I recently came across a TikToker who said she simply wants to date a guy with a low Snapchat score, and honestly, I donât blame her. In an era where social media rules everything and you can Instagram stalk just about anyone, Gen Z is embracing an even more attractive idea when it comes to dating: the offline boyfriend. According to many TikTokers, itâs more refreshing than ever to date someone who isnât online 24/7. And honestly, Iâm here for it.Â
Allow me to introduce you to this hot, intriguing offline guy, alternatively referred to as the ânormcoreâ boyfriend. Not only does he have a low Snapchat score, but heâs notoriously not online, ever, and tends to rarely post on social media. In fact, he may not have social media at all. If the dude has any hint of online presence, you wonât find many pictures of him, and if you do, theyâre likely of the back of his head, or of something completely unrelated to the information youâre trying to stalk him for.Â
TikTokers like Madison Herrera are all about the idea â one of her videos, posted last month, says, âWhen [youâre] the only girl he follows on Instagramâ followed by celebratory dancing. Same with creator @layarenae_, whose caption reads, âWhen he has less than 1k on Insta and never posts.â I donât know about you, but Iâm sensing a trend. Weâre even seeing the rise of the offline boyfriend in the context of celebrity couples (think: Ariana Grandeâs husband, Dalton Gomez, or Meryl Streepâs non-famous husband who I desperately want to know more about).
Regardless of celeb status, offline boyfriends are notoriously not in the spotlight. They aren’t posting weekly thirst traps or shooting videos of their daily routines. I would imagine that instead, they are out in the world living their damn lives, perhaps blissfully unaware that the rest of the world is obsessed with the fact that they arenât online right now. TikToker @soundslikepetra shares a fabulous example of this by documenting the moment her (very) offline boyfriend says that “good 4 u” is sung by Ashlee Simpson. Bless.
For some women, trying to date someone and noticing they are âofflineâ is a red flag. âI literally will not trust that Iâm not being catfished,â says Laryn. But for others like Maggie, the offline boyfriend is totally attractive. âEvery guy Iâve hooked up with (minus one) has been âoffline,â now that I think about it,â she tells Her Campus. âI think [being online] could be attractive if youâre running a business on social media â okay, fine, itâs part of the job â but I could never date an influencer or someone who is obsessed with social.â
Despite my ongoing love for celebrity couples in the wild (ZoĂ« and Channing, Iâm rooting for you!) I definitely think thereâs an appeal to dating someone whoâs not online and visible 24/7. Maybe itâs the fact that the person seems cool and enigmatic (one of my goals in life, except Iâm a writer and constantly liking memes online, so not likely), or that I assume a person might be more low-maintenance if they aren’t obsessing over their feed all day. Of course, all of this can be argued, and certainly doesnât just apply to “boyfriends,” men, and heteronormative relationships. However, every time I hear about the whole ânormcore, offlineâ boyfriend thing, something about it feels strangely comforting.Â
For women like Emily, having a partner who rarely uses social media is exactly that: comforting. She tells Her Campus, âWhen I met my current boyfriend, I loved the fact that he rarely uses social media. Heâs a ânormcoreâ boyfriend through and through, and in return, itâs made me kind of a ânormcore girlfriend!ââÂ
Since adapting to the normcore lifestyle, Emily has felt a huge shift from her past relationship experiences where social media was a toxic influence. âMy last boyfriend was super big with social media,â she tells Her Campus. âI eventually found out that he was using it to cheat on me â I became really untrusting, and even started using my own social media more frequently so I could continue to post to âshow off that he was mine.â It was obviously super unhealthy for me to do that, and I created a really poisonous relationship with social media.â
For Emily, being a ânormcore girlfriendâ means that social media is far more enjoyable now. She says, âNow, when I do [post], itâs not because Iâm trying to prove something â itâs because I genuinely want to share it! All in all, Iâm 100% here for having a normcore boyfriend, and 110% here for being a normcore girlfriend.â You love to see it.
When it comes to dating, perhaps the reason I love the âoffline boyfriendâ idea the most is that â at least in my opinion â thereâs a reduced chance of feeling insecure, obsessing over a personâs online activity, wasting time on endless Instagram stalking, or constantly wondering whoâs in his DMs. Maybe it feels refreshing when a guy isnât online all day, and is focused on real life (or so it appears), or maybe it feels like one less thing to stress about in a new relationship. Then again, doesnât this all speak to the sad truth that social media will always have some significant impact on our dating lives? Sigh.Â
The love for offline boyfriends continues, and Iâm interested to see how long it’ll last. Bella Hadid recently debuted her new boyfriend, Marc Kalman, on Instagram after supposedly dating in secret for a year. Then, there was Issa Rae, who posted pics from her wedding in the South of France to Louis Diame â truly a top-tier offline boyfriend, considering he only has LinkedIn (itâs private) and their long-term relationship has been kept under wraps for years. One of my favorite singers, BANKS, recently introduced her new boo on the âgram, to which musician Kito responded: âWe love a boyfriend reveal!â This whole thing has me thinking that the âoffline boyfriendâ phenomenon is here to stay. After all, we love a good mystery.