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Let's talk (and laugh) about sex: Comics confess bedroom horror tales
Let's talk (and laugh) about sex: Comics confess bedroom horror tales

The Herald Scotland

time5 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • The Herald Scotland

Let's talk (and laugh) about sex: Comics confess bedroom horror tales

Be warned, these are comedians talking, so there will obviously be some rather adult content ahead in this week's Big Read. Stop now if you think you're likely to be offended... Hal Cruttenden When discussing dating in the digital age, many roll their eyes and say it's far too depressing and no way to find real love. I admit that I am yet to find lasting love on the apps, but they helped turn me from a man who felt rejected, unconfident and overweight – into a man who felt accepted, attractive and overweight. (Image: Steve Ullathorne) Dating apps transported me into the most exciting time of my middle-aged life. It's hard to underestimate what being left, after 21 years of marriage, does to you. The person I felt closest to, my best friend – although I was never her best friend, that was Lisa – no longer wanted to make a life with me and didn't find me attractive any more. It took me about a year to discover that there were women out there, who'd been through the mill like myself, and had reached such a low point that they also found me attractive. I've been on and Bumble. Bumble was definitely the favourite. It's where women make the first move so you can be sure that when you're talking to someone you're not bothering a woman who's not interested. A straight man's experience on apps is far less traumatic than a straight woman's because straight women have to deal with the idiocy, the emotional immaturity and sometimes the downright creepiness of straight men. Virtually every woman I've met has been lovely and, most importantly, sane. There are still far too many blokes sending unsolicited d**k pics and starting their conversation with 'what do you like in bed'? That's a conversation you shouldn't be having until at least the first coffee. If you're embarking on apps for the first time, please remember that originality is what grabs people's attention. Avoid these cliches: • 'I'm a glass-half-full type of person!' That's an immediate swipe left for me. It sounds like you're trying too hard to look happy, which probably means you're not. • 'I'm looking for a partner in crime.' Who are you? Rosemary West? • 'I'm equally at home in a little black dress and heels as I am in walking boots.' To this one I wrote 'Me too!' And she blocked me Hal Cruttenden's new stand-up show Can Dish It Out But Can't Take It will be at the Pleasance Courtyard Cabaret Bar at 9.30pm throughout the Fringe Ria Lina I'VE been single for three years, but still live with my ex-husband, which really streamlines the question 'what are you looking for' The answer is: a mortgage. TLDR* I got married while I was at uni to a man in his 40s – because I believe in learning the hard way. Fast-forward two decades: we share children, a cost of living crisis and, therefore, a flat. (Image: Ria Lina (Picture: Steve Ullathorne)) But I'm finally back out there, if by 'out there' you mean there exists a dating profile of my face, my preference for pineapple on pizza, and three truths I jokingly pretend are two truths and a lie. JK** they're all true, 'cos I'm just that quirky and amazing. Unfortunately, modern dating isn't about connection, it's about branding. The apps want me to distil my essence into six photos, one punchline, and a job title that sounds non-threatening but still implies I can pay for half the meal. I'm a stand-up comedian, which is a red flag for anyone looking for emotional stability, so instead I say 'journalist'. It serves for feisty and intelligent, but minus the if-we-date-I-will-turn-you-into-publicly-accessible-art-on-social-media vibe that can be such a turn-off to delicate men. Unsurprisingly, I struggle with online dating. I'm half Filipina, half-German, which makes me 'vaguely Asian' and far too ethnically ambiguous for the algorithm. It thinks I'm an AI-generated stock photo and keeps asking me to replace it with one of my own. Most of my matches are men who assume I'm Western enough for their tastes, but ethnic enough to take home to their first-generation traditional mothers. What a shock their mothers would get if they found out I'm more educated than their sons, earn more money, and have already had all my children. Sorry Auntie! If I do go on an actual date, do I tell them this date or the next that I still live with my ex? Although full disclosure: I have yet to get to a second date. The last guy I met from an app talked so much about himself I never even got the chance to tell him my real name… Ria Lina's new stand-up show Riabellion will be at the Monkey Barrel Cabaret Voltaire at 2.25pm throughout the Fringe Tiff Stevenson AS a fortysomething woman who was with my husband 15 years before we got married, you may as well ask me about dating in the Neolithic era. I do, however, consider myself an enthusiastic spectator of this brutal sport. A world of excruciating descriptions of hobbies for people who will never read them. (Image: Tiff Stevenson (Picture: Steve Ullathorne)) I was fascinated to know that my friend swiped left while on the toilet. Literally rejecting men as she took a dump. Maybe that's evening out the score a bit? It's generally tougher for women out there, even if Bumble has women in the lead. I was last dating in an era when there were a few dating websites. In fact, my husband cancelled a date on because we got together. Then there was also OKCupid and Plenty of Fish but I think with global warming and super-trawlers, all of a sudden there weren't that many fish any more. To be honest I don't know how I'd cope as a woman in my 40s on a looks-based app where men in their 50s want to date twentysomethings. I think they are now developing apps for older, single people like OurTime. I've even heard they are thinking of doing middle-aged Love Island. I'm keen to see how that pans out – people refusing to drink because their indigestion is playing up. 'Good on paper' will just mean everyone showing their prescriptions. I'm from the era of mix tapes, sometimes with personalised recordings thrown in between songs. An era where you had to split the bill in the moment because you couldn't PayPal it later. If you liked them there was no FaceTime – it was text or phone or, worse, ringing a house phone and talking to a questionable flatmate. What I'd love for young people to do now is experience true love like my generation of millennials: bang someone at work after getting drunk at the office party, then transition into a relationship because someone has reported you to HR. Ahhh romance. Tiff Stevenson's new stand-up show Post Coital will be at the Monkey Barrel Hive 1 at 2.50pm throughout the Fringe Read more Neil Mackay: English nationalism will be the death of the union Neil Mackay: Labour is a psychopathic government that's just as bad as the Tories Neil Mackay: For some she'll always be guilty simply of being Nicola Sturgeon Neil Mackay: We're not an island of strangers. But I'm now a stranger in my own land Laurie Magers I MET my convict ex on a dating app. Of course I did, I love dating apps. I know they don't have the most sparkling reputation, but I love them. I love how they gamify dating. I love how they gather all the nearby singles into convenient little boxes for me to thumb through at my leisure. I love that there are tons of different apps to suit the needs of any sort of dater, or my mood at any given moment. (Image: Tiff Stevenson (Picture: Steve Ullathorne)) For the past 15 years, I've met all my partners online. From one-time hook-ups to casual arrangements to long-term relationships. Dating apps have always provided. I used a wide variety of apps. I've had paid accounts on serious dating sites like swiped through hundreds of profiles on Tinder, and looked for other women on Her. Just like IRL*** dating, sometimes I would hit and sometimes I would miss. I should also mention that I am admittedly and undoubtedly a full-blown love addict. But there was one app I knew I could always open and secure a date. Plenty of Fish. It was like the discount store of dating apps. Look, I don't know that my experience is universal, maybe I just got really unlucky, but every single person I met through POF was a disaster. An unemployed video game addict who lived in his mom's detached garage. Dated him for months. A woman who lied about her age and forced me to fold her laundry. And my ex. A violent multi-felon. He messaged me on POF and, as I always did, I asked to meet up immediately at a bar. 'I can't leave the house after nine,' he wrote. 'I have an ankle monitor. I'm on parole.' At the time, that was the sexiest text I'd ever read. Four months into dating, he got locked up again and I stayed with him for two years of his incarceration. This probably wasn't the best choice. But I got a wild story and a great solo show out of it, and I have Plenty of Fish to thank. Do You Accept These Charges? will be at the Pleasance Courtyard Below at 3.10pm throughout the Fringe Aideen McQueen With online dating, the biggest cliches are really good advice. 'Be yourself' is the main thing I've learned over the years. I know that sounds more clichéd than someone saying, 'No sugar for me, I'm sweet enough as it is!' – but it works. I treated it all like an audition: my profile was a beige smoothie of generic hobbies like hiking, travel and the gym. I laughed at everyone's jokes like a Japanese schoolgirl, was offensive to no-one and appealing to almost as few. But bland doesn't win hearts. You have to be honest about your weirdness. (Image: Aideen McQueen (Picture: Steve Ullathorne)) If you hate dogs, say it. If you grow your toenails into tiny claws, own it. Your tribe will follow. I used to write that I was a 'social drinker', even though I'm a recovering alcoholic. I didn't want to 'scare people off'. Now my profile says: 'Just because I don't drink doesn't mean I can't make mistakes.' And you know what? That one line has worked wonders. The same applies to photos. I used to have super-flattering ones without a freckle in sight and more filters than a Brita factory. But now I've learned to use photos that reflect how I actually look, and embrace my flaws. If you're curvy, stop hiding behind weird angles or top-down shots. Embrace it. Show your body as it really is. Sure, some guys won't like it, but who cares? The ones who do like it are the ones you actually want to meet. I spent years trying to shrink myself into someone else's ideal. Now I just show up as me. I tried everything to meet a man. All the apps, online dating coaches, even a posh gym. I went on so many blind dates the British Guide Dog Association got in touch. But I overlooked one crucial thing: I wasn't being nice to men. Honestly, men can start to feel like the enemy after a while. I remember going on a date with someone I wasn't even sure I liked – because I hadn't been honest in my profile – and my attitude was awful. Defensive, snarky, impatient. So now I ask myself: 'Would I say that to a friend?' If the answer is no, I don't say it to a man either. Aideen's theatre show Waiting For Texto will be at the Gilded Balloon Patter House Nip at 2.20pm throughout the Fringe Britt Migs Could you fall in love with a sex bot on Instagram? My ex-husband did. It cost him $700 in iTunes gift cards. It cost me our marriage. They're not fearmongering when they say AI is coming for all of our jobs. AI took my job of 'wife'. Social media blurs the lines between what's real and what we want to be real. Now add AI into the mix, and this becomes a cautionary tale. (Image: Britt Migs (Picture: Dev Bowman)) How is a man supposed to properly cheat on his wife when he can't tell which of the beautiful women in his DMs are sentient? Hint: if she says 'big boob sexy girl here for you' keep scrolling. In this new digital age of dating, we have to be increasingly more careful – with our hearts and bank routing numbers – lest we make the same mistakes as my ex. No surprise, I was digital dating's number one hater, but I still couldn't avoid it. Shortly after this Insta-cheating scandal, I was thrust back into the world of online flirting via eager likes, thirst traps, and story stalking. I quickly regretted making it clear online that I was single again, as my DMs were promptly flooded with strange men and even stranger requests. My fellow ladies know that for every DM a man receives from a bot, there's a very real man sending a DM to us that says 'send feet pic'. But lo and behold, what ended my marriage – and perpetuated the creepy messages I received – also gifted me the love of my life. I stumbled across the Instagram profile of another comic who quickly became my online crush. Funny? A certified hottie? Immediate follow. They were queer, and so was I – I just hadn't made that clear enough on social media yet. That's right, the 'G' in LGBTQ+ stands for 'Got Divorced'. We laid the groundwork by exchanging likes on each other's photos until the tension built up so big it could no longer be contained by the Cloud. Finally, I received a DM I actually wanted to read: 'Hey, are you queer?' Britt Migs's debut stand-up show Dolphin Mode will be at the Underbelly Buttercup on George Square throughout the Fringe Ismael Loutfi I'M 32 and I've been divorced twice. I got married the first time when I was 17, to a classmate in my Senior Year. It was a Sharia marriage, meaning there were no legal documents involved, but the Muslim community in my hometown viewed it as legitimate, as did I. The marriage only lasted six months. One day, my wife called me while she was at summer camp and told me she didn't want a husband – she wanted a boyfriend. So, we ended the marriage and broke up. (Image: Ismael Loutfi (Picture: Mandee Johnson)) That phone call was the only tangible impact that technology had on our relationship, and its effect was to end the thing. I met my second wife on Facebook, and the marriage lasted three years. So, based on my own experience, it would seem meeting online works better than meeting in person. But I know this isn't the case… I'm currently on two dating apps: Salaams, for Muslims trying to get married; and Hinge, for non-Muslims trying to be in a situationship for two weeks. I regularly go through the ritual of downloading these apps and then deleting them several months later, as many people do. The initial hit of seeing hundreds of women all trying their best to be their sexiest is alluring, but the facade quickly fades. Much has been said about the gamification of online dating, but the apps aren't a game, they're a cheat to the game that dating already is. As anyone who's gamed knows, after you start using cheats and hacks, the game itself loses that very antagonistic value that makes it fun in the first place. You begin to see the finiteness of the world you're playing in and experience a sense of dread that you're wasting your time. So, too, does online dating fill the user with a sense of dread. What at first appears as a limitless field of potential lovers quickly transforms into a fixed set of personality types, quirks, and catchphrases. What does 'let's build an empire together' actually mean? You begin to see the digitised walls around you, and the obviousness of how limiting, rather than freeing, the framework of online dating fundamentally is. And then you flush the toilet. Ismael Loutfi's stand-up hour Heavenly Baba will be at the Assembly George Square Studio 5 at 6pm throughout the Fringe Mary O'Connell I LOVE being consumed by a new crush. It's so nice having someone else live in my brain for a bit. It's like a holiday from your own thoughts. 'Move in shirtless man on bike from the park. See how you like staying there. Give me a break.' (Image: Mary O'Connell (Picture: Rachel Sherlock)) I'm actually really good at dating – if I don't like you straight away. Correction, if I don't get obsessed with you, I'm funny, charming, exciting and a bit aloof. However, if I get infatuated with you, I will still be all those things on the surface. But underneath I am googling how to make your star sign obsessed with me; wearing my perfume in an arguably manipulative way; and looking at when you were last online on WhatsApp, judging what time you go to bed, and making plans on how to make your sleep schedule more aligned to mine. It's easy to be infuriated because you know where everyone is at all times. Here you are at the beach not replying to my text, at the coffee shop not replying to my text, at a funeral not replying to my text. Some people are so insensitive. I would never stoop so low as to watch any of my love interest's Instagram stories, I do have some pride. But I will meticulously sift through every name of who's watched my IG**** stories in order to find said lovers. Smirking, as I spot their names: 'These losers are obsessed with me.' I know I may seem intense, but allow me, I'm a romantic, and even worse I'm in the arts. I pride myself in being able to get over crushes quickly. It's savage really, considering all I'd had planned for them in my head. Most of them didn't even know we were getting married. I love a bit of chaos. We've had hot girl summer, brat summer – how about 'messy-should've-worked-it-out-in-therapy summer'? I go a bit crazy if I'm not getting attention from someone who wants to bang me. It is a problem and I'm not working on it. Mary O'Connell's stand-up hour Dilly Dally will be at the Pleasance Courtyard Attic at 7.15pm throughout the Fringe Dylan Adler I WAS fully out of the closet when I arrived in New York City for college in 2014 and was ready to start dating and kissing boys. My first official date was through Tinder and I was incredibly nervous. I took 45 minutes styling my hair. The date was fun but didn't lead to anything more. The first time I lost my virginity was about one year later with someone I met on Tinder. He was a 25-year-old Vietnamese gay. The experience was fun and we still keep in contact and run into each other a lot because the gay Asian world is very small. (Image: Dylan Adler (Picture: Kim Newmoney)) Afterwards, I started using Grindr which is exclusively for sex. I have also used it to promote my comedy shows to horny gays who have nothing to do that night. After a while I deleted Grindr out of frustration with how fleeting my experiences felt. In 2022, I met my first boyfriend in person on the dance floor of a gay bar in NYC. Vintage! I asked him if he wanted to dance and he said 'no'. I went home with my tail between my legs, but the next day I got a DM***** from someone on Twitter saying: 'Sorry about last night, I was with my cousin and didn't want to make it weird. Let's get dinner.' Then he became my first boyfriend. If not for Twitter, that never would've happened. I'm now single and back on Grindr being very slutty. Grindr is fun while touring comedy on the road because you get to have sex with people that you may never see again. So chic! I used Grindr while opening for Atsuko Okatsuka in Europe this February. European boys are really something else. Ten out of 10. For safety, whenever I went on a hook-up, I would share my location with Atsuko and one time she saw that I was in a river in Zurich, Switzerland. I was just taking a walk by a river after a fun hook-up, but she was understandably very scared. Dylan Adler's comedy show Haus Of Dylan will be at the Pleasance Courtyard Beside throughout the Fringe Seaton Smith Dating apps. Why do you need them? Because we are busy people who don't have the time to find the perfect person outside of our jobs, local bar, or walking the streets sobbing. If you are searching for love – the internet has got you. Convenient love. Special delivered love. Like Amazon Prime love. I know there are levels to it. Tinder is for hook-ups. Hinge is for a relationship. Bumble is for BDSM submissives. But how do you navigate it? How do you find success? How do you avoid being swiped to the left like a booger on a T-shirt? (Image: Seaton Smith (Picture: Mindy Tucker)) There was a time I used to think it was the land of milk and honey. But then I realised that it's a lot of work. Sitting there swiping over and over like I'm playing bingo. Then, when you finally get a match, the game is to try to talk informally via message. But I'm so tired by the time I get the match I forget that I am supposed to talk. I don't even care. And to be honest I have made mistakes myself on dating apps. I've said dumb things like 'Hi', ''Hello', or 'What's up' and 'How are you doing?'. All toxic things, according to women ranting on Instagram. I met one girl who had a middle room with no windows. It was like having sex in an oven. I matched with a woman who didn't look like her pictures and I felt no chemistry and I insulted her country. She was from Sydney, and I told her a story of my first day visiting Australia where I saw a Trump rally across the street from my hotel. There were only five people on the corner but they were yelling something about immigrants. And I was watching them in awe… until I realised I was an immigrant. One of the local police told me 'everything is gonna be okay' and looked embarrassed. Anyways, the Australian date hated that story. Probably my biggest mistake was on OkCupid, when I met and moved in with a woman after three weeks. But it was a brief love affair… that lasted five years. Thankfully, dating apps are figuring out more and more ways to be helpful. They are offering you more access for more money, adding status and perks if you pay more and more. Eventually, there will be one financial solution that is inevitable… hooker apps. Seaton Smith's stand up show Trauma Bonding will be at the Pleasance Courtyard Bunker 3 throughout the Fringe GUIDE TO DIGITAL LINGO In case you're not up to speed when it comes to online chat, here's an explanation of some of the slang used by the comics *TLDR: too long, didn't read **JK: just kidding ***IRL: in real life ****IG: Instagram *****DM: Direct Message TICKETS FOR ALL SHOWS ARE AVAILABLE AT

'I fell in love with a violent criminal': 5 comedians on dating
'I fell in love with a violent criminal': 5 comedians on dating

The Herald Scotland

time09-07-2025

  • Entertainment
  • The Herald Scotland

'I fell in love with a violent criminal': 5 comedians on dating

Alongside their shows, Hal Cruttenden, Laurie Magers, and Mary O'Connell will all be gracing the stage. Tickets for all these shows can be bought at Below is a list of comedic shows about dating at the Edinburgh Fringe. Britt Migs Britt, from New York, got caught up in a whirlwind of cheating scandals, including her ex-husband getting extorted by an Instagram sex bot. After her divorce, she was chased by various men in her DMs, which included some disturbing experiences. Britt Migs (Image: Dev Bowman) However, these mismatches eventually led her to appreciate her new queer life. Britt will be sharing this rollercoaster journey in her debut stand-up show "Dolphin Mode" at the Underbelly Buttercup on George Square for the entire fringe. Hal Cruttenden Hal discussed in his last show how his wife left him for a firearms officer after 20 years of marriage. Now, he's dating again, sometimes more passionately but always with the lights off. Hal Cruttenden (Image: Steve Ullathorne) Despite nearly 25 years passing since he was last "on the scene," Hal admits his personality has not changed much since his 20s. Hal will be performing his new stand-up show "Can Dish It Out But Can't Take It" at the Pleasance Courtyard Cabaret Bar at 9.30 pm for the entire fringe. Waiting for Texto Waiting for Texto stars comedian Aideen McQueen. It's been described as "Bridget Jones meets Baby Reindeer", offering a fresh, hilarious take on the trials and tribulations of modern dating. Aideen McQueen (Image: Steve Ullathorne) From real-time SMS exchanges to unexpected twists, the play is a comedic insight into love, texting, and the quest for purpose. Waiting For Texto is set to be performed at the Gilded Balloon Patter House Nip at 2:20pm for the entire fringe. Do You Accept These Charges? After meeting her boyfriend Evan on a dating app, Laurie Magers found herself on a journey into the complexities of love addiction, physical abuse, and the American prison system. Despite Evan's appalling crimes and re-incarceration, Laurie stuck with him, and her show recounts the events of their toxic love story, navigating both pre- and post-incarceration eras. Laurie Magers (Image: Kim Newmoney) The real-life relationship with a man behind bars is reflected upon in the show. Do You Accept These Charges? will be staged in the Pleasance Courtyard Below at 3:10 pm throughout August. Mary O' Connell Living with her parents and dating, Mary brings her experiences into her second stand-up hour. The show will focus on Mary's chosen one, her boyfriend, and their life together under the same roof as her family for six months before they can finally move into their own flat. Mary O'Connell (Image: Rachel Sherlock) It's about the exposure and reality of co-living, where her boyfriend viewed her family from a new perspective, making Mary question its normalcy. Mary's "Dilly Dally" will be performed at the Pleasance Courtyard Attic at 7:15 pm throughout the festival.

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