that scene is valid and the scene itself has realism if the actual context I laid out above is completely ignored.
the bedroom scene when he shared his football story, not sure how you can say he "overshared" and risked losing her attraction?
At first she told him he didn't have to tell her but he wanted to - he wanted her to "know" him.
She said he didn't have to tell her that. That's an indication of oversharing. That's why I called that an overshare.
Keeping mysterious is better than oversharing in general.
she responded quite empathetically saying "it's still torturing you isn't it?" while kissing his face and him embracing her saying "oh Jess "
They became closer after that and fell in love!
I'm not suggesting all men should open up like that, it depends on so many things!
I only brought it up to show what that type of chemistry and connection looks like
Yes, there was a chemistry and connection there. There are also a lot of times when men open up and it doesn't work out. Most of the time when men open up and show vulnerability, it doesn't work. The scene itself isn't entirely unrealistic from a red pill perspective.
In real life, a 6'0"+ fit guy with NFL money might be able to get away with this behavior and keep attraction, but the typical 5'9"-5'10" male with a more modest physique and income isn't going to have the same outcome.