Los Angeles Times

IF I HAD ONE MORE CHANCE

DIDN’T GET THE DIGITS DURING THAT BRIEF ENCOUNTER? DON’T DESPAIR. SOME CUPIDS ARE RUNNING ONLINE LISTINGS TO RELINK MISSED CONNECTION­S

- BY SIENA GILJUM

ACAPTIVATI­NG STRANGER, A PUBLIC PLACE, a moment of connection. And then, nothing. A missed connection. We’ve all been there. ¶ A meet-cute played out just last month on Overheard LA, a popular Instagram account that documents the musings of Angelenos through a vast network of followers-slash-eavesdropp­ers. An encounter in the Whole Foods condiment section, detailed in Overheard’s “Missed Connection Love Story,” prompted a search for the lost crush and — success! Ah, the romance. (The lovebirds in question are choosing to remain private and anonymous.) ¶ “Our followers are already sending us everything they see and hear, so it just made sense to use our platform to make this happen,” Overheard founder Jesse Margolis said in an email. “Plus, who in L.A. doesn’t want to be quizzed on their knowledge of small dog breeds.” (A Frenchie named Oscar was one of the key elements of the hunt.) ¶ Margolis posted to the Instagram story after receiving an “earnest and sweet” direct message from one of the involved parties, albeit knowing the chance of connecting them was small: “If it doesn’t work out, at least we’d have fun.” ¶ Messages and potential leads started pouring in. There were DM exchanges about the mystery man’s identity (and dog breed) and brands offering to pay for dates and more for the eventually reunited couple.

“We finally made the connection and confirmed from both parties it was just magic,” Margolis said. He’s right, though: Usually missed connection­s are a whole lot less successful, not to mention less conspicuou­s.

The missed connection — a fleeting moment with a stranger that leaves you wishing you’d worked up the nerve to strike up a conversati­on — long predates the internet, with LA Weekly and the Village Voice among those publishing their communitie­s’ missed connection­s in print. Classified ads and posted notices date to 18th century America, ancient Rome and beyond.

The birth of Craigslist and its “casual encounters” forum took the practice of documentin­g missed connection­s to a new level. Personals graced Craigslist from 1995 until 2018, when casual encounters shut down in accordance with new sex traffickin­g prevention laws.

The missed connection­s section lives on, but it doesn’t offer quite the same sweet yearning as the casual encounters posts (cough, cough, it’s raunchy as hell).

Enter Alex Lee: full-time copywriter, part-time web designer hobbyist and hopeless romantic. Lee founded the online personals site missedyoul­a.com in May to fill what he saw as a niche left by Craigslist and to give people a space to submit missed connection­s truly based in romance.

“Ever since Craigslist shut down their casual encounters section, I’ve noticed that a lot of the casual encounter posts were spilling over into the missed connection­s section,” Lee said, adding that their quality was noticeably lower. “And so I thought it would be cool if there was a dedicated website just for missed connection­s.”

So that’s what he created. The no-frills page is sorted by month, with 40-plus submission­s to date. Registered users can write posts like, “Cute tall guy at mar vista farmers market” or “Blonde at Wendy’s in Alhambra.”

Think you’re the one the writer is talking about? Ball’s in your court now, so initiate a private conversati­on directly through the site.

Posts go up automatica­lly, but Lee does daily quality control to ensure his website remains a safe haven for the romantic in all of us — free from “that kind of hookup content that you see everywhere on Craigslist.”

Lee, 34, doesn’t have a missed connection story to thank for a wild romance of his own. Rather, he can point to his experience and that of his friends on the lackluster L.A. millennial dating scene as the inspiratio­n for the page.

“People are definitely sick and tired of dating apps,” Lee said, and are experienci­ng what he calls “dating app fatigue.” Missed connection­s offer something different. Something hopeful, rare and romantic — all in what Margolis calls “a digital landscape that can be so dark and divisive.”

For Will Domke, 19, his missed connection­s Instagram page, @usc.missedconn­ections, filled a different desire. He was bored in quarantine during his senior year of high school in Seattle, preparing to head to USC. He had seen a missed connection­s account based at Emerson College in Boston and thought up an experiment with his intended roommate.

“I love gossip. I think everyone loves gossip. I think everyone loves reading little things about business that is not their own,” he said. Plus, “When you’re staring at a screen, what else is there to do than get crushes on people?”

The @usc.missedconn­ections account launched in September 2020 as the fall semester kicked off.

“The first few posts are completely lies. We just made them up,” Domke, an acting major, said. He was hoping to drive traffic and engagement, and it worked: The page was quickly flooded with real submission­s.

Now with more than 4,500 followers and nearly 300 posts, some compiling as many as 10 missed connection­s in one upload in a text bubble format, the account has become the campus authority for missed connection­s, crush confession­s, and even students admitting their infatuatio­n with teaching assistants and professors. There’s something that sets the USC account apart from the other L.A. missed connection­s platforms, though: It’s insular, contained to one community of people bumping into one

another all the time.

Domke, who began his time as a Trojan taking remote classes from home, 1,000 miles from campus, doesn’t know of any submission­s that have led to meetups or relationsh­ips, but he did have a post written about him once (there’s been no follow-up, sadly). But his missed connection­s project helped fill the social gap in his pandemic college experience.

It did something else: captured an essential facet of today’s dating landscape.

Evidently everyone wants to be the inspiratio­n for a romantic online gesture, whether your secret admirer spotted you from across the quad or became enchanted with you at the grocery store. There’s something captivatin­g, almost vintage, about documentin­g fleeting moments or dreaming of what could have been — and knowing a spark can happen away from an app.

Just ask Lee, founder of missedyoul­a.com.

“People kind of all know that when you post a missed connection­s it’s really the longest of long shots. Like, the chances of a missed connection working out really aren’t that great, but people still do it,” he says.

“I think it’s really because it really gives people a chance to indulge in their hopeless romantic side . ... That, to me, is kind of what my missed connection­s website is kind of about. It just gives people a chance to indulge in the idea of romance even though they might not find it.”

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 ?? Illustrati­ons by Claire Morales For The Times ??
Illustrati­ons by Claire Morales For The Times
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