prisoners. The allure of the men is not their income, for you can't earn much when you make license plates for a living. Instead, it is the men's gratitude that proves irresistible. The men are happy to have the love of these women, these smart, free women, and they focus all their thoughts, attention, and energy on their wives. The women also like the fact that their husbands' fidelity is guaranteed; the longer the inmates' sentences are, the more attractive the men become. "Peculiar as it is," Hrdy writes, "this vignette of sex-reversed claustration makes a serious point about just how little we know about female choice in breeding systems where male interests are not paramount and patrilines are not making the rules."
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Do women love older men? Do women find gray hair and wrinkles attractive on men as attractive, that is, as a fine, full head of pigmented hair and a vigorous, firm complexion? The evolutionary psychologists suggest yes. They believe that women look for the signs of maturity in men because a mature man is likely to be a comparatively wealthy and resourceful man. Of course, the thesis can't be taken too far. Desmond Morris once expressed his surprise that baldness wasn't considered a particularly attractive state. One might predict, he said, that since baldness comes with age and a man's status generally rises with age, the bald head, gleaming in the midday sun of the veldt or the fishbelly glow of a fluorescent office light, would lure the attention of every woman on the prowl for her alpha mate. But no, he admitted, there was no evidence that baldness was adaptive, nor that women admired rather than merely accepted a thinning hairline. Nevertheless, the legend of the sexy older man persists, particularly among older men. The older male moguls in Hollywood can't stop casting older male actors in roles that have them flinging about on the wide screen like elephants in musth, and the age gap between the men and their female costars gapes ever wider, leaving nothing to the female imagination but things we'd rather not imagine. Jack Nicholson, Clint Eastwood, Robert DeNiro, Al Pacino, Woody Allen: no matter how much their faces come to resemble a bassett hound's, no matter to what extenuated proportions their cartilaginous features grow, the men are portrayed as sexy, comely, frisky, desirable, to women twenty-five, thirty years their junior, to women who are themselves considered "mature" for being older than, oh, thirty.
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