Toronto Star

Fast friends — for an hour or two

For an hourly rate, website lets Torontonia­ns hire a pal as an entertainm­ent tagalong

- RYAN PORTER ENTERTAINM­ENT REPORTER

In ’80s teen movies, when someone pays for friendship they’re usually about to learn a valuable lesson about how priceless true friendship really is. Priceless, as in free, as in the same price of a Can’t Buy Me Love VHS.

So I had steeled myself for a karmic comeuppanc­e when I first met Cassandra Lemon, a 22-year-old social-work student, kitchen staff member at iQ Food Co. and profession­al friend-for-hire.

This was in spite of encouragin­g early evidence. Lemon had cheerfully embraced the idea of attending a showcase of breaking bands at the Painted Lady, a bar on Ossington Ave., earlier this month when I contacted her through RentAFrien­d.com. The site arranges platonic hangouts at an hourly rate, plus a $24.95 (U.S.) monthly membership fee.

Though she usually asks for $20 to $25 an hour, Lemon happily agreed to accept $10 an hour in exchange for a free night out.

Arriving 10 minutes early, dressed in a simple black T-shirt, smoky eye makeup beneath her glasses and a necklace strung with the symbol from video game Assassin’s Creed, Lemon nodded along as I made conversati­on, fixing me with a sympatheti­c, unblinking gaze.

This was the 15th or 16th time she had met someone through Rent-A-Friend since joining four years ago and the results had been drasticall­y mixed. She describes one man she met for a drink as “too angry” — she politely excused herself early in the evening.

Another, in town for a meeting, invited her to the theatrical horsemansh­ip showcase Cavalia. He got lost along the way and, frustrated that her phone was too old to receive photos of the surroundin­g landmarks, took her straight to the Apple Store and bought her an iPhone.

“I was really uncomforta­ble,” she says. “I was incredibly grateful the whole day, like thank you so much!”

Another guy asked her to accompany him to a wedding. “He didn’t want any more, ‘Why aren’t you seeing anybody?’ ” she says. At the last minute, he cancelled.

Before meeting anyone, she sets ground rules to ensure it’s understood just what kind of friend-forhire she is. “I’m not OK with hand holding,” she says. “I’m OK with sitting next to you. We’ll see, maybe a hug at the end . . . For me, I’m not even going to get in your car.”

Despite RentAFrien­d.com’s goal of connecting people with friends, finding Lem’on wasn’t easy. Of the 14 profession­ally social people I contacted, only half responded and most shirked press coverage of their side gig.

The people we reached include Parker, a 25-year-old filmmaker who joined the site last year as research for a screenplay, though he was never “rented.” On the other end of the spectrum: Natasha, whose fee was “100/hr, with a 300 minimum.”

I chatted with Rina Czerniawsk­a, a 42-year-old waitress who has been on the site for six weeks. She’d gone out once, to see a horror movie with a guy whose friends don’t follow the genre. “You get to meet people,” she says, a shrug in her voice. “If I have nothing to do and I’m bored at home, why not, right? It gets me out of the house.”

While Czerniawsk­a is up for new experience­s, she turned down a request from a woman who wanted her to meet at Ossington Station every morning at 8:15 a.m. to make sure she made it to work. It’s the only story I heard about a woman trying to rent a friend. Lemon says all of her messages have been from men.

Ironically, Lemon has been using some of that extra Rent-A-Friend income to go out alone: she’s gone to see arena acts such as Taylor Swift, Ed Sheeran and Arianna Grande.

We pause to listen to Color Film, an indie rock guitarist from Hamilton. I worry that Lemon can’t see. I worry that the noise is overpoweri­ng the music for her the way it is for me. I worry about if she is having fun.

Though Lemon is nothing but upbeat about the experience, if there’s any moral to the Rent-A-Friend story, I decide, it’s this: if I’m going to make anyone suffer through an unknown rock band, I would rather it be with someone who I’m already comfortabl­e not having fun with.

“I’m not OK with hand holding. I’m OK with sitting next to you.” CASSANDRA LEMON RENT-A-FRIEND

 ?? J.P. MOCZULSKI FOR THE TORONTO STAR ?? Profession­al “rent-a-friend” Cassandra Lemon and Star reporter Ryan Porter enjoy an evening at the Painted Lady bar.
J.P. MOCZULSKI FOR THE TORONTO STAR Profession­al “rent-a-friend” Cassandra Lemon and Star reporter Ryan Porter enjoy an evening at the Painted Lady bar.
 ?? JIM SHELDON ?? Christina Milian was paid to be a girlfriend by co-star Nick Cannon in the 2003 movie Love Don’t Cost A Thing.
JIM SHELDON Christina Milian was paid to be a girlfriend by co-star Nick Cannon in the 2003 movie Love Don’t Cost A Thing.

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