Calgary Herald

Outing the online dating creeps

Instagram account airs horror stories and is ready to turn tales into a book

- JENNA BIRCH

If you’ve been online dating for more than a hot second, you’ve probably encountere­d a range of joys and horrors. On the positive side, dating apps have introduced me to some pretty great men. On the depressing side, I’ve also matched with men who have said inappropri­ate things to me, sometimes before we ever met. At worst, I’ve — briefly, thankfully — feared for my safety.

Such is the burden of being a woman, looking for connection online. Alexandra Tweten knows this well. Her popular Instagram account, Bye Felipe, outs creeps for their bad online-dating behaviours. For the unfamiliar, she posts screenshot­s submitted by women who have been harassed by men on dating apps. Propositio­ning for sex, lashing out when they’re turned down, sending pictures of the male anatomy (or requests for racy photos) and calling women a slew of names are all-too-common online-dating scenarios.

Since Bye Felipe’s creation four years ago, Tweten has amassed nearly a half-million followers.

A journalism major with a popular social media account, she’s back to her writing roots, exploring online dating and lending her best wisdom in a new Bye Felipe book — an ode to understand­ing and taking it all in stride.

Q Where did you originally get the idea for Bye Felipe?

A It was October 2014, and I was in a Facebook group for women in L.A. One woman posted a screenshot of a message she had received on OkCupid. She didn’t respond, and 12 hours later, she’d got a second message (an insulting expletive).

I thought it was funny, and I’d got messages that felt similar before. There was one guy who’d messaged me for months and months, over and over, on OkCupid. When I finally turned him down, he said, “Why would you even respond?” You learn that you can’t not respond; they freak out. But if you do respond, they also yell at you. You can’t win.

So, we had an inside joke in the Facebook group that when something like that happens, we’d say, “Bye Felipe” — which is a play on “Bye, Felicia.” I started the Instagram as a joke just for me and my friends to make fun of these guys. Two weeks later, Olga Khazan at The Atlantic found it and asked to interview me. After her article came out, it blew up from there.

Q Tell me about some of your personal online-dating horror stories. How did it compare to other women’s?

A When I first started online dating, I received a handful of hostile messages. And the first thing I thought was: Is he a stalker? Is he going to come after me? You just don’t know. It can be scary putting yourself out there on the internet. I got a lot of thank-you messages from women who don’t feel so alone in that experience now.

Q Do you think “toxic masculinit­y” plays into the Bye Felipe phenomenon? A Yes. It’s definitely related. Men hear the phrase “toxic masculinit­y” and think, “Wait, we’re not allowed to be men anymore?” That’s not what we’re saying; it’s really about redefining the social norms of what it means to be traditiona­lly masculine. Currently, “real men” aren’t generally

allowed to step outside of a very rigid set of gender roles that basically say they should be strong, dominant and unemotiona­l. Anger, violence and aggression are some of the only approved emotions men are allowed to have. They can’t be sensitive, sad or show any softer emotions. We expect men to be sexually aggressive, too, and this is a big reason that women experience so many hostile messages online. It’s ingrained in our society.

The point of Bye Felipe is that our society and culture are really broken; the evidence is that we have all these examples of men acting completely entitled, objectifyi­ng women and becoming aggressive.

Q Let’s talk about your book. How did you approach creating a book from an Instagram account?

A I got the idea for the book pretty shortly after the Instagram took off. It took me two years to finish the proposal, and then another year to write and publish it. Whenever I got submission­s, I’d put them in folders in my inbox: mansplaine­rs, fat-shamers, nice guys and so on. And then I analyzed them to see if they had anything in common to figure out what the best ways of combating them would be.

I wanted to create a handbook for how to handle any situation when you’re online dating as a woman. It ended up being an anthology of the best — or worst, I guess — Bye Felipe submission­s, a guide to the best ways to respond to trolls, a collection of funny stories from my own dating experience­s and then partly dating advice.

 ?? ANEL SALGADO ?? Alexandra Tweten is the creator of the Instagram account Bye Felipe, which has nearly 500,000 followers.
ANEL SALGADO Alexandra Tweten is the creator of the Instagram account Bye Felipe, which has nearly 500,000 followers.

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