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Looking for Love in All the Right Places
| Article
# : |
17255 |
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Section : |
LIFE
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| Issue
Date : |
2 / 1990 |
2,325 Words |
| Author
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Steven Kaplan Steven Kaplan is a widely published writer living in St. Paul,
Minnesota, and a contributing editor of St. Paul magazine. |
If you've noticed what Pepsi girls look like these days or have taken a gander at the Sports Illustrated swimsuit issue lately, you'll know what 5'4", 200-pound Bonny D. is up against. Bonny is an executive, a college graduate, and an attractive woman; but she's about as far from the media's idea of the ideal American woman as is possible. That fact has been brought home to her all too often in her dating life. Men avoid her in bars and other public places, and blind dates have been a nightmare. Bonny had been rejected and rudely treated so many times that she was just about ready to give up dating altogether when she discovered the Bigger and Better Dating Service, which caters to overweight men and women.
"For the first time in my life," she says, "I am able to have a social life that is normal. I don't have to worry about what my date will think when he meets me, because everybody there is either a big person or somebody who wants to date a big person. I date several times a month now, and I' am enjoying my life like never before."
Bonny is a beneficiary of an eighties trend in dating services, the special-interest dating club. Dating services in the seventies tended to be catchall affairs, a little like the singles bar scene, only more organized. But lots of people were unable to fit into the broad-based singles scene. These were people who either didn't look "right" - they were too tall or too short, too skinny or too fat - or they had particular interests or requirements that were unlikely to be met at random in a crowd.
In Palo Alto, California, the Vegetarian Dating Club connects singles who would prefer a cheese to a pepperoni
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