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Notes -
Right, this is influenced by my own demographics, but most of my experience of people complaining about AGRs takes the form of young men complaining about old men stealing all the attractive young women (and, to a lesser extent, older men who don't have the game to attract younger women and now resent the fact they seem to have lost out on both ends). I certainly remember being frustrated about my female classmates dating 30-year-old obvious losers in high school and college.
I also see a lot of older women complaining about age gaps with romantic leads in movies, but I'm not sure if that's more a personal resentment thing or a "representation in media" thing.
I'm somewhat more sympathetic to the "representation in media" complaint here, but it actually slightly cuts against the complaint about real AGRs. The problem is that the fictional relationships are rarely actually being depicted as AGRs. A fifty-year-old actor is playing a Generic-Age Man and a twenty-year-old actress is playing a Generic-Age Woman. If the script was actually trying to portray an AGR - which it may well be likelier to do if AGRs were more culturally accepted - the implications would be quite different.
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