They've Gotta Have It The impossibility of being celibate Peter T. Chattaway
May 1, 2002
Chastity—that's Cher's daughter, right? And then there's Virgin Records. It hardly comes as news that we live in a time when once-prized Christian virtues survive chiefly as vehicles for irony. Still, there are moments when a celibate person realizes afresh just how profoundly out of step he is with the world.
Several months ago, David Letterman mentioned in one of his monologues that Brad Pitt and Jennifer Aniston, one of Hollywood's more celebrated couples, had reportedly not had sex with each other until after they had gone out for nine months. As one who has always associated sex with lifelong commitment, and as one who has always assumed that I would have to know someone for at least a year before making such a commitment (to see how we handle all the holidays, if for no other reason), I thought it didn't sound so odd to wait that long. But I was brought back to earth by the huge collective gasp that came from Letterman's audience. Apparently the thought of a couple—especially two hot young actors—putting off that kind of intimacy for so long was one of the more shocking things they had ever heard.
I had another one of those moments a few months ago when the ads for 40 Days and 40 Nights, which declare that it is "unthinkable" for someone to give up sex for little more than a month, began popping up. Forty days? I wanted to laugh. Try 30 years!
40 Days and 40 Nights stars heartthrob du jour Josh Hartnett (currently best known for playing military types in Pearl Harbor and Black Hawk Down) as Matt Sullivan, a twentysomething dot-commer whose girlfriend dumps him and becomes engaged to a guy higher up the corporate ladder. Unable to cope with the breakup, and egged on by his sybaritic roommate, Ryan (Paulo Costanzo), Matt ...
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