The Big Single

BY: JASON RAYNER

The face of a chronically single but nice gay boy.

The face of a chronically single but nice gay boy.

It has been four and a half years since my last relationship.

Four and a half years. 

It would be powerful to say that this was a self imposed sabbatical - because, in a lot of ways it was. It just wasn’t an intentional self imposed sabbatical. 

I should also note that I’m being very generous when referring to anything in my dating history as a relationship. Throughout my 20s I found myself going from three month stint to three month stint, usually following the same cycle. I’d always start off high on the concept of connection, obsess over intensity, and then have it fall flat before it was ever really able to stand on its own. 

I’ve never been in a long term relationship. In fact, the last relationship I was in was my longest at four months. .

Exhausted from the cycle of my 20s, dating and relationships in my 30s became something I started to procrastinate. Any time I thought about the prospects of a relationship, I’d also question if I really needed one. After all, I happen to be a fairly independent person, and I actually like spending time alone. When Kelly Clarkson sang “Doesn’t mean I’m lonely when I’m alone” I felt that. So why would I put pressure on myself to find someone to be with when I could hang out solo with a glass of wine, face mask, and Jennifer Lopez movie? Plus, I was getting very comfortable being the witty single friend who regales people at gatherings with hilarious and sometimes salacious Grindr hookup stories, or tales of disastrous dates with men who look like a mature Tom Holland that turn out to be priests (I say this as if this has happened more than once, it hasn’t. But it is also a true and tremendous story for another time). 

Well it turns out the unintentional self imposed sabbatical has ended. Because, after four and a half years, I’m finally ready to come out and say it. 

I want to fall in love. I want a relationship. I want a boyfriend. 

Even while writing those very sentences I could feel my heart tighten and my brain wanting to intervene and turn what I’ve written into a punchline that would to cover up my exposed vulnerability.

In all honesty, for all of my cynicism and the self deprecation I’m a hopeless romantic. I grew up obsessed with the deep pining love songs of No Doubt and Gwen Stefani and my teen years were influenced by Carrie Bradshaw and basically any rom com from Bridget Jones to Notting Hill or When Harry Met Sally. My favourite movie and book is Call Me By Your Name. The problem is, most of these stories make love seem like a struggle. Almost all of them involve a sequence where the couple is torn apart by a major obstacle that leads to breaking up until the end of the third act when they realize that actually, they were meant to be together. Or in the case of Call Me By Your Name, circumstance gets in the way (and sadly, in the vast majority of queer films, that circumstance is AIDS and/or death. But I digress), and love is just too damn precious to hang on to. 

As a result, I seemed to only crave relationships that felt difficult. And for years, I blamed those influences for giving me unrealistic expectations of love. 

It wasn’t until recently when I started replaying the limited romantic interactions that I’ve had over the last four and a half years that I realized I never was Bridget Jones (although I am clumsy AF, swear too much, and embarrass myself constantly), but maybe was more like the gay version of Hugh Grant (which in a way would also mean I get to be a Paddington villian. Although if I was in the Paddington universe I would never want to pretend to hate that lovely little bear. Wait. I’m getting off topic and referencing Paddington Bear again, aren’t I?). 

Of those men I did get involved with, some were dates that proved to be disasters (bad chemistry, the fact that he turned out to be a priest), some guys turned out to be flakes or jerks, but most weren’t bad at all. I just didn’t let that stop me from finding a way to make it not work.

I’ve realized that I actively look for the negatives. I look for delays in text messages, or opinions that I don’t necessarily agree with. If that doesn’t work, I try to make snap judgements on their maturity, assume they probably have a lack of ambition, or my personal favourite, I say that we lack the elusive sparks that every relationship needs (cue Bruce Springsteen’s Dancing in the Dark).

Nothing is as bad as when a guy manages to clear all of those hurdles. Because instead of going with it, even if I have evidence that he likes me, I search for a way to convince myself that there must be a mysterious ulterior motive. Or that I’m trying too hard to make my “Elio in search of an Oliver” fantasy come true, and that I’m naively missing something that could end up hurting me. 

So I push them away. I become the one who doesn’t respond to texts or doesn’t hang out with them. I let them move on, and before I can give myself the space to be upset about it, I say that I’m relieved because deep down I knew it wouldn’t really work. 

In other words, I sabotage and put up walls to avoid the potential of rejection. I have become a cliche. How boring, I know!

That’s not to say this thought process is totally unwarranted. I’ve been through a lot, especially in the last year and a half - scroll through this blog for a sample platter of what’s been going on. However, I’m writing this to say I’m tired of repeating my destructive patterns. I finally feel ready to move forward and not let my past stand in the way. 

Now the biggest problem is figuring out how to do it. As noted earlier, I’ve never entirely removed myself from dating apps but it’s been a while since I’ve honestly put myself out there. Putting effort into online dating feels strange and uncomfortable. Partly because I’m making decisions on people without knowing anything beyond what someone lists as their hobbies, or how they answer “fun” questions such as “how my third grade teacher would describe me”. And even if I wade through that and find someone I match with, I still have to wait for him to message me back back. Messaging back, for those of you who don’t use dating apps, has the same success rate as waiting for Godot. You sit in vain, hoping for a response, and at least with gay dating it almost never comes (you’d be surprised by how many profiles outright make mention of this, and then once you match with them and send the first message never hear back). 

It’s a lot. In fact going to the Apple Store without a Genius bar appointment is more relaxing than online dating (for those of you who don’t own an Apple product, the Apple Store is the closest we will come to understand what hell on Earth is). 

Regardless, I’m up for the challenge. I’m learning to be okay with being open about wanting to find someone. I don’t know if I’ll be good at being a boyfriend but I also don’t want to waste any more time missing out on great people because of that uncertainty. 

So I’m writing this blog to hold myself accountable to putting myself out there. And if you know me in person, don’t be surprised if I ask you if you have any single friends, co-workers, or Amazon delivery men that I could potentially date.

The Trip

BY: JASON RAYNER

Bon Voyage, Friends!

Bon Voyage, Friends!

At the time of posting, I’ll be a few hours away from boarding a plane and heading to Europe for 32 days. The trip will take me to Paris for a few days, Barcelona for a few weeks, and then I’ll hit up Munich, Prague, and Berlin. Some of the trip will be work focused, some of it will be with other people, and a portion will be entirely alone. 

In theory, it sounds like the kind of antidote your friend from Deb from HR shares on their Facebook page - you know, the kind of graphic with cursive text over a bunch of clouds saying “Travel more, live more”. And to some degree, it is. I’m absolutely clamouring for the chance to sit in a Paris cafe and pretend to smoke a long cigarette while writing. Or sitting on a patio in Barcelona, sipping amazing wine while working diligently. Or finding love with a handsome German gentleman that I meet on the dancefloor of a Berlin club. 

Obviously I’m excited. 

But also, I’m terrified. 

Don’t get me wrong, I’m aware that most of the things that scare me are nerves and rooted in irrationality. Yet, as I’ve been getting closer to the trip, I’ve had the same fears running through my head. 

First, I’m realizing how long a month really is. I initially chose a month because it sounded whimsical and romantic. Now, as I get closer - as in hours away, I worry how prepared I actually am. What if all the work I’ve been doing on DuoLingo has been in vain and I understand nothing? Do I actually have enough money? What is I get lost one day and can’t find my way back and don’t know how to ask for help because DuoLingo failed (because apparently in my nightmare state WiFi in Europe doesn’t exist)? What if I get lonely and need my support system (valid but again, I seem to have forgotten about the internet)?

Another portion of my fear comes from me spending a very small portion of the trip alone in Barcelona - a city I’ve actually been to before. In theory, the idea of spending a portion of time in the city and acting as if I actually live there has always been something I’ve wanted. So much so that I’ve even flirted with the idea of moving abroad on a work visa. Then, earlier this summer, I was on a work trip in Montreal where I spent a week alone. I was doing pretty well until my last day, where I suddenly felt trapped, desperately wanting to get home (never mind the fact that the day after I landed I started a brand new six week contract that I knew would take up all of my time).  

Then I worry because I’m an extravert and at some point, I’m going to go crazy craving human interaction (because somehow I’ve forgotten that ¾ of the trip will in fact, be with other humans). 

Mostly I’m worried this trip isn’t going to live up to the crazy standards I’ve placed on it. I’m worried that I’m going to leave for a month and nothing will change - because for some reason, I’ve told myself that this has to be transformative. If I don’t have an Eat, Pray, Love experience, then I’m going to let myself down (There is obviously no pray component in play, although I can confidently predict that I will also have a hard time fitting into my clothes after all of the food I will consume and devour). 

It’s a weird thing that we do as humans. Even when exciting opportunities arise, we find ways to stress ourselves out instead of just focusing on the exciting and positive. 

The truth is, I need this trip. I need to break my patterns, and that includes making a list of ways that a trip will disappoint me before I even go on it. 

What I need from this trip is the opportunity to focus on myself. The last year and a half I’ve felt like I’ve been at an amusement park, going from ride to ride, but not really paying attention to what I’m actually doing. I go from job to job, experience to experience, creating the same bad habits, and pushing my problems to the periphery where I can conveniently ignore them. Things like dealing with why I haven’t had a boyfriend in four years, or my tediously constant struggles with body image, or what it means to be an only child with only one living parent. 

This trip isn’t going to solve these things, especially the ones that are particularly heavy. I do however, hope that removing myself from the patterns I’ve created in Toronto, I can actually focus on spending time with myself, and maybe even gain a few tools to help me eventually conquer these issues.

And if not, then at least I can ensure that I sit in a Paris cafe and pretend to smoke a long cigarette while writing. Or sitting on a patio in Barcelona, sipping amazing wine while working diligently. Or finding love with a handsome German gentleman that I meet on the dancefloor of a Berlin club (that one is a stretch but hey, maybe I can try to maifest it!). 

Or, I don’t know, maybe take a few deep breaths and just have a really good fucking time.


No Really, I Don't Want Children

BY: JASON RAYNER

Me, trying to find a way to tell someone I don’t want kids.

Me, trying to find a way to tell someone I don’t want kids.

I’ve always been different. In high school, my friends would talk about their crushes and sex with the opposite gender, and I would sit silently realizing that the only people I felt attraction to were my male classmates. While I ended up going to university and completing a psychology degree, I turned away from the idea of of grad school or building a career related to said degree, to pursue a career in writing and film. While countless people around me are settled into long term relationships, I don’t know how to date - mostly because I don’t understand how to fit in seeing someone romantically with my busy schedule of binge watching my stories and seeing my friends. I’m also not quite sure I understand the concept of having sex with the same person indefinitely.

While I see that my experiences often don’t match the status quo, they’ve always felt pretty natural to me. As I’ve gotten older, I haven’t really put much thought into how these things separate me from others. In fact, it wasn’t until this past holiday season, amongst the parade of dinners, drinks, and gossiping with various friends and family that are outside my immediate circle, that I realized how different my lifestyle is from other people my age.

It was somewhere in the middle of my approximately 73rd dinner with a friend where I realized a pattern. Every conversation seemed to revolve around who was getting married, buying homes, and to my shock, having kids. While I do have many friends who are married, own homes, and are thinking about having kids, I have just as many who are not. I realized that even as I’ve been attending weddings and housewarmings over the years, I’ve never really registered how common these things were for people my age. So many people were moving through adulthood briskly, with a set of personal goals accomplished that I haven’t even thought about.

As soon as my friend left, I promptly finished whatever wine was left in the bottle and started thinking. Not only about what my life would be like if I followed a different path, but more importantly, if I even wanted any of these things.

A lot of these answers were easy. I’m in such a different economic stratosphere that I can’t even begin to think about owning a home and I’m more than okay with that. I’m doing the work to be satisfied with my career, and I’m not willing to sacrifice happiness for money - although it is a tad annoying that my happiness has to come from creative expression, perhaps the least assured form of financial stability.

Then there is marriage. My life as a partially-by-choice/chronically single person is for another essay but, I also don’t feel too worried about having to get married. It’s something I could see myself doing (I do love parties), yet I can easily see myself being content with a significant other and skipping the legalities.

The easiest answer however, is the one that I feel I’m not supposed to express.

I don’t want children.

At all.

Seriously.

Taking this stance, is of course very different as a male, especially as a gay male. I’m aware that women have a large number of factors placed on them, including their own hormones and bodies practically screaming at them to have children. The only thing I do know, is that all of us  - regardless of gender and sexual orientation - are at some point in our lives, expected to want to have kids (to the point that it’s weaponized against many members of the LGBTQ+ community when they come out).

I can already hear the choruses of people saying “well, you never know”, or “never say never”, or my personal favourite, “don’t say that!”.

In fact, even while writing this piece I have encountered people I barely know telling me how much I need children in my life. No word of a lie, earlier today a man at work I don’t know told me I was “missing out” because I didn’t have kids, nephews, or nieces (which by the way, is hard to have when you’re an only child and single). He then asked who would take care of me when I was older as if that is the true incentive for having a child (also, wow that’s fucking grim, and again this was from a man whose name I don’t even know).

Even though I’ve known this for so long, even though I’m stating it as plain fact, I’m still treated as if my feelings are temporary. Most people in my life at some point  - and I mean people both with and without children - love to bring up hypotheticals. They speak of this magical man that I’ll fall in love, who will want children so much that he will convince me to have them. Of course, this ignores my choices and how little I want to have children. This is a ridiculous of argument because, while being a dealbreaker, it’s also a pretty good sign that someone who wants kids desperately is not a compatible spouse for me. It’s also worth noting that most people seem to forget that as a gay male, the only way to have a child is to actively want it. Adoption and surrogacy are things that require a never ending well of planning, money, and effort. There are no unplanned pregnancies between two men.

The most offensive assumption I get from people is that something must have happened to me as a child to make me feel this way. Except, my childhood was awesome. As a child I wasn’t really that into children friendly things. My tastes have always been more adult. In grade five, I was obsessed with TV shows like ER and Seinfeld - even if I didn’t fully understand them. I remember telling my grade three class my favourite movie was The Pelican Brief and begged my dad to take me to see Seven when I was nine (he did; we both loved it). Even when I did something more child friendly like going swimming, I would spend my time underwater trying to figure out why Alanis Morissette was so angry on Jagged Little Pill, and then swim over to talk about it with the adult (but in actuality probably, teen) lifeguard. I was only really interested in my peers when we got older and their tastes caught up to mine.

Simply put, I’m not a paternal person. I can be selfish. I have very little patience (like, very little). I have aspirations and goals that do not prioritize a child - and most importantly, I don’t want to make space to prioritize a child. I’m loving, and I know that if I had a child I would drive myself crazy worrying about them. It’s like hearing someone tell you how hot a plate is and touching it anyway. Except I’m not curious enough to touch the plate. Again, it isn’t lost on me that I just compared a child to a burn, which again is just proof that I am not built for that life.

It’s not that I actively dislike kids, either (although I will sometimes lean into this idea to watch people’s reactions). I do however hate kid culture as perpetuated by adults. I hate temper tantrums. I hate the way many parents allow their children to behave.

Even after being so declarative, I still feel like I have to write a disclaimer, making sure not to offend anyone with kids or anyone who wants kids. It’s truly astonishing how often saying you don’t want children is taken as if its a personal attack or criticism on someone’s choice to have them. The thing is, I get why people want them. If I’m friends with you, or related to you, and you have a kid, I’ll (probably) really adore your kids and I’ll totally watch Paddington with them (but let’s be real, I’ll probably be a much better uncle-ish figure when I can show them Greta Gerwig movies and they can have a glass of wine with me). That being said, I also don’t really want to be your babysitter (unless you’re really in a bind, and in that case, duh I’ll do it), and I will absolutely never speak to your child in a baby voice.

I don’t want kids, and I know that the fact that I don’t want them is evidence enough that I shouldn’t have them. I’ve felt this way since I was at least 18 years old. Even after explaining myself, I’m sure people reading this will still think that I’m being dramatic. People will still try to get me to hold their babies even after I politely say no thank you, and strangers will continue to question me if I don’t gush over the idea of having a child. And while even I am not immune to a cute photo on Instagram or a funny precocious child moment, more often than not I’m not really paying attention when your social media accounts and conversations are inundated with baby talk.

I’m finally in a place where I know what I don’t want - and while it may not be as satisfying as knowing what I do want, it’s definitely a nice way to get there. So no really, I don’t want children. And I don’t feel bad about it.

Dreams vs. Money

BY: JASON RAYNER

For my entire adult life, I have been perpetually broke. I don’t think I’m supposed to admit that, though. Money is a strange thing in our society. It’s coveted, it’s necessary, and it is something almost everyone thinks about. Our entire days are centered around making it and spending it. But you aren’t supposed to talk about it. If you have an abundance, it’s best to not gloat. If you have too little, it’s weakness.

Me, looking longingly at a case of La Croix, which at tis point in my life, is essentially a luxury item.

Me, looking longingly at a case of La Croix, which at tis point in my life, is essentially a luxury item.

It’s important to note the difference between being broke and being poor. I have an apartment, I am able to afford basic necessities, I just don’t have much money outside of that. Most of the time there are fluctuations. There have been times in my recently-graduated-from-University days where I’ve had so little money that the only way I was able to pay the minimum payment on my credit card was to go out for dinner with a friend, charge it to my almost maxed out card, and then ask them for their half in cash so I can could into an ATM and transfer that money to my credit card. Then there times where I am making a little more than I used to and I feel like I am living like Prince George. In almost all cases I add up my annual income and realize that I’m still just a little over the poverty line.

Choosing a life as an artist is particularly tough on finances. Everyone is competitive, and the amount of work you have to produce before you can even begin thinking about earning money is overwhelming. Writing jobs require sample packages, acting agencies require demo reels and resumes, film grant eligibility is based on having work already publicly exhibited. Getting to the place where you can maybe get paid takes a lot. More importantly, it takes time. So rarely do we talk about the time that is necessary to dedicate to making art.

Putting in the time isn’t really a problem per se; in fact I would prefer to. If I could spend my days writing at home or working on a film set, I’d be at my happiest. It’s the fact that balancing art while simultaneously trying to keep your head above water financially is a constant balancing act. It feels like I’m walking on a tightrope, and I’m a clumsy mess (and yes, I am listening to The Greatest Showman soundtrack while writing this, thank you for noticing the circus metaphor).

For most of my adult life, I have struggled with wanting to focus on art, while also trying to ensure that my income increased every year. Because more money is status, and the older I get, the more status I’m allegedly supposed to have. In your early 20s, living in a house with five roommates and spending a winter day in a coffee shop so you don’t have to turn on your heat seems almost charming (I’ve never personally done that but I know people who have). In your 30s, you are expected to be a “proper adult”. If you aren’t sharing a home with a spouse, you should be on your own, and most definitely be working toward owning. You should also be able to afford to eat organic. It’s called Forever 21 not Forever 31, after all (I sit here at me desk at 32, wearing head-to-toe Forever 21 by the way). When you’re an artist, you can get away with having less as long as you can bring up several projects you’re working on during a dinner party. Just keep your fingers crossed that no one asks you where they can view your short films,

The struggle to have enough money to help me feel like an adult yet still work on becoming a writing, acting, directing, and producing sensation has led me to several phases of my professional life. For a while, I would work contract jobs and tell myself that I would work on my craft in my off time. Instead, I would get a contract that would occupy all of my focus and energy and when it ended, I would spend all of my now free time looking for the next contract, leaving no time to create. So then I decided that I would go for stability and get a full time job, not worry about finances, and work on weekends and evenings (looking for this type of job was its own kind of nightmarish full-time job, by the way). Well, once I actually landed something, it turned out that I absolutely hated the 9 - 5 life (no matter how many times I thought of sweet angel Dolly Parton), and I was too tired to actually work on anything creative once I got home. In fact, I had less spare time because I was dreaming of being in bed by 9pm. I had money and I was miserable. So I went back to part time work, and was back at the start, stressing over not having enough money. So I got a second part time job. I was working 6 days a week, and while I was making more money than usual, I had virtually made no progress with the career I actually wanted. So I quit the part time job I loathed, and used my new free time to try laser focus on art.

Which brings me to present day. I’ve never been more focused on creating and I am simultaneously losing sleep over the fact that I am barely covering my basic life expenses. I feel fulfilled during the days (and some evenings) that I am writing, editing, and filming. Then I realize that I probably can’t afford that celebratory glass of wine I want to commemorate a job well done.

So how exactly can someone balance working toward their aspirations while meeting their financial standards? And yes, I realize I am asking this like I’m Carrie Bradshaw (even though I’m so obviously a Miranda).

I remember vividly one day in my mid-20s when I was working at a temp job, and a woman I had never met before said to me “You can have everything in life, you just won’t have it all at the same time” (moments after she said this, she vanished and I never saw her again). I didn’t love hearing that at the time because I wanted to believe in the glamour that came with whatever “having it all!” was supposed to mean. Now I think it might be the wisest thing ever said to me (if I was to find out that the 50 something year old woman with a great outfit dropping deep life lessons never really existed and was just a figment of my imagination, I would maybe believe you). Because the idea of “having it all!” is really an end game, but no one really goes into the specifics of what the process really entails.

Right now, it appears that while one area of life thrives, others fall apart. If you’re trying to focus your energy into building a career as an artist, your finances might take a hit. If you want to focus on your career in general, you might also have a hard time having a personal life. If you are in a new relationship, or do something crazy like have a kid (I think this is something people my age do - I’ll research that later), that will probably take up a lot of your time, and a lot of things like work will probably seem a little less important. And that’s okay. Some annoying truths about life include the fact that there is only 24 hours in a day, our attention spans wander constantly throughout our work days, and our bodies crash if we do not get sleep (while at 23 I would excite myself with the idea of only needing 5 hours of sleep, I now at 32, do not function well with less than 7 not just mentally but physically, in the form of bags that are so heavy they look like they’re weighted to the ground).

This essay isn’t a declaration or an answer. I don’t have a mantra I repeat in my mirror to manifest my dreams (no shade if you do!). Right now, I’m forcing myself to weigh what is more important to me, and trying to focus on what matters. For me, that is my art and trying to turn it into a career. I still want to be able to buy nice things, I still want to meet a nice guy to date, I still want to travel the world. If this (maybe imaginary) woman’s words from the temp job are to be believed, we should stop talking about “having it all!”, and maybe just focus on what we have right now and try our hardest to be happy with it. I think it’s also important that we talk about these struggles. There is nothing worse than feeling like there is something wrong with you for not being able to juggle so many things at once. So yes, I’m struggling with all of this. If you are too, you’re not alone.

I’d say we should commiserate over a drink but I’m currently broke.


DVD Collections Made Dating Easier

BY: JASON RAYNER

Yep. That's my actual movie collection. And a few books, too. Displayed PROUDLY.

Yep. That's my actual movie collection. And a few books, too. Displayed PROUDLY.

Remember having a movie collection? Whether it be VHS (90s represent!), DVDs, or Blu Ray, there was a time when most people had a sizeable movie collection of films they not only owned but also displayed prominently in their living rooms. However, with the rise of Netflix and every other streaming service out there, collections stopped being added to, and much like CDs, DVDs and Blu-Rays are now seen as a marker of the past.

I, however am one of the few people who still proudly displays my personal library in my living room (see that photo - that's my collection!). And I have to be honest, I’m mourning (not a hyperbole, seriously) the days everyone had their collections proudly on display. Because looking at someone’s movie collection was not only an easy point of conversation on what kind of taste someone has. This is great for most social interactions, but was perhaps the most helpful of all for the toughest of social interactions, dating.

One of my favourite quotes ever comes from John Waters. He says, “If you go home with somebody, and they don’t have books, don’t fuck ‘em!”. Now, as someone who reads voraciously, but has a bank account that could be described at its kindest as slim, I don’t quite have the money for books and films. And since certain universities refer to film as the “literature of our time” (seriously), I’ve decided to extend this sentiment to film collections.

The standard film collection used to feature some key staples of the 90s - Titanic, Jurassic Park, and for most of the men that I dated (I can only speak of dating queer dudes), Mean Girls and The Devil Wears Prada (all of which have been in my collection at some time. I also want to take a moment to sidebar and reminisce about how my copy of Titanic was on a 2-tape VHS. Remember that? The movie was too long for one tape!). Scrolling through a collection would let me know if my future potential love of my life had depth - hopefully in between the staples there would be the odd indie like Before Sunset, or Lost in Translation, or an indie starring Nicole Kidman. This told me that while they liked things that were popular, they were also open to something a little different and artistic. Alternatively, if my date only had movies from the Criterion Collection I would worry about pretension. The outlier of Clueless or Sister Act in their collection was soothing because it meant that I was about to date someone who could also have some fun, even while being very serious about film as an artistic medium. If they owned a copy of Romy & Michele’s High School Reunion, I knew I had hit the jackpot because I was understood on a fundamental level.

Film collections, just like a music or book collection, say something about how we like to spend our time. They also give an insight on interests - someone with a wide range of Holocaust documentaries is fairly likely to be a history buff, someone with tons of horror films probably loves an equal mix of camp and is a bit of a thrill seeker, and someone who owns a 30 Rock box set understands my sense of humour. Film collections are also almost always displayed proudly either by a TV or in the living room.

It’s also a great conversation starter without having to ask a series of questions. This is essential when starting to date someone because there is only ask so many “and where did you live before you came to Toronto?” style-conversation starters before it feels like an interrogation. Loving the same movie can tell you a lot about what makes someone laugh and their sense of humour, what shakes them to their emotional core, and yes, if they are smart and can handle films with challenging or subtle plots (I’ve definitely had my fair share of guys talk about the glamour of Breakfast at Tiffany’s only to realize that they probably haven’t seen it and only bought the DVD because of the iconic imagery from the film). I also loved the idea of discovery that can com through browsing a film collection. I love hearing someone enthusiastically boast about a film I may not have seen.  If a potential lover tells me I absolutely must see The Tourist because it’s a beautiful love story, I’ll know that my idea of romance might not be in line with theirs (yes, this happened). If someone tells me that Best in Show is the funniest movie they’ve ever seen, I can fantasize our future together doing a Jennifer Coolidge/Jane Lynch couples costume for Halloween.

There were, of course, people who didn’t ever have movie collections. But I’m a film actor, film director, screenwriter, and film producer. Film is obviously a big deal to me. If you haven’t heard of Greta Gerwig we probably won’t have that much in common anyway.

Obviously you can’t (entirely) judge someone just by their film tastes. And just like music, we still are sharing art with others. In fact, we probably share more with people because everything is so much more accessible. But there was something about running through your hands of a DVD collection feeling like you were getting the sneakiest sneak peak at a part of someone’s personality without having to do too much prying. It also confirmed the general rule to avoid people who own copies of Boondock Saints.