Posts Tagged ‘cougar’

Cox favours ‘Cougar Town’ name change

Wednesday, June 9th, 2010

Courteney Cox has suggested that she would like the name of her show Cougar Town to be changed.

The programme’s executive producer Bill Lawrence recently confirmed that he is considering a different title for the series as the premise has changed since the pilot.

Cox, who stars in the show as Jules, has now claimed that the current name could be misleading.

“We’ve been talking about [a name change] for a long time,” she told Access Hollywood. “I don’t know if it’s going to happen or not. I don’t know… I honestly don’t know.”

She continued: “This show is not just for women. It’s for women and men. It’s funny. It’s crazy. It’s kooky and you know it’s heartfelt and it’s all of that. So… we don’t want people to get misled by the name Cougar Town. It’s just about trying to get what the real show is about and we may do it or we may not.”

See full article on Digital Spy

Attitude to the word Cougar on About.com

Saturday, May 22nd, 2010

Although the term ‘cougar’ has become synonymous with older women who date younger men, its predatory image is neither accurate nor acceptable in the opinion of many women tagged with the label. Since there’s no similar word to describe an older man who dates younger women, many feel it’s far from complimentary. In fact, they say it is ageist, sexist, and certainly not empowering to women.

Celebrities from Demi Moore (whose husband Ashton Kutcher is 16 years her junior) to Kim Cattrall have emphatically stated, “Don’t call me a cougar!” Cattrall in particular rejects the the idea that Samantha, the iconic character she played for six seasons on Sex and the City, is a cougar, saying that some who are uncomfortable with strong women use the term to label women. As Cattrall told the celebrity news show Extra, “I don’t see anything negative about Samantha and her sexuality, sensuality and choice.”

Long before Moore or Cattrall took a public anti-cougar stand, UK artist and entrepreneur Julia Macmillan defied the label by making the domain name dontcallmeacougar.com her own. There, she started a blog supportive of women in relationships with younger men because, as she sees it, “it should be as normal for a woman to date a younger man as it always has been for a man to date or marry a younger women.”

Like many attractive and intelligent women who look younger than their years, Macmillan typically dated younger men not because she sought them out but because they had approached her and were more compatible than men her age.

When she tried online dating in 2006, she found she wasn’t connecting with the same type of men she had met in person; and those that were contacting her didn’t suit her at all.

Thinking that there had to be a better way, in 2007 she founded a UK dating website with a deliberately sassy, tongue-in-cheek name — ToyboyWarehouse.com — where members abide by one simple rule: that women date men at least a year younger, and men date women at least a year older.

Nowhere on the website is the word ‘cougar’ ever used. As Macmillan says, “It’s not empowering to women.”

She seems to have hit a nerve. Three years later, the site is so successful she’s planning to launch a US version of ToyboyWarehouse in late 2010 in the New York City area.

read the rest of the article here

The Rebound – older women and younger man yeaaaaahhh!

Wednesday, May 5th, 2010

Ground breaking movie soon to be released in the UK showing an older woman /younger man relationship that actually has a positive ending and doesn’t just show it as ‘a bit of fun’….can actually be love too!

I’m not happy to be called a cougar

Tuesday, March 30th, 2010

Screen shot 2010-03-30 at 17.22.46

I also have a younger lover, as the anonymous Guardian contributor posted recently. My husband and I don’t quite span the same 17-year age gap as she, but we do nudge past a decade, give or take a few months.

But unlike her, I detest the term cougar. Women dating younger men is not something new, but to be defined as predatory, scheming and power-hungry just because my partner is younger? Those are not the kind of boxes I’m looking to add to my resume. And the truth is, wearing the cougar badge (or choosing not to) is a feminist issue. As a mature, accomplished, and successful woman in my own right, I take exception at being defined, based on the age of the man I chose to marry. I don’t need a man to define myself, thanks all the same.

Yet more and more women are taking pride in wearing the ‘cougar’ badge, much in the way that when the ubiquitous Samantha from Sex and the City launched onto our screens, they perceived that being branded a ‘Samantha’ equalled being a liberated, out-there, challenging woman. Hindsight rather shows that trying to emulate men left many looking rather sad and more than a little superficial.

I’m delighted that more and more women are dating and celebrating their relationships with younger men, and why not, when men have been enjoying the company of younger women for so long – so long in fact, that their relationship status is largely left uncommented upon. When the age gaps of women dating younger men are also largely irrelevant in eyes of society, don’t elicit comment and the ‘C’ (cougar) word is finally dead and buried – that’s when we’ll have truly made progress.

Written by the fabulous Jo on her blog beyondcougar

So you’re thinking about dating younger men…

Friday, March 12th, 2010

jo2ndfeb081Stepping out with a younger man requires confidence. Choosing the first younger guy who comes along (because he’s better than nothing), is doomed to end in failure. You need to be in the right place mentally and emotionally to deal with a relationship of any kind, let alone one with a younger man.

Perhaps you’re recently divorced, and think a younger guy will boost your morale – and be a bit of fun.  And perhaps it will be. But stepping back onto the dating scene requires courage – particularly with a younger man. Some people will tell you the best way to recover from your past relationship is to put yourself right back out there, but unless you have taken the time to evaluate what caused the break-up of your past relationship, and have learnt the lessons that resulted from it, you’re probably better to go gently and find yourself someone with whom you share much in common to ease back in to the dating game – that person may be someone closer to your own age. Emotional baggage is a sure-fire turn-off for most men, especially for younger guys who lack the life experience to be able to relate to and empathise with the ghosts of your past.

For the rest of the article go to http://beyondcougar.wordpress.com

Call me a cougar and I’ll get my luger…

Sunday, February 28th, 2010

storyA confession: I hate cougars. I hate the word “cougar.” I hate the concept of cougars. I hate the new show “The Cougar.”

This does not mean that I hate the solitary wild cat who feasts on deer, elk and sometimes armadillos, in regions across North and South America. Nor does it mean that I hate women who have sex with younger men. What I hate is the never-ending cutesy-pie conflation of the two.

Enthusiasm for the word “cougars” as applied to women, and not simply to high school football teams or John Mellencamp, seems to have begun around the millennium, with the 2001 publication of “Cougar: A Guide for Older Women Dating Younger Men,” by Valerie Gibson. But the term caught fire in 2005, fueled by the marriage that year of then-42-year-old Demi Moore to then-27-year-old Ashton Kutcher.

Four years later we are still awash in knee-slapping, claw-bearing, never-gets-old cougar mania! Rowr!

In addition to the reality show “The Cougar,” which premieres Wednesday on TV Land, Courteney Cox-Arquette has produced and stars in a pilot for an ABC sitcom called “Cougar Town.” The independent film “Cougar Hunting,” a comedy about young men chasing older women, was prevented from shooting at the Aspen courthouse because it was deemed too racy. “Cougar: A Guide for Older Women Dating Younger Men,” was reissued in 2008, and has been joined on shelves by titles like “Cougars, Poptarts & One Night Stands: 101 Essential Wingman Tips” and “Hot Cougar Sex: Steamy Encounters With Younger Men.” There are cougar hunters. There are cougar Web sites. There is a recurring “Saturday Night Live” skit called “Cougar Den” — which always seems to star Cameron Diaz, whether or not she’s the host — in which hilariously menopausal but libidinous women act like ninnies in pursuit of Zac Efron, the Jonas Brothers and youth itself. There are also self-proclaimed professional cougars, women who are apparently just “smart, sexy, independent … and proud to be over 40,” whether or not they’re jumping over couches to grab crotches.

By Rebecca Traister read the rest on http://www.salon.com/life/feature/2009/04/15/cougars_madness

Why women hate the word ‘cougar’

Thursday, February 25th, 2010

I think the term Cougar is demeaning to women. I understand why she wouldn’t want to be called that. It strikes up an image of a horny older woman who wants to recapture her youth thru younger men. Why can’t an older woman be with a younger man because there is a mutual attraction and sometimes chemistry is timeless. Why does the woman have to be viewed as an oversexed predator.

Why my older girlfriend was the best…

Thursday, February 25th, 2010

Both of us had interesting jobs that demanded too much of our lives. She was a divorced dr. in her early 50’s. I was a free spirited mid 30’s, responsible yet bold in seeking enrichment of experiences. Never happy with younger or women my own age. Seemed like there was stress in those relationships. When I met her she was home to me because she enjoyed all I had, and she liberated me in a way no women up to my age could. It’s not for everyone. I must say I never did fit into the type of staged life everyone around me seemed to be distracted with. She freed me from it, knowing there was only our time we could get, as I enjoyed what she accomplished. And I was a man living for deep feelings and exploring time in the environment when I could escape work. We became part of each other’s landscape, until we both had to follow our work. I would have followed her if she asked, but knowing my work was important to me, she never did. She was the best for me still 12 years gone.

Taken from http://womensissues.about.com/u/ua/femalesexuality/CougarPositiveNegative.htm

Please don’t call me a cougar!

Tuesday, January 19th, 2010

Even though it is very funny!

The ad from air New Zealand, to advertise their grabaseat deals, that had to be banned from the air due to people’s complaints about the use of the term cougar….

Toyboys: a third of women in their 40s want one!

Tuesday, November 24th, 2009

Female Following on from my Evening Standard blog last week about Sam Taylor Wood, 42, and Aaron Johnson, 19 who have announced they are to be married, I think we will probably be seeing more and more marriages where the woman is significantly older. It’s no longer just a celebrity thing, it’s now going mainstream according to Parship, who have just published a new study on the changing desires of women in their 40s. According to their survey 34% of women in their 40s and 50s want to date and even marry a younger man.

This is a dramatic change from their last survey in 2005, a mere four years ago, when only 8% said they were interested in younger men. Back in 2006 when I first started thinking of launching my own dating site, it was this particular niche that I felt was not catered for. I looked around and saw that more than half my female friends had either married or were dating younger men, and from my own experience (I’ve always had younger boyfriends) I felt this was a trend that would continue to grow.

When I launched www.toyboywarehouse.com in Jan 2007 I thought to myself how are we going to get enough attractive young men on it, but to my amazement that has never been the problem. We’ve been inundated with wannabe toyboys ever since the beginning, and that includes men in their 40s, although the main demographic is between 20 and 40. The stats confirm that there has been massive growth on this side of the sexual divide too as the survey finds that 18% of men under 40 are looking to date an attractive older woman, whereas it was only 5% five years ago.

When the site went live I thought the main female demographic would be 35 – 55 and so it was in the beginning but I’m finding more and more women in their late twenties and early thirties are following the trend and choosing younger men and this is also something borne out by the survey. Now 17% of women in their thirties are looking for a younger man. Society changes when women are financially independent. The feisty, independent women of today are going to make different choices from those their mothers made. The younger men of today, often sons of liberated women, see all the advantages of the attractive older woman. Vive la difference! Go for it girls!

By Julia