Nasty, nasty boys, let me see your body groove. — Janet Jackson, “Nasty”
Lester Nygaard |
There has to be a
word for it. And if there isn’t, we should scour world’s languages over to
invent one. Because it’s legit. I remember how I felt in the moment I fell for
Shane Vendrell, sometime around season two of The Shield, and my heart just started pounding, and I thought, “He
is so fine that I am going to literally
die from how fine he is.” Then I discovered he was the cast member with the
last name Goggins and thought “Well,
Mrs. Elizabeth Goggins doesn’t sound that
weird….” But through all of it—through the casual racism and the grenade
throwing, the violence and the threats, Shane was my One True Love, right to
the end. I was there for all of it.
And I thought
maybe it was a one-off thing. Nope. A whole series of trash boys followed.
Jimmy McGill on Better Call Saul.
Lester Nygaard on Fargo. Boyd Crowder
on Justified, and on and on and on.
There’s one in every series.
I am not really
like this. My husband is a well-regarded figure in our community. He is honest
and handsome, a sweet man who buys me Donald Fagen records for Christmas. I
have never once wanted to date a “bad boy;” in high school and college I
happily dated a series of nerds, guys who listened to Billy Joel or watched
anime or went to ren faires. I have always been attracted to nice boys. I am a
feminist. I demand respect, Ms. Cudmore if you’re nasty.
Shane Vendrell |
But I confessed
this terrible feeling to my other girlfriends and, as it turns out, they all had their own trash boys. Caleb
on Bates Motel. Gus Halper as Erik
Menendez. Jax on Sons of Anarchy.
They’re the first entry on a game of F•ck/Marry/Kill, but they are down for a good time. And so what if
they impregnated their sister or murdered their parents or take sleezy career
shortcuts? We love them just the same.
To men, these
characters often play as a sort of justification for all their weak impulses.
Who hasn’t felt like they’re misunderstood in their work or by their spouse,
believed they deserved more, that they had earned
what they’d stolen? It’s an outlet, a
fantasy that they could get away with being something other than the common
human we are all guilty of being.
But to women, they
are someone in need of love, of fixing, of understanding,
then maybe they wouldn’t do such terrible things. There’s a certain power, at
least to me, in loving these sorts of characters. We could keep their secrets.
We could help bury the bodies. We are bold and trustworthy broads, and no man
would ever think of double-crossing us. We can hold our own in a gunfight or a
car chase.
It’s dangerous
thinking, in real life, to imagine that you are responsible for fixing someone.
But in film and fiction, it’s an addictive thrill. And a good writer knows
this. A good writer knows how to make a man desirable and repulsive all at the
same time, give him something the audience recognizes as a nearly-palpable need
and then twist that into something selfish, the push and pull with the
audience. It is almost erotic when done right.
Crime fiction
thrives on nasty boys. But a good writer can make even the worst of them
somehow charming, to keep the reader turning the page, breathless and, just
maybe, slightly in love.
And while you’re
working on that, I’ll be trying to create a new word for that
stupid-twisted-love feeling. I’ve got another season of Fargo to get through.