TV

Esther Perel Denounced “Artificial Intimacy” on a New “Real Time With Bill Maher”

Plus a policy-heavy panel discussion

Bill Maher

The latest "Real Time With Bill Maher" covered politics, dating and more.

By Tobias Carroll

So far in 2023, the interviewees on Real Time With Bill Maher have tended to be there to discuss either creativity or politics. Friday’s episode went in a somewhat different direction, with author and psychotherapist Esther Perel appearing to discuss relationships, a subject that she has written a lot about over the years. As Maher noted in his introduction, he had initially seen this conversation as a break from more serious matters, only to realize that bringing up dating, relationships and intimacy also took things into relatively bleak territory.

“There is a sense that modern loneliness masks itself as hyperconnectivity,” Perel said. She went on to describe what she termed “artificial intimacy” — and then invoked the feeling one gets after being candid with someone over the phone, only to realize that they’re multitasking on the other end. 

Perel went on to discuss the algorithms that point people to new things to do or listen to as a form of “assisted living.” Her issue was with a mindset of “trying to erase the bumps from life” and remove friction. “Any good sex therapist will tell you that friction is an essential part of sex,” she said. 

When Maher brought up a statistic that the number of people having sex had declined since the 1990s, Perel pushed back slightly, arguing that the frequency of sex mattered less than other aspects of it. “The essential piece is the erotic quality,” she said.

Later in the discussion, the subject of marriage came up, with Maher noting that he had never married. Perel, for her part, took a different approach. “Many people today, especially in the West, are going to have two or three committed relationships or marriages. Some of us are going to do it with the same person,” she said. “I’ve been married a few times, but with the same person. That keeps it interesting.”

“A relationship is a living, breathing organism that you need to reinvent and infuse,” she clarified — and made the case for not taking a relationship for granted. The discussion went to some places that Maher’s interviews don’t usually go; the two politely clashed on a few matters, but Perel wasn’t afraid to critique some of Maher’s choices of phrasing. By the end, it felt as though the conversation had gone somewhere unexpected. “This was interesting,” Maher said as the interview drew to a close — and it really was.

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Some other notes on the episode:

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