Dating Magazine

Ruby and Alex

By The Guyliner @theguyliner

Imagine being 24, decent-looking, with your future lying ahead of you, exciting and mysterious and certain to contain lots of utility bills and phone calls to customer services about an irregularity with your gas meter. Maybe you don't need to imagine, maybe, for some inexplicable reason, you are still young enough to pogo up and down to music in Converse and not worry about your knees the next day. if so, what on earth are you doing reading a middle-aged man coming up with increasingly laboured quips and metaphors on a Saturday morning? Shouldn't you be off eating pastry like you've never even heard the word 'carbs' or looking into mirrors, pulling at the skin on your face and marvelling at the fact that it doesn't take an industrial winch and several multi-denominational prayers to get it to snap back into place? Well, whoever you are, whatever your age, I am glad you are here. There doesn't seem to be much to look forward to at the moment but all we can do is go forward and help bring others along with us. The only way to deal with such uncertainty and blankness is to stare right into it and make sure it knows you are watching.

Anyway if you're wondering what's brought on yet another mini existential crisis it's the young, happy and good-looking faces of our two Blind Daters this morning. Yes, I'm afraid on first glance they do appear to be heterosexuals but remember "love is love" and whatever these people like to get up to in the privacy of their badly decorated shrines to IKEA's least fashion-forward home interiors ideas is up to them. Perhaps a lack of cynicism will do us good for once. Anyway, they are Ruby, who is 24 and a senior account manager - for whom, it does not say. Swatch watches? Nuclear weapons? Cola-flavoured Maoam? We'll never know. And we have Alex, also 24, who is a PR account manager. All these accounts that need managing - what a chaotic little world we seem to live in. No telling who Alex does PR for but those jeans appear to be stonewashed so I'm guessing he's about to relaunch the year 1984 with a pop-up mixology hut and a line of Simon le Bon wigs?

Here they are:

Read the full version of what happened on the date in the Guardian before I take a select few of the questions and kind of waggle my hands a bit and hope it serves as entertainment.

Ruby on Alex | Alex on Ruby

She has just described a blind date. She was hoping for a blind date? Ruby, you're already going on one.

Ah, "How we met" stories. Nobody is ever interested in them, unless they're an author with a deadline looming and have been struggling with their manuscript which starts off with a couple meeting in a bookshop - she works there, he's in browsing for a limited edition of something utterly turgid which, it turns out, is actually for an elderly relative so he's NOT dull and boring after all - and is desperate for new ideas. It doesn't matter how you met unless it is PROPERLY exciting. Examples: You ran him over. You were piloting a plane and they were arrested on it for assaulting cabin crew. One of you is/was/served a quail's egg to Princess Diana. That's it. Nobody cares that you were the victims of matchmaking by a well-meaning friend who has since gone on to bang all your exes, or that you were both fighting over the last crab linguine in Balans (in 2013), or that you met on Tinder and spilled a pint over each other in All Bar One or whatever. Sorry.

Well-dressed, nice smile.

I don't think we've ever had a match in the 'first impressions' question before. They like each others' clothes, that's nice. I am going to pause briefly to take in that a 24-year-old has said a fellow 24-year-old had a "youthful glow, kind of like Peter Pan".

Right. Onward.

Naked cyclists in Brighton, Anne Hegerty, whether the ice-cream was lavender-flavoured.

No matches at all. "All fairly above board" - look, I just wanna see Ruby's birth certificate to check she's not actually in her seventies. Maybe she spent a lot of time with grandparents when she was young? Or popped a Werther's Original before she left the house?

PLEASE don't talk about past relationships and bad dating experiences on a date GOD the other person is only listening to be polite, probably.

Anne Hegerty - they watch The Chase. These people are the pensioners from Cocoon.

Possibly when Ruby was briefly impaled between the ticket barrier at Oxford Circus after I encouraged her to run through after losing her travel card.
Ruby and Alex

Okay, so playing Jessica Fletcher here, I notice an inconsistency. Ruby says her ticket "didn't work". Alex says Ruby had to "run through after losing her travel card".

So which is it? Broken or lost? Oh look, two words that perfectly describe my eternal state of mind since March.

Anyway, I am going to be kind and not accuse Ruby of being a serial fare-dodger and assume they were both so drunk on wine and romance that they didn't remember exactly what led to the crime. Also, I don't think Alex means impaled, unless this date has a very dark ending. I quite like how they are both young and getting their words jumbled up because they don't really know how to talk yet - like their vocabulary is generated by rounds of Boggle.

Regular readers will know I am AGAINST topping up the wine - it almost always comes at the wrong time and so many people (men, usually) add cold white wine to warm which leads to a very tepid experience in more ways than one. Also letting someone through the door first gets a mention: wow, gentlemen, the bar is truly on the floor. I'm guessing Ruby's exes (all called Charlie, with grace and favour flats in tumbling mansion blocks in Fulham, eternally covered in hairs from their parents' labrador) were not the chivalrous type.

NOT a euphemism, it would seem.

Ruby and Alex

No, seriously, these are all wonderful qualities to have and great compliments. GENTLEMANLY is perfect - and further proof that Ruby is indeed a holder of a free bus pass. Rubes, drop the skincare secrets - we need to know!

And, again, a great selection of compliments.

Runy has flung in this "defo" to put us off the scent - she'll be cruising by on a skateboard in a FRANKIE SAY RELAX T-shirt next.

QUIETLY, like you would creep through a door to escape, the next morning, before you're offered 'some toast' which will be overcooked and under-buttered, and a cup of tea that's not the strength you like it, served in a mug featuring the logo of a company that went bust in the mid-2010s, or a cutesy illustration and some word denoting the relationship of the recipient of the mug to the person who gave it. It's usually 'grandson', just to really hammer home the fact you spent the evening getting railed to death by some little old lady's pride and joy.
CONFIDENT, like the first 15 seconds of that walk of shame down Streatham High Road - you can do this, it's fine, you feel great - before you realise there is something stuck to your shoe (no, not loo roll) and your hangover is kicking in, and you're not sure where your wallet is, and your genitals are tingling not with excitement or a post-shag afterglow, but with a threat.
INTERESTED, like every passerby seems to be in whatever it is that's stuck to your shoe. Don't look! Don't check! Just go home and burn the shoes.

WARM, like mulled wine is for precisely three seconds before it turns into cold, gloopy, spicy spunk.
INTELLIGENT, like you felt when you added up in your head just how much change you'd get back from the mulled wine seller at that cart on the south bank, only to find that you were wrong. Were you wrong? Or were you short-changed? You've walked quite a bit away from the cart now - could you actually go back? Maybe they'd think you'd trousered some of the change and were pretending to be short-changed. Do people actually do that? Maybe the person you're with would think you were tight and you do want to make a good first impression. But... well, it was a 20. Maybe they charged you for three? Should you go back?
ENTHUSIASTIC, like the person you're with is when you say you absolutely have to go back and sort this out. "It's fine, they say, you're right to check, they shouldn't get away with it, not in these uncertain times" and then they watch you walk back to the mulled wine cart before slowly backing away and melting into the crowd, then turning to walk quickly, quicker, fast to Waterloo station, texting their ex as they march on. "It was all a mistake," they say, "I can't stop thinking about you, take me back, I have mulled wine to drink but you got custody of the microwave."

Yes, we went for a drink at a bar around the corner.

THIS IS VERY ENCOURAGING.

Ruby and Alex

I know I'm old, because I know this gif is of Barbara Stanwyck.

If it weren't for social distancing, would you have kissed?
Perhaps ...
We were somewhat lax on the social distancing at the end.

Perhaps, as we are about to head into lockdown - according to the the government's primary communication channel, the sodding PAPERS - the timing is not great for me to speculate on what may or may not have happened here but

Ruby and Alex

Believe me, Alex darling, it is quite literally one THOUSAND bonus points for not doing that. Avoid the obvious, clichéd banter - leave it to the men on comedy panel shows.

Scores are in.

Ruby and Alex

Eight? Seven 'point' five?! Are you playing it cool?! Why??? Haven't you seen... [gestures wildly in the vague direction of the rest of the world] all this?! 7.5 is almost unforgivable for a date that appears to have actually gone very well (if a little too well for the WHO's liking) and Ruby's 8 seems woefully under marked. You're not Craig Revel Horwood marking Anton du Beke's first rumba of the series, guys.

Oh, hang on:

It's certainly a possibility.

Well, I guess we'll watch this space - all two metres of it. I like them; I hope they make it work with whatever is coming next.

Stay safe. We'll get there. See you next week.

Ruby and Alex

About the review and the daters: The comments I make are based on the answers given by the participants. The Guardian chooses what to publish and usually edits answers to make the column work better on the page. Most of the things I say are merely riffing on the answers given and not judgements about the daters themselves, they seem very nice, so please be kind to them in comments, replies, and generally on social media . I will not approve nasty below-the-line comments. Daters are under no obligation to get along for our benefit, or explain why they do or don't want to see each other again.If you're one of the daters, get in touch if you want to give me your side of the story, you pair of adorable super-spreaders.

* Ruby and Alex ate at Hankies, London W1. They were photographed separately for this image. Fancy a blind date? Email [email protected]. Oyster card image source Ruby and Alex

Back to Featured Articles on Logo Paperblog