Jayo wrote:
One thing I will say is that I NEVER recall getting the label or comment of "creepy" behind my back. I've heard "weird", "strange", "not all there", "something up with him"... guess it helped that I had about an 8.5/10 rating from having handsomeness which my close circle of friends attested to, including a platonic female friend, and that I worked out regularly. So I had moderate success at the clubs and occasional success on dates with girls.
I think the "creepy" label tends to be more for the very unattractive men who engage in similar behaviours to the average Aspie. Like, if someone looked like George Costanza or Wallace Shawn and acted in a "bizarre" socially awkward fashion towards women, yeah, they'd creep them out. But if it was someone who looked like Chris Hemsworth or Matthew McConaghey (particularly in the 90s or 2000s), they'd be unlikely to get the "creepy" label.
That's just how our society works. Heck even Ted Bundy was able to bypass women's "creepy" radar...

I got called creepy all the time during my school days. Back then, I was (at best) average (in terms of looks).
I mentioned on a prior post how I eventually looksmaxxed myself to an 8 out of 10.
The looksmaxxing started around age 21 (and really became perfected at 25). Ever since I started looksmaxxing, I don't recall getting called creepy (except by family members belittling me)
You could be onto something: Good looks end up hiding the "creepiness" factor.