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The Social Bonds between Highly Attractive Women and Gay Men in the Workplace

AnthonyAnderson

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The Social Bonds between Highly Attractive Women and Gay Men in the Workplace

Over the course of several months I have observed that the three most attractive women (in my estimation) at my place of employment spend a significant portion of their coffee and lunch breaks paired with a homosexual man. It got me thinking about whether this social bond served as a shield against interaction with heterosexual men. I asked Gemini AI whether there was some research to validate this hypothesis. The answer is yes (please read the AI summary quoted below):
To answer your question directly: **Yes, it functions as a highly effective social shield, but it is also a psychological "safe harbor." Here is the mechanical, evolutionary breakdown of exactly why this dynamic is so common, and why highly attractive women utilize it the most.

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## 1. The Absence of Ulterior Motives (The Safe Harbor)
In 2015, evolutionary psychology researchers (most notably Eric Russell) published landmark studies specifically analyzing why straight women form such tight bonds with gay men. The core finding comes down to a biological concept called **mating deception**.

For a highly attractive woman, almost every interaction with a straight male carries a baseline level of friction. She has to constantly run background algorithms: *"Is he being nice to me because he values my professional input, or is he feigning friendship as a covert strategy to sleep with me?"* A gay man completely neutralizes this threat. He possesses zero ulterior mating motives toward her. When she hangs out with him, she can turn off her exhausting threat-detection radar. She can be entirely herself, make jokes, and relax without the fear that her friendliness will be weaponized or misinterpreted as a sexual invitation.

## 2. The Shield Against the Male Gaze
Your instinct about it being a "shield" against straight men is also mechanically correct.
* **The Physical Barrier:** In social dynamics, the presence of *any* male in a group of women alters the approach calculus for outside men. It signals that the group is not entirely vulnerable and disrupts the standard "predatory" approach tactics some men use.
* **The Social Buffer:** If a straight man approaches the group and makes the women uncomfortable, the gay friend can easily intervene, deflect, or mock the intruder with a level of social immunity that the women might not possess themselves without being labeled "bitchy" or aggressive.
Has anybody else made the same observation?

Original research: Eric M. Russell et al. Why attractive women want gay male friends: A previously undiscovered strategy to prevent mating deception and sexual exploitation, Personality and Individual Differences, Volume 120, 2018, Pages 283-287 https://doi.org/10.1016/j.paid.2016.11.020
 
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skarsga

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No offense intended sir, this seems pretty obvious to me. And without needing ai or a journal article to validate it.
The overwhelming majority of women have faced situations where they are objectified, treated rudely based off of their looks, or assaulted by men.
 
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AnthonyAnderson

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No offense intended sir, this seems pretty obvious to me. And without needing ai or a journal article to validate it.
The overwhelming majority of women have faced situations where they are objectified, treated rudely based off of their looks, or assaulted by men.
The novel finding, according to the work cited, is that there is a positive correlation between the level of attractiveness of the woman and the likelihood of befriending a homosexual male. This also squares with my observations in the workplace.
 

mtlspacial

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Jul 26, 2025
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It makes sense, to a certain point.

But, on the flip side, I have been in workplaces where the openly gay men had the most mysogenistic attitude and disrespectful comments toward women.

Some gay men believe they have immunity from HR or getting fired, and have no filters.
 

AnthonyAnderson

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The novel finding, according to the work cited, is that there is a positive correlation between the level of attractiveness of the woman and the likelihood of befriending a homosexual male. This also squares with my observations in the workplace.
An important note here: when we talk about correlations, that does not mean than  every attractive woman will have a gay friend, or that it's not possible for a less attractice woman to have one. These are trend lines. Tendencies that are measurable. I will access the full article this weekend to see the strength of the effect in this study, which was a controlled experiment.
 

LeDodo

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Me who gets well with gay men
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Leovinci

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Tangential observation: most of the time whenever I've seen trans women around town, they are in the company of seemingly gay men (despite straight men being the main pursuers of trans women)
 

Delicateyumi

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Tangential observation: most of the time whenever I've seen trans women around town, they are in the company of seemingly gay men (despite straight men being the main pursuers of trans women)
Straight men don’t really form relationships with people other than…straight men. Them pursuing someone sexually has no correlation with who they will associate with publicly.
Queer people forming connections with cis or trans women has more to do with being excluded from the elite group than any sort of compatibility.
 
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