Posted on 11/27/2004 7:37:36 AM PST by MississippiMasterpiece
Prince William may be the most eligible man in Britain, but would he give me good-looking children? Unfortunately, the answer is no. Those aristocratically fleshy noses, the lantern jaws - and don't even get me started on those chins. So, with apologies to the royal one, I must cross him off my list of prospective partners - well, it's a harsh world out there and one has to take into account a variety of considerations when choosing a partner.
Conveniently, a computer program is now on hand to help us all do just that.
Predict Your Child, a program designed by two researchers at Stirling University, allows couples to see what their future offspring could look like. It does cost a small fee - £25 - but how can one put a price on knowing you are not wasting your time with someone who would give you unattractive kids?
The researchers, Charlie Frowd and Peter Hancock, were inspired to create the software by their work helping to identify criminals.
"We had been working for some time with a very sophisticated photofit computer program in which we could mix features of different faces as directed by the victims in order to draw up a picture of the criminal, and we thought, why can't we do this cross-breeding with normal people?" said Dr Frowd.
Using a photograph of each of the future parents, the researchers give the program a set of "genes", or parameters, that describe the faces. The software then randomly mixes up the genes and produces an image of the result.
Accuracy, apparently, is not guaranteed. "Each time the computer produces a different result because the genes are mixed differently, as in reality," said Dr Frowd.
The researchers have not yet tested it on a couple who already have children to see how closely the computer's predictions match the real thing.
And so far, no couples have decided to end their relationships when faced with unfortunate looking children, "and I very much hope none do", Dr Frowd said.
Does this represent the apotheosis of a looks-obsessed culture? "Oh no, it's more of novelty," he said, before adding, contradictorily, "it's more of a fun wedding present, or a dating agency".
But let's cut to the point: are there any tricks for producing pretty sprogs? "I don't think there are any guarantees,"Dr Frowd said. "Each time you breed, the kids will look different. Sometimes a child looks not very attractive, other times they look like a model." So the trick is to have lots of children and hope that you hit the target eventually? "Yes."
But this sounds too vague for me, not to mention exhausting. The most common theory (in the world of women's magazines, anyway) is that one should look for an alpha partner, and you surely can't get more alpha than the future ruler of the realm, Prince William. Good at sport, well turned-out and the most eligible bachelor in all of Christendom - plus I would make my mum a very, very happy woman.
But unfortunately, even combined with my peasant genes, our children turn out too Sloane Rangerish for their mother's comfort. Dr Frowd agreed: "They do have a kind of Windsor influence and I don't think that family is very attractive," he said.
Perhaps I need to update my definition of "alpha". So what about a more modern kind of royalty, like the current king of British pop music, Pete Doherty, formerly of The Libertines? OK, he may have a pronounced substance abuse problem, having been thrown out of his band due to an addiction to heroin and crack; and, admittedly, my mother would be less thrilled. But the NME has just this week anointed him "Cool Icon of 2004" - and you can't get more alpha than that.
So I push Wills away and breed with Pete and, predictably, I produce beautiful children with this "punk soap opera spiked with criminality, heroin and homoeroticism", to use a recent magazine description. In fact, I become so filled with parental pride for the Freeman-Doherty hypothetical offspring I briefly consider whether it would be for the world's greater good to make this dream a reality.
I wonder where "punk soap operas" hang out these days. Sorry mum, but you just can't fight genetics.
Doesn't Conan O'Brien use this software for his "What if they had a kid?' segments?
The 'if they mated' combinations for [prince] Bill,
are not encouraging.
Mine look like the mailman.
There's already software that can take a baby's facial features and project it ten, twenty, fifty years into the future. So you can see what someone will look like at a given stage in life. You don't need to wait til your children grow up to see who they'll be.
Yeah, it would be really difficult to test out this software to see if it works at all.
but that doesn't always work out. there was a time (age two to five)when my daughter was the very image of my husband's sister as a child, and you would have predicted she would grow up to look just like her, with me leaving no mark but the toes and tongue. But she is almost thirteen and looks a lot more like me now.
Mrs VS
Apply that software to members of the British royalty and there would be calls for their mass sterilization.
I cant find that software anywhere on the net can someone give me the link please. Thank you
What's really funny is that I remember there was a picture in a magazine of a prediction on what Prince William (I think he was a newborn) would look like based on his parents faces - and it was scary. Thank goodness he got her looks.
What if they have boys?
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