| Titulo: Where to meet men with money |
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Publicado: Sunday 26 de April de 2026, 13:18
Article about where to meet men with money: Ohlala’s website clearly states “Escorts are not welcome.” 4 min read. Jul 18, 2016. Press enter or click to view image in full size. GO TO SITE Can’t Buy Me Love. I’m not going to waste your time with small talk, because apparently that’s the thing modern daters hate most of all, instead, I’m going to explain very quickly that there is a new dating app, it is called Ohlala, and men can use that app to buy dates with women. Ohlala | Home. Ohlala is an instant paid dating app connecting people to date on demand. Curious? That's understandable. Sign up for… DATE ON DEMAND. No more getting to know someone over a dating interface before deciding to meet in person—or, depending on your point of view, no more in-app chit-chat until someone gets bored and ghosts. Demand those dates, men! Because that’s how Ohlala works: men post date requests and state how much they’ll pay for a woman to join them. Bustle’s review of Ohlala includes what looks like a PR-created image of a man named Ralf who is offering “$240 for two hours at your place.” Ohlala Is The One Dating App Where Everyone's Intentions Are Very Clear. Online dating is confusing. Not only is it a total PIA to fill out profiles and weed your way through the unsolicited… I am pretty sure Ralf isn’t real, first because his faceless profile pic doesn’t look like any dating site picture I’ve ever seen, and second because $240 for two hours?! My freelance rate is higher than that. (This is also probably why I’m single.) Verge, meanwhile, gives us an in-depth overview of one woman’s experience with the site: A new app lets women charge for a night out. Will dating join the on-demand economy? A new app lets women charge for a night out. Will dating join the on-demand economy? By Emily Yoshida | Illustrations… It’s a longread, and it keeps going. We learn that our heroine, “Tara,” isn’t actually searching for a partner, or even a date, instead, she’s hoping to expand her own matchmaking business: She’s a matchmaker, as it so happens, specializing in the “sugar dating” niche. She found out about Ohlala in the course professional research, and signed up hoping to use it to find eligible women for her wealthy male clients to meet. “When I realized I couldn’t,” — Ohlala’s structure means that there’s no way for women to contact other women — “I [thought], well, maybe I’ll just meet cool guys.” Still, for the purposes of research, Tara accepts a $600 date from “Stuart.” A man is willing to pay $600 to go on a date with a woman he’s never met. Two-thirds of the way through the piece, journalist Emily Yoshida reveals that Tara is black, and that some of Ohlala’s users have rescinded their date offers after discovering that fact. (Men don’t see women’s profiles until women accept the date request.) At the very end of the piece, after Tara and Stuart go on their $600 date, Yoshida reveals that Stuart is married with children. It is an incredible read—seriously one of the best pieces I’ve read this month—but I’m stuck on this section where Yoshida meets Ohlala founder Pia Poppenreiter and learns why Ohlala is “better” than other dating apps: According to Poppenreiter, Ohlala seeks to improve upon two perceived flaws that Tinder and other dating apps often fall into. First, the in-app chats that go nowhere — or worse, promising matches who ghost on you. As more results-oriented users of Tinder or OkCupid can attest, if you’ve logged on with the objective to meet up with someone that night, you can often be left frustrated. With Ohlala, everyone wants something, and everyone’s on a tight schedule. And then there’s expectation management. People use Tinder or OkCupid for everything from NSA hookups to long-term relationship hunting, but there’s a high likelihood that you and the person you’re courting electronically might not be on the same page, even if both of you put “casual dating” in your “looking for” field. The chat stage of Ohlala prompts you to be up front and clear about what you want. If you are definitely not open to having sex on your date, you can establish that there. If you want to bring a third, you can propose that as well. Either way, the goal is to get exactly what you want that night. As any fan of either Captain Awkward or He’s Just Not That Into You can attest, people ghost on dating apps for a reason. It’s not a flaw of the app. It’s probably not even a flaw in you , unless you’re one of those people who’s been sending unsolicited Diglett pics or something. But if you don’t want to deal with that, or if you just want exactly what you want tonight , it’ll cost you $600. |
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