Remembering the Bad Boys of My Youth Through Machine Gun Kelly
Like any good fantasy, my desire for all MGK represents is a guilty pleasure, not sustainable or practical.
I’ve got to look this dude upBuzzFeed
I wasn’t always as uninteresting as I am now
I’m out of place and I love it
that Tickets to My Downfall
Rolling StoneTickets to My Downfall
Lemonade
Tickets to My Downfall
My desires, too, have morphed and matured. Not just from exhaustion or because I had my daughter, but because I have the privilege of settling down. I met my partner before I was forced to figure out dating apps—luckily, given the number of times I had to accompany my girlfriends on dates with potentially chaotic men. Partying less means more energy for visits to botanical gardens, for drinking wine with my colleague-friends at the little place by our campus building, and for the thrilling feeling I get after a good Bikram yoga session. A full-time job with benefits, walks, therapy, lots of water, and—yes—guilty pleasures like MGK help me feel steady, feel good, most days.
I know the countless moments my partner and I share are more or less ordinary, compared to the Kardashian-Davidson-Barker-Fox-MGK lifestyle. We didn’t climb up onto a roof the first night we connected like MGK and Fox, and he’s never installed a giant wall of flowers in my home like Barker has for Kourtney Kardashian—unfortunately. When we got engaged, we didn’t drink each other’s blood and we have yet to get tattoos in honor of our love. But we are our own kind of cool.
Like any good fantasy, my desire for all MGK represents is a guilty pleasure, not sustainable or practical. Like my youth, his allure passed (in part because I’ve grown past ignoring the harmful things some bad boys say and do). It wasn’t that my high school boyfriend or current partner got boring, per say, but they were just boys underneath the facade. If you’re with someone for long enough, you begin to peer past all-encompassing desire, and there’s always someone left standing in front of you who’s less of a type and more of a flawed human being. Despite how thrilling being with him was, that high school boyfriend and I only lasted about six months before we grew apart. My partner’s desire settled into something that endures past the gradual appearance of more and more shortfalls (from my daily catastrophizing to habit of not screwing the lids on containers all the way), however. It’s a kind of desire that comes with responsibility, but it offers a constancy that feels warmer than freedom—than Florida, even.
It stands to reason, then, that my favorite moment in the video for “Bloody Valentine” actually has nothing to do with MGK’s bad-boy persona. It’s a moment I noticed almost immediately, when Fox and Kelly are seated at opposite ends of a dining room table. MGK’s mouth is taped shut with hot-pink tape and Fox saunters up to him, removes the tape, and feeds him a donut despite a bewildered shake of his head. Then she rips the donut away, puts the tape back over MGK’s mouth, kisses him on top of it, and cups the side of his face with her hand. When she touches him, everything in MGK’s body relaxes. He looks at her like the words he sings are insufficient.
I recognize this feeling of relief. It’s why I settled down in the first place.
Alicia Andrzejewski is an Assistant Professor in William & Mary’s English Department. She is a scholar of early modern literature and culture; queer, feminist, and critical race theory; and the medical humanities. Her current book project, Queer Pregnancy in Shakespeare’s Plays, argues for the transgressive force of pregnancy in his oeuvre and the expansive ways in which early modern people thought about the pregnant body. Her work has appeared in The Boston Globe, The Chronicle, Literary Hub, and others. For more about her, visit her website, aliciaandrzejewskiphd.com.