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as transparent as those airline seat pocket magazine ads for "affluent" dating services. These ads target hot young women looking for older rich men and vice versa.
For this kind of money, you could buy an island in the Philippines, kill all the guys and consecrate the surviving desirable women as your concubines and live a normal life, rising early and presenting your turgid god member to the harem and enjoying their entreaties to gift them with the sanctifying balm.
Silly Con valley and SF must have the worst male to female ratio I've ever witnessed in the country. So the girls over there have a literal pick of the litter when it comes to guys since it's like 10 to 1 in some neighborhoods.
So I see a lot of women who MIGHT rate a "6-7" being treated, wined and dined like they are top tier 10's. It's sad.
Goran_K saysSilly Con valley and SF must have the worst male to female ratio I've ever witnessed in the country. So the girls over there have a literal pick of the litter when it comes to guys since it's like 10 to 1 in some neighborhoods.
So I see a lot of women who MIGHT rate a "6-7" being treated, wined and dined like they are top tier 10's. It's sad.
All true but basic game and an anti feminist confident anti sjw attitude still gets you plenty prime pussy. There's no natural game in SV only soyboy money and many womyn ironically are starving for men. Still if you're going to settle American I recommend the mid west.
Silly Con valley and SF must have the worst male to female ratio I've ever witnessed in the country. So the girls over there have a literal pick of the litter when it comes to guys since it's like 10 to 1 in some neighborhoods.
So I see a lot of women who MIGHT rate a "6-7" being treated, wined and dined like they are top tier 10's. It's sad.
I wonder if there is an ETF that invests in venture capital. Might be an exciting investment.
Silly Con valley and SF must have the worst male to female ratio I've ever witnessed in the country. So the girls over there have a literal pick of the litter when it comes to guys since it's like 10 to 1 in some neighborhoods.
So I see a lot of women who MIGHT rate a "6-7" being treated, wined and dined like they are top tier 10's. It's sad.
Silly Con valley and SF must have the worst male to female ratio I've ever witnessed in the country. So the girls over there have a literal pick of the litter when it comes to guys since it's like 10 to 1 in some neighborhoods.
So I see a lot of women who MIGHT rate a "6-7" being treated, wined and dined like they are top tier 10's. It's sad.
I would imagine Silicon Valley would be the romping grounds of pretty gold diggers. Anyone working for a startup with stock options could suddenly find themselves filthy rich.
The billionaires SV creates is just phenomenal.
I wonder if there is an ETF that invests in venture capital. Might be an exciting investment.
I'm not in the Bay Area often but the 3-4 times per year I am, I rarely see anyone I would rate above an 8.
But here's the thing: There are essentially NO hot chicks in the SF bay area. You'd think with all that money there would be hot chicks! No.
Strategist saysI would imagine Silicon Valley would be the romping grounds of pretty gold diggers. Anyone working for a startup with stock options could suddenly find themselves filthy rich.
The billionaires SV creates is just phenomenal.
I wonder if there is an ETF that invests in venture capital. Might be an exciting investment.
Gold diggers are supposed to be somewhat pretty.
I'm not in the Bay Area often but the 3-4 times per year I am, I rarely see anyone I would rate above an 8.
In SoCal, I see 8-10s pretty much every 5-10 minutes just walking on the beach.
Priscilla Chan, on the other hand, is smart.
Satoshi_Nakamoto saysPriscilla Chan, on the other hand, is smart.
Pris was already a 4.0 premed and thus, had a $200K/yr-$400K/yr career ahead of her. Hanging out with Zuck, however, gave her a stock option of cashing in at a higher number than a regular doctor's salary and so she took it. I suspect that part of it is that many other guys at Harvard, didn't give her the time of day. Realize, for every Pris, there's 2-3 Jeannie Suks on the campus.
Is it "national state the obvious day" today? ;)
Strategist saysI would imagine Silicon Valley would be the romping grounds of pretty gold diggers. Anyone working for a startup with stock options could suddenly find themselves filthy rich.
The billionaires SV creates is just phenomenal.
I wonder if there is an ETF that invests in venture capital. Might be an exciting investment.
Gold diggers are supposed to be somewhat pretty.
I'm not in the Bay Area often but the 3-4 times per year I am, I rarely see anyone I would rate above an 8.
In SoCal, I see 8-10s pretty much every 5-10 minutes just walking on the beach.
Still if you're going to settle American I recommend the mid west.
mell saysStill if you're going to settle American I recommend the mid west.
Well after a certain age, many women in the Midwest resemble beached whales.
Even within the Halls of Harvard, she's not an attractive Asian-American women.
There are 8+, they just drown in the sea of SJWs/feminists and smelly hipsters and many ride the cc til they hit the wall, but they are there. I know ;)
They should move to a Muslim country declare themselves Muslims marry a harem and live like the King of their castle.
For this kind of money, you could buy an island in the Philippines, kill all the guys and consecrate the surviving desirable women as your concubines and live a normal life, rising early and presenting your turgid god member to the harem and enjoying their entreaties to gift them with the sanctifying balm.
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https://www.yahoo.com/finance/news/meet-silicon-valley-matchmaker-helping-top-tech-executives-find-love-213316523.html
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Dating in any dense metropolitan area can seem like a herculean challenge, but try doing it in tech-savvy Silicon Valley, where scoring a date may be relatively easy, but cementing a relationship can be more difficult than raising another round of venture capital.
That’s where Linx Dating founder Amy Andersen comes in. While smartphone dating apps like Tinder, Bumble and The League have taken off since the iPhone launched in 2007, Andersen has established a successful business that seems downright counterintuitive, shirking complex algorithms for old-fashioned matchmaking. Over the past 14 years, the former Merill Lynch financial adviser has successfully paired hundreds of couples who work at high-flying tech companies including Apple (AAPL), Facebook (FB), Amazon, (AMZN), Google (GOOG), Netflix (NFLX), Square (SQ) and recognizable venture capital firms such as Andreessen Horowitz, to name just a few.
As Andersen sees it, Silicon Valley has its own unique pitfalls when it comes to finding a match. Many of these companies, whether they’re small startups or large, publicly-traded corporations, almost condition their employees to believe the mind can solve all complex problems, she contends.
“They are constantly using their IQ — naturally, as they should be — but, when it comes to matters of the heart, and where I fit into the picture for my clients, it becomes very challenging because falling in love and finding chemistry is about that emotional quotient, the EQ, and letting go, feeling, and really kind of feeling emotions,” Andersen adds. “It’s about people and connections and not necessarily a set of objective characteristics, tangibles or data that so many of these Silicon Valley types are used to.”
Andersen’s services aren’t for cash-strapped singles. The Menlo Park, California-based matchmaker has well over 50 premium clients who pay at least $35,000, and a “handful” of VIP clients, some of whom pony up as much as $500,000 for a series of hand-picked dates and coaching services. (Yes, really.) That’s in addition to the more than 500-plus, many of whom pay if they’re successfully matched up, as well as the 25,000-plus additional people in Andersen’s database.
One of her more recent successful VIP matches: a member of one of the ruling families of the United Arab Emirates with an Ivy League-educated entrepreneur. The couple, who married after only a few dates, welcomed their first child last year.