F*ck Tinder: a love
story
David Rodwin
When a show begins with the invitation for the San
Francisco, mostly thirty-something audience to yell “Fuck Tinder” so loud that
they can be heard in Oakland -- and they do -- it is clear that we are in for a
wild and wooly ride. After all, the
nearly fifty-year-old guy before us declares that following a sudden, surprise
break-up with his girlfriend, he decided to turn to the dating (more
accurately, hook-up) online site Tinder, where he was hoping for “free sex,
right now, often weird.” During the next
ninety minutes, David Rodwin leaves no bed sheets unruffled as he describes in
full, often XXX-rated detail the up’s and down’s of his two-plus year journey
swishing right (yes) and left (no way) on Tinder, looking for his true soul
mate – and if not that, then at least a hot, one-night stand. Returning to PianoFight for a third and final
encore of his F*ck Tinder: a love story
before heading on a multi-city tour through the U.S., Australia, and Canada, David
Rodwin bares it all in a monologue that elicits many laughs and eventually even
a few tears.
David’s escapade begins with so many Tinder matches coming
in at the same time that he needs a spreadsheet to sort out his options. He soon finds that if he waits too long to
analyze the accumulated data, the potential set of girlfriends quickly becomes
null. One of his first successes is actually
not the result of a Tinder swipe but of going to synagogue for a Friday night
service, somehow leading from prayer in temple to doggy style in his bedroom to
her deciding it is time to go upon climax.
“It feels dirty; I feel like an escort, and it’s kinda hot,” he recounts
almost in a panting sweat; but when she leaves, he recalls, “It is only
9:30.” That leaves him to what becomes
his favorite way of spending time alone when the magical app does not work the
way he wants: “I get high, watch “South
Park,” and masturbate.”
With much enthusiasm, moving around the small stage in an
often hyped-up, arms-flailing state, David proceeds to describe various
one-time adventures during that first year of online searching -- from a
nursing, hot mom who shows up at 11 a.m. with her baby in tow to a Russian
woman who arrives wearing a t-shirt emblazed with the last eight lines of his online
profile. Stories pour forth with images
often hilarious, sometimes steamy, always entertaining.
Fifty women are his rendezvous partners out of the 500
match-ups during that first year, but only seven actually are climatic events
in the biblical sense, leaving David 325 nights alone in his bed (getting high,
watching “South Park,” etc.). But as
Year Two progresses, our storyteller’s tone and mood begin to shift as into his
life enter a true and lasting friend with both free-love and free-drugs
benefits named Meadow and a true heart-throb whose eyes send him swooning named
Joan.
David’s story begins to leave behind some of its heretofore
locker-room bravado and to reveal more of his own insecurity, vulnerability,
and self-doubts. We also begin to feel
and see in his tear-wet eyes more of the real pain that he experiences after
finding a possible mate whose advice to him is to “build a wall around your
heart” if he wants to continue seeing her – a clear warning she is not where he
is even after she slips and says, “I love you.”
David Rodwin is clearly a master storyteller, able to convey
a script that sounds as if he is spontaneously relaying this litany of sexual
and relationship encounters for the first time.
Sometimes it seems more the kind of talk one might expect in a men’s
college dorm room after an evening of consuming a couple of six packs, and one
cannot help but wonder if there is not a bit of exaggeration in how many times
he actually had sex in some of the more rambunctious outings. (Eight? Really?) And there is some unease in wondering if he deserves
quite as much sympathy as we are increasingly willing to give him as he tells only
his side of the story for each encounter/relationship – especially in light of
the current #MeToo revelations. But there
is a sense of genuine honesty and even humbleness that David brings to his
telling, and he does hook us in enough amidst our laughter and opened mouths in
amazement in order for us to hope that maybe there is a happy ending for him coming
at some point.
In the end, there is a possible lesson or two for us all
from his experiences that often seem straight out of a National Enquirer, tell-all article. When David at one point realizes that he may
in fact not be successful in his hunting for a partner, he admits, “For the
first time in a long time, I didn’t know where I was; I didn’t know how to get
there; and there was nowhere else I wanted to be.”
The look of calm satisfaction and the quiet, reflective tone
of his voice at that moment are very different from that initial, diatribe yell
he leads against Tinder (and thus, against online and maybe all dating). Besides providing us with a hilarious,
titillating romp through his past couple of years of prowling online for sex
and maybe more, David Rodwin also gives us in F*ck Tinder: a love story some things to think about in
appreciating the relationships we may already have and/or the patience and
perseverance we should employ in seeking our next true love – or loves.
Rating: 4 E
F*ck Tinder: a love
story continues two more evenings on April 25 and May 8 at PianoFight’s Mainstage, 144 Taylor Street,
San Francisco. Tickets are available
online at http://pianofight.com.
I found that site very usefull and this survey is very cirious, I ' ve never seen a blog that demand a survey for this actions, very curious... tinderhackapk.info/
ReplyDeleteOnline Dating
ReplyDeleteBenefits of Social Relationships
Best Tinder Openers
Tinder Pick Up Lines
Tinder is cool, but I feel like the pairing model is kind of limiting. It's quite hard to have a 1-on-1 conversation with a person you barely know. I have a side-project, which is kind of Tinder for group chats, where you swipe on conversation topics. Swipe right and you join a group chat with people interested in the same topic. If you meet someone interesting you can slide into DMs :) Feel free to check it out - Campfire Chat
ReplyDeleteHere is an example of mini-community group chat: Naruto Fanfiction Community
I'm not sure it as great as Tinder for dating though, especially because it's not location based and you kind of want people nearby for dating.