I'll go a bit against the current there.
Blindly following any kind of advice is folly, in my opinion, but depending on the recipient it can still be useful, especially if what they were doing before was worse.
Many people keep asking and asking "where do YOU want to go", and it may be off-putting to some women, when they realize that it comes from a desire to please and do whatever she says instead of having their own plans and their own initiative. There is some cultural expectation that men must take the lead, come up with the plans, and it must be taken into account.
About the second scene, I'd say the underlying problem is clingyness. There are many intense guys who call often and a lot, and seriously, is the second date really the best time to start talking about feelings being developed? For clingy guys, the second scene would be an step forward while they figure out all the intrincacies.
Third scene: Many guys just keep calling and calling and calling to the point it becomes unsettling. And again, clingy. I've been in situations where a woman receives a call, sees the caller ID and exclaims "oh, it's him again, what a pain in the ass!". If someone is that guy, then that piece of advice would also be a step forward. Many guys don't take "no" for an answer, and don't accept that maybe the woman in question just doesn't want to hang out as often, or at all, and are pushy.
Quote:
~Men who LEAD. Men who are in control of themselves and situations.
~Men who MAKE DECISIONS and stand by them. (This is why you can
ask a girl what she wants and take her to her favourite cafe / club
tell her how you feel about her and watch as she loses interest in you.)
~Men who treat them well but don't allow the woman to control them.
~Men who show respect for women enough to take no for an answer.
~Men who look after their personal hygiene and grooming
~ Men who show interest in the lady - as a person not as a sex object.
Those seem like very reasonable things to ask, in my opinion. Except maybe the second, there is nothing instrinsically wrong with asking her what she wants to do - unless you do that all the time. Oh and maybe being a leader is not something universal, either. But it is usually an attractive quality, usually more for women than for men, although for any person, regardless of gender, being able to lead is a good thing.
Bottom line: as far as advice goes, this one is not bad. Knowing the reasoning behind that advice and being able to make your own decisions based on that reasoning is much better though.
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To build may have to be the slow and laborious task of years. To destroy can be the thoughtless act of a single day. - Winston Churchill