George Clooney smiling at a red carpet event symbolizing the attraction younger women feel toward older men (Photo Credit – Amazon Prime Video)

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The world raised an eyebrow when George Clooney tied the knot with Amal Alamuddin, a whip-smart human rights lawyer. Clooney was Hollywood’s most eligible bachelor at 53, while Alamuddin, then 36, was dazzling on her merit. But behind the glamour and red-carpet glow, psychologists saw something fascinating in their pairing—a striking trend they coined “The George Clooney Effect.”

So, what about this effect have younger women drawn to older men? According to evolutionary psychology, the answer might be as old as time. Nature has a knack for design, and men and women might be wired differently regarding age preferences. Evolutionarily, while women’s fertility is finite, men can keep fathering children well into midlife. This means an older man has had more time to build resources and stability—qualities that, according to psychologists, tick many boxes for younger women.

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But the Clooney Effect goes beyond biology. A 2010 study by Dr. Fhionna Moore at the University of Dundee found that as women become more financially independent, they prefer older, attractive men even more. The study surveyed over 3,700 young adults and showed that financial stability does something surprising: it boosts women’s taste for maturity. “We’d assumed that as women earn more, they’d prefer younger, attractive partners, much like men do,” Dr. Moore explained. But nope, they lean into age and power—think charm, experience, and a hint of that silver-fox vibe.