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The evolution of online dating
Straight people finding love on the Internet can thank gay men

HOME > SOVO SCENE > FEATURE

Nov 03, 2006  |  By: RYAN LEE  | COMMENTS |   |  

Tossed out by many who received them, those America Online CDs that maintained a ubiquitous presence in mailboxes across the country in the 1990s helped dramatically alter gay culture, particularly the way people find romantic or sexual partners.

For almost a generation now, an increasing number of gay and lesbian youth have taken their first steps into the enigmatic “gay community” by passing through an online chat room door. What often awaits them is an oasis of images and personal ads, where Mr. Right or Ms. Tonight is one click away.

“Online is the way we meet people these days,” says Dave Singleton, author of “The MANdates: 25 Real Rules for Successful Gay Dating.”

“If you are not an openly gay man, or you don’t live in one of the major urban areas, [the Internet has] opened up so many avenues,” he says.

Once looked upon by mainstream society with the same chagrin as newspaper personals — something for desperate people who are too socially awkward to meet partners in person — online dating is now mainstream enough to be featured regularly in dinnertime TV ads.

On Craig’s List, which is not a specifically gay site, the men-seeking-men personal ads are the most active dating category and show the greatest growth rate, according to founder Craig Newmark.

“Even my mom has a Match.com profile now,”

says 25-year-old Ryan Norbauer, who recently launched Lovetastic.com, an online dating site for gay men looking for more than a casual hook-up.

Growing up in West Virginia, Norbauer says he routinely logged online after school to talk with friends before branching out into gay chat rooms.

“Online dating was the absolute first thing I tried,” Norbauer says. “It makes more sense for gay men … because of the inherent challenges of meeting other gay men in the real world.”

For gay men who didn’t come of age alongside the Internet, any reluctance to using online dating sites faded after one or two hook-ups, says David Kooy, 49, Norbauer’s business partner at Lovetastic.com.

“What broke down the wall of resistance to online personals was that they worked,” Kooy says. “People actually got to meet people and it was a viable alternative to meeting people in bars.”

Online pioneers

KOOY FIRST ENTERED A GAY CHAT room in the mid-‘90s as “Missieboy.”

“I remember going on to chat rooms in AOL in ’95 or something like that and thinking it was the biggest hoot you could think of,” says Kooy, who describes the chat room banter as random gay people making random statements while “fostering a sense of community.”

Even before AOL chat rooms, gay men were using their computers to meet each other. Subscriber-based Bulletin Board Services with names like “28 Barbary Lane,” “Hotlanta Chat” and “OUTline” — void of stimulating images or graphics — were the precursors to the AOL chat rooms that exploded in the ‘90s.

“A lot of [the online dating phenomenon] sprung out of the AOL chat rooms,” says Phil Henricks, marketing director for Manhunt.net. “We all know gay men were the first big users of the AOL chat rooms, but … AOL embraced the gay dollar, but not gay sensibilities.”

Dissatisfaction with censorship and other issues with AOL created fertile cyber soil from which many gay-specific dating sites sprouted.

Among the early queer-centric web domains was Gay.com. Mark Elderkin created it in 1994 initially as a personal web page featuring pictures of his dog.

Gay.com quickly grew into the preeminent online meeting place for gay and lesbian Internet users. It was so successful that it merged with competitor PlanetOut and became a public company trading on the Nasdaq National Market in 2004.

“[The company’s success] is largely fueled by the membership growth on Gay.com,” says Anne Moellering, vice president for marketing at PlanetOut.

“The product on Gay.com is the most solid [branch of the company], and we have a solid and loyal membership base.”

Gay.com features more than 10 million user profiles, and more than 30,000 people are chatting at any given moment, Moellering says.

“It has always been looked upon as a blessing for the gay community more than a taboo,” Moellering says of online dating.

“It’s been a lifesaver for lots and lots of people in certain areas of the country — at least it’s been a datesaver.”

But while Gay.com and other hook-up sites increase access to potential partners, they far from guarantee dating bliss, Singleton notes.

“Expanded choice does not in and of itself make anything better,” says Singleton, who also writes dating columns for MSN and Match.com. “It may make meeting people easier — it doesn’t necessarily make dating better.”


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CamryE
Columbia , SC
0
I just recently retired from the military and have been some what cut off from the gay and lesbian community. I'd like to find a chat room where I can meet new people. In the near future I plan to move to Atlanta and it would help if I knew someone in the area. Is there any information you could provide me on chat rooms? I'd also like to start communication with a realtor to assist me with looking at some properties in the Northern Atlanta area.

Posted 8/19/08 - 1:05 PM




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