Ben Affleck is a relatable everyman, says Esquire, Vice and The Ringer

Ben Affleck pictured picking up his favorite coffee delivery!
Last week, a couple of suspicious stories came out about Ben Affleck being a relatable everyman. They were both in the “he’s rich and famous, but struggles with packages and coffee delivery while looking exasperated” vein. It could have been a “great minds” thing, that happens a lot in our industry because we’ve been following the same celebrities for years and end up coming up with similar ideas. (I try not to read other blogs’ takes before writing a story for that reason.) Plus those photos of him went viral. However we’ve seen Ben Affleck try to control the press narrative, to a ridiculous degree, for years. He’s dictated questions in press junkets, has given blow-by-blow updates about his relationship status, bitched repeatedly at being called out by tabloids ten years ago, and even tried to whitewash his own ancestors. So when I see stories about poor Ben I wonder if it’s some kind of new PR strategy, especially when the stories all sound similar. It isn’t a bad one, actually. Here are excerpts from those two articles, with more at the sources.

Vice title: We Are All Ben Affleck and His Dunkin
Recently, mention of the former Ben half of Bennifer and Bennifer 2.0 conjures up images of giant cups of Dunkin, stacks of mail, and paparazzi strolls with his now-ex-girlfriend Ana de Armas, not to mention a cardboard cutout of de Armas being stuffed into a trash can. Ben Affleck has crossed over into meme territory, and we can’t look away because in him, we see ourselves at our most defeated…

Affleck is no different than, say, Lindsay Lohan or Britney Spears in that he’s experienced public personal traumas, and the fact that he’s openly discussed his struggles can make the jokes a bit hard to stomach. Even so, the images of him fumbling with a stack of mail and a huge cup of Dunks are painfully human and deeply relatable in their mundanity. While we can all comprehend that Ben Affleck is technically a human person, seeing a celebrity of his stature chugging his Dunkies with an arm full of Amazon packages is mesmerizing. Like, he could probably pay someone to get his mail and coffee, right?

Esquire title: Ben Affleck Is the Only Relatable Celebrity
Then it was announced that Ben and Ana had broken up, the reasons unspecified. Soon, a life-size cut out of her was being dumped in the bin outside of his house. There were no more trips to Whole Foods, the iced coffee order was for one, not two. Who gets to keep the dogs? Over the weekend, Ben was photographed wrestling with approximately 103 Amazon parcels, a Dunkin’ Donuts cup placed precariously atop the pile’s peak, a grimace spread across his stubbled face. Breakups are always rubbish, but especially so when everyone wants to see yours play out in real-time on Just Jared and TMZ.

Ben Affleck is the only relatable celebrity because, despite having an Oscar and being worth $150 million (I googled it), he wears dodgy jeans and smokes actual cigarettes and has bad tattoos. With no red carpets, premieres or glossy paparazzi opportunities, he has become a sort of street style anti-hero; the king of the Whole Foods car park and the suburban pavement, in a pair of old Sambas and a pained expression. The gloss of money and fame melt into the Calabasas concrete. As things have gone from bad to is-it-over-yet? over the last 12 months, the only thing to do is to forget how to get dressed, buy too many things from Amazon and go on silly little walks for a silly little coffee. Ben Affleck is the king of that. King of the melancholy, Sisyphean stroll. See you again tomorrow, yeah? What’s your coffee order? Who cares.

[From Vice and Esquire]

Vice linked this earlier article in The Ringer about Ben, which says essentially the same thing as Vice and Esquire, that he’s relatable because he’s gone through a lot and drinks Dunkin’ coffee instead of Starbucks, essentially. The narratives are strikingly similar and all three stories mention Dunkin Donuts, his back tattoo and his smoking. The fact that these are more prestige publications makes me really think they were encouraged by Ben’s people. As I said he could do worse, and he often does. Then again, he could change his perspective instead of trying to use the press to change ours. I listened to that over hour long podcast with him a couple of weekends ago. I didn’t hear much gratitude nor did he seem able to move past the consequences of how he treated his then-fiance ten years ago.

There’s definitely one thing I can relate to Ben Affleck on though, and that’s ordering too much crap from Amazon.
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Ben Affleck grabs packages that were delivered to his house while sipping his coffee

Ben Affleck grabs packages that were delivered to his house while sipping his coffee

Photos credit: Backgrid

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40 Responses to “Ben Affleck is a relatable everyman, says Esquire, Vice and The Ringer”

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  1. EllenOlenska says:

    Oh he’s relatable all right. And while men may focus on him shuffling packages and his bad tattoos….every woman sees an immature man-child who takes every girlfriend/wife down with him. I often wonder if the minivan crowd propping Jennifer garner do it in part because they’re busy propping up their own man-child at home.

  2. DS9 says:

    I actually find him relatable in general. The man has so much and yet he manages to self sabotage so very often.

    I don’t feel sorry for him really. But I understand.

  3. Sarah says:

    I find the meme of him taking the exhausted relief drag off the cigarette the most relatable lol. But other than that? Nope. I got nothing.

  4. Sigmund says:

    Lol, I almost wonder if he signed some kind of deal with Dunkin’ Donuts. Weird that all three articles mentioned it, which means his camp took the time to dictate that.

    “Make sure you include that…he drinks Dunkin’ Donuts, not Starbucks. Very important.”

    • DS9 says:

      Dunkies is very Boston branding lol

      • Sigmund says:

        Ah, thanks. I live in the Midwest and didn’t realize it was any different than any other coffee chain. Yeah, it could be that they’re just trying to hammer home the Boston bit with the Dunkin’ coffee.

    • TQ says:

      There’s a Blind Item that he did sign a Dunkin’ deal. Ugh.

    • megs283 says:

      Sigmund, if he were photographed drinking Starbucks, the Boston Bros who adore Affleck would SHUN HIM.

    • Sojaschnitzel says:

      This. It totally smells like a DD ad. Quite blatantly so, in my opinion.

  5. Darla says:

    Anyone who’s spent a lot of time in MA, gets the DD thing. I don’t find that it makes him an everyman honestly. I prefer Marylous but I think that’s mostly a Cape Cod chain. Anyway, I can well afford Starbucks but I don’t like the taste of their coffee, and I bet you he doesn’t either. And that’s all there is to this.

    • Jayna says:

      I hate Starbucks coffee and love Dunkin’ Donuts coffee. Why people flock to their burnt-tasting, bitter coffee is beyond me.

      • DS9 says:

        Starbucks really does have the most bitter tasting coffee. There’s no nuance to the flavor at all and you can’t balance it out with cream and sugar either.

        I also feel like you have to do gymnastics and order complicated ish just to get something drinkable. I literally once ordered a nitro cold brew for like $7 bucks and then stopped at Dunkin 10mi down the highway after deciding no, I couldn’t just deal.

      • Jayna says:

        @DS9, LOL Too funny, That sounds like something I would do.

    • megs283 says:

      LOL Darla. I used to like Marylous. Then my dad said it tastes like sewer water, and that ruined it for me.

  6. Devs says:

    haha yes, so relatable
    remember when john mulaney’s wife talked about ben groping her at a party?
    if this self absorbed, arrogant, misogynistic, racist, sleazy fool is the bar for white men then they’re in even worse shape than i thought.
    stop babying these grown ass men

    • Darla says:

      No, I didn’t know about this. I googled it, ugh. I definitely believe her, but I did not know before today.

    • Lena says:

      I’ll never understand why so many have amnesia when it comes to the very credible sources that have come out against Ben’s sexual harassment and boorish behavior but he keeps getting pass after pass whereas other men (like a certain comic) get cancelled for the same thing. Someone explain it to me slowly because I don’t get it.

      • MM2 says:

        I think Ben gets it. If he hams up his plumber’s crack, smoking & Dunkin’ Donuts coffee, he can ride that wave of the every-man who uses the “boys will be boys” narrative. Gross.

      • Darla says:

        I don’t have amnesia, I never read that story. to forget something you first have to know about it. I don’t know who the certain comic is, I don’t have an agenda.

      • Lady D says:

        The only comic I can think of that was given pass after pass was that piece of filth, Cosby. He was given a pass for 35-40 years to rape, drug and destroy young women. I’m also assuming that Lena certainly isn’t referencing that filthy human being.

    • lucy2 says:

      I remember that, after the video of him groping Hilarie Burton resurfaced, but I didn’t realize that was Mulaney’s wife.

      I think of those incidents every time Affleck is talked about. And all the promotion he and Matt Damon did for Casey after that all hit the fan a while back too.

      I feel like Ben tries real hard to project himself a certain way, but I feel like there’s a lot of issues, including toxic masculinity, under the surface there. I don’t find him relatable at all, nor do I really want to. I think he’s a talented director, but so are a lot of people.

  7. SarahCS says:

    So given that I don’t smoke actual cigarettes or have dodgy tattoos does that mean I’m some kind of unreal elite?

    Hire new PR people and/or a better therapist.

  8. Purple prankster says:

    Even Crisp Ratt would fit better with this claim

  9. Tiffany says:

    Yeah, he is such a relatable, everyman that he held up production for four days in the middle of filming on Girl Gone because he wanted to change the character of Nick, who is from Cape Girardeau, into a Red Sox fan instead of a Cardinals because Ben refused to wear a Cardinals hat for a scene. Fincher and company literally had to negotiate to get the scene done.

    And before the denial come from anyone on here, this info came straight from Fincher himself in the commentary,

  10. LaurenMichelle says:

    I find Ben’s privileged air of dispair somewhat relatable. His crashing and burning of relationships, addiction issues and self-pity are exhausting beyond measure.
    I am not certain what happened with Ana, but Ben’s team is trying to make Ben “relatable” to garner sympathy.
    What are they hiding?

  11. Amando says:

    I think it’s more like people root for him to get his sh!t together. He’s not a good actor, but he is a talented writer and director.

  12. Daphne says:

    All I feel when I see the Dunkin is deep concern for the environment. Same with any celebrity I see getting Starbucks or Dunkin takeout or delivery. Come on Ben, you have nowhere to commute to and probably five nice coffee machines at home. Can you spare the carbon footprint and single use plastic? Heck, buy bags of Dunkin and poor it over ice!

  13. Lady D says:

    In that top picture of him, the first word I thought of looking at it was sadsack. He looks like he needs a mommy to take care of him.