First of all, the bio she rewrote for me captured my personality. Her secrets were simple. Her other biggest piece of advice was to hit the ground running. Message anyone and everyone I found attractive, take matters into my own hands, and find a way to feel empowered by it. Just like in-person dating, not every guy responded to my message, which I knew was normal, and Davis specifically told me not to let that stand in my way.
My first successful slew of messages came from a guy we will call Vegan Sean. Vegan Sean and I messaged back and forth before he asked for my number, but upon exchanging info, he immediately texted and asked when we could meet for drinks. Two days later, we sat at an Italian bar trying to get to know each other. Not even 10 minutes into being there, I felt zero sparkage.
I stayed, of course, and endured a lecture from him about going vegan, and why the confusion between omega-3 fatty acids and omega-6 fatty acids was the biggest problem facing the modern world.
My next date was with an Indian doctor who looked just like Dev Patel. My third date was much more successful and turned into three dates. The bonus was good conversation with intellectual guys. And, while all three guys earned six-figure salaries, it was only the third one who flaunted his credit card like it would impress me.
Harper, a year-old marketing assistant and graduate of the University of Denver, met her now boyfriend on Sparkology. It was mostly guys who work in finance or business, and those guys can be very arrogant and not that nice to date. To read our full stories, please turn off your ad blocker.
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Luckily, there's a whole subset of exclusive dating apps catered to elite clientele that restrict access only to users who meet certain standards. Here's a peek at how the desperately single other half dates. Who's it for: "Celebrities" and "influencers" You certainly don't earn a reputation as the " Illuminati Tinder " by letting in any old schmo. If you're worthy enough to be accepted, you'll be swiping through stock that includes everyone from Kelly Osbourne and Patrick Schwarzenegger, to Elijah Wood and Trevor Noah.
Who's it for: Ivy League snobs Sparkology sells itself as a luxury matchmaking service for "well-intentioned men and women," where the dudes are all verified grads of top-tier schools, and you can only join if you're invited by the site's team or referred by a current member. Some other interesting details: guys have to pony up a virtual currency to initiate conversation with a lady, and the app provides a concierge service that will help you boost your profile and even plan out a whole date when you're ready to take things offline.
Who's it for: Rich Patrick Batemans and their admirers The self-described "Tinder, minus the poor people," Luxy caters to douchey wealthy singles seeking other douchey wealthy singles, weeding out the poors and posers by verifying user income via tax returns.
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