The New Zealand Herald

Tinder sets up older rivals

Dating agency says younger people now seeking help after trying online exploratio­n

- Sarah Harris

Tsocial issues inder has become a slippery slope into dating agencies for the younger crowd. Five years ago about 20 people under 30 were looking for love through dating agency Two’s Company. Now that number hovers around 80.

Agency director Sasha Madarasz spoke to the Herald ahead of Valentine’s Day this Wednesday.

In the past five years, Madarasz has seen a huge shift in younger people using dating agencies. Most of her clients used to be in the 37 to 55 age range, now they’re in the 25 to 40 age range.

Tinder has acted like a gateway drug for younger people to get into dating agencies, Madarasz said. Globally, 46 million people have used the dating app.

Madarasz often heard people complainin­g about the incessant number of meaningles­s matches they found on Tinder and she said they turned to an agency for a more tailored approach.

“We started in 2007 and didn’t get anyone under 33. Now we’ve had to lower the age group to 25, the change is so dramatic.

“Tinder means there’s a market out there. They go to Tinder first, then come to us.”

Cody turned to a dating agency two years ago when he was 25 after becoming exhausted by fake profiles on Tinder. After five introducti­ons he is now dating the woman he met a month ago.

“It’s great for anyone that is too nervous to arrange it on their own. Loads of people are like that. I had my very first date through that agent, since then I’ve arranged some of my own.

“If you’re already dating and relatively confident I would say don’t worry about it. But if you’ve just broken up from a relationsh­ip and you’re not getting out there then it’s a great way to date and relatively painless.”

Cody said because you financiall­y invest in the agency it puts more pressure on the relationsh­ip to be “all in or all out” from the beginning. He also warned that the vetting process is not bulletproo­f.

“A deal breaker for me was no drugs. I went out for a drink with one girl and she got really drunk then took some recreation­al drugs at the bar with a friend of hers. She misinterpr­eted something I said then started crying.

“I don’t regret that I’ve done it, but I wouldn’t recommend it to everyone.”

Around 600 people have paid $550 to be on the books for Two’s Company which includes four introducti­ons.

Despite the payment, Madarasz warns people against treating dates like business transactio­ns or a job interview.

She disapprove­s of asking a list of questions to determine whether that person ticks your boxes. Instead, she advises just enjoying their company for the first few dates and seeing if there’s chemistry.

“Forget about all that stuff, enjoy getting to know that person and treat it like a date, not a job or interview.”

The “deal breaker” questions Madarasz vets clients on are what age group they want to date, whether they mind if their date has kids from a previous relationsh­ip, do they want kids and is religion, ethnicity or smoking important to them.

She matches them based on their answers to these questions and other more subtle questions about personalit­y and preference­s.

One conflict she often gets is men looking for women who have time for a relationsh­ip and women looking for men who have their own lives.

“Women are really good at being busy creatures.

“But when you’re dating you have to make room in that busy life for a guy,” she said.

“If the person thinks you don’t have time, they read you are not interested in them.”

Madarasz’s rule is that you should always have a second date before making a decision about that person.

“You’ve got to stop thinking about your future and just enjoy the dating process. First dates are not flirting as much as you would because they’re a complete stranger, they are quite interviewy.

“If you want to lose weight you can’t just join the gym, you’ve got to go over and over again.” ESR chief executive Keith McLea

According to local media reports, STRmix was used to analyse car keys, bullets, gloves and a black hooded sweatshirt recovered from a car stolen from one of the victims and from the culvert the vehicle was left in. Early tests showed a mix of DNA that couldn’t be matched to any single suspect, before police turned to the Kiwi tech that eventually led them to Steward.

“In this case in the US, STRmix allowed the software to match mixed DNA profiles directly against a database,” ESR chief executive Keith McLea said. “This is a major advance for cases where there are no suspects and there is DNA from multiple contributo­rs in one sample.”

Before the scientific breakthrou­gh, forensic scientists had been unable to draw conclusion­s from complex mixed DNA samples, McLea said.

Also in Florida this month, it was reported STRmix had allowed police in Sarasota to charge a man nearly a decade after a woman was raped and murdered inside her home.

Sarasota County Sheriff’s Office spokeswoma­n Kaitlyn R. Perez told the Bradenton Herald how STRmix was used to test DNA taken from the clothes of Georgann Lee Smith.

The results pointed them to Delmer Smith, who had already been sentenced to death, and life in prison, over two separate cases.

STRmix was now being used by the US Army Criminal Investigat­ion Laboratory, the FBI, Michigan State Police, Texas Department of Public Safety, and the California Department of Justice. The software is also used in labs here, Australia, England, Scotland, Ireland, Canada, Dubai, Hong Kong, Finland, Switzerlan­d and China.

 ??  ?? Sasha Madarasz says her dating agency Two's Company has seen a huge shift to younger clients in the past five years.
Sasha Madarasz says her dating agency Two's Company has seen a huge shift to younger clients in the past five years.
 ??  ?? Young people are turning from using Tinder to the more tailored approach offered by dating agencies.
Young people are turning from using Tinder to the more tailored approach offered by dating agencies.

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