I don't think it matters as much how he said, but where he said it, and that he used a not-so-subtle proposition as an opening line. Is this something that men typically say to women they've never met? And are women supposed to be okay with that?
Before getting to those questions, I'll talk about something I know more about. That is something that
men typically say to
men they've never met at conventions all the time. It frequently happens to me. The "don't take this wrong" is a form of reassurance to the effect of "this is not a gay pickup." (Sometimes they say "I'm not gay or anything, but..." I thought this was a bit silly, as it wouldn't matter too much to me if they were.)
So, yes, really, men who have never met each other, who are both going to the same hotel, and who are at the same convention, do this to each other all the time, even (and perhaps especially) in the middle of the night. Honestly, they do. Usually, it's a relatively unknown man approaching a better known man, like one who has just given a speech.
Now, you ask if women are supposed to be OK with that. Frankly, I don't think you care what I think about that. Also, I don't care. I don't care what "women" do. I don't even think there is a concept of "women" in general. That's your bag, not mine. There are women I find annoying, but I can avoid them and find other women who are more to my liking. I have absolutely no desire to say what women
should find OK.
At the same time, you and others are trying to convince me (sometimes with rhetorical questions) of what women
should find OK.
Almost everybody seems to know that a statement like this, which is completely ordinary amongst men,
should or
does mean something entirely different between a man and a woman. It
has to be a thinly disguised pick-up, as it is
impossible for a woman to be "interesting" for any reason other than her vagina. (Again,
I'm not the one making the claim; I'm observing and reporting.) It must be a crude, transparent attempt specifically to do the horizontal bop. Maybe it's heinous, and he's a creep, or maybe he's being polite, and she should lighten up, but there seems to be no doubt that he's a horndog with One Thing on his Mind™.
It's not just the suggestion that there is a sexual element involved. That is, of course, true. Conferences are charged with sexuality, even if they only include heterosexual men. People who go to conferences know how to use that sexual (in want of a better term) energy, to channel it into enthusiasm about the subject matter.
Not is it the possibility, even the likelyhood, that there was some desire to
plook her. There probably was.
It is the certainty that
plooking was all that it was about and the insistence that everyone agree on this even before the discussion starts.
Now, I'm not at all convinced that all women believe this way. I didn't get that vibe from Donna Cox, Carolina Cruz-Neira, or Theresa Marie-Rhyne. In fact, Theresa invited me to a panel, and years later, we had lots of fun going to the Pioneer's group and generally hanging out.
But if you do, or if Rebecca Watson does, then go for it. I am not the boss of y'all. Do what y'all please. I'm just saying that it amounts to a demand for men to treat you very differently from how they treat other men. If you like that, fine. If you want to call that "feminism," fine. But it's not about equal treatment. At all.