The Vergecast - Will virtual dates stick around after the pandemic?

Episode Date: July 15, 2020

The Verge's Why’d You Push That Button? is back for a special episode all about virtual dating in 2020. The pandemic has forced us all to stay at home when we can, which means if you want to go on a... date, it may have to be done online. Ashley Carman and Kaitlyn Tiffany return to talk to online daters and app makers about how they are adapting to virtual-only dating, and what features and behaviors will stick around after social distancing and the pandemic end. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Hey, everybody, it's Nealai from the Vergecast. Special third episode in the feed today. Not the Vergecast, but Why'd You Push That Button? One of my favorite podcasts that we put on hiatus when Caitlin Tiffany went to the Atlantic. Ashley Carmen convinced her to come back record a special episode of Why'd You Push That Button about dating in the pandemic under quarantine, under lockdown, the tools people are using, how relationships are developing. I love this show so much.
Starting point is 00:00:24 I'm so happy Caitlin did a little Renegate episode with us. Check it out. It's Ashley and Caitlin with Why'd You Push That Button. And welcome to Why'd You Push That Button, a show where Caitlin Tiffany and Ashley Carman, that's me, examine all the choices technology forces us to make. We are back, sort of. Just for now, just for today. Yeah, a little one-off for all of you who have stuck with us for this almost year since we last
Starting point is 00:01:03 released an episode. I have absolutely no sense of whether that's accurate because I no longer have any idea of the use of calendars. Yeah. So it's a pandemic. Kate, how have you been doing? Let's give the listeners a little bit of a sense of our mental state these days. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:01:20 I think I'm getting into the swing of it. When a couple of months ago when we started talking about doing this episode, it was chaos here in the Tiffany home. I had recently broken a mirror, a window, two wine glasses. It was basically like I was just kind of crunching around. like a floor covered in glass being like, I wonder if I'll ever see my friends or family again. So that was a dark time. But, you know, things are picking up in New York a little bit.
Starting point is 00:01:51 We're allowed to go to the beach. Crucial. Yeah. We're allowed to look at each other outside, if not touch each other. So things are on the up. Yeah, we've seen each other, which is really great. I think I've sort of settled into a routine of sorts. I've done pandemic bingo.
Starting point is 00:02:08 I've done Peloton workouts. I've made various foods and baked. I've done a puzzle. I hate to admit out loud. I've learned TikTok dances. And I've had jello shots from my birthday that you made me. Yes. Anyway, so we wanted to do this episode where, you know, of course, why'd you push that button?
Starting point is 00:02:27 We are always curious about how dating is affected. What's changing in dating these days? And so we wanted to do an episode about how COVID-19 in the pandemic has forced us to make a ton of decisions. about how we live, work, relax, et cetera, and how we date. Everyone's been staying at home, as you all know. And so that means they haven't been able to go on real dates. And virtual dating has become a thing. And we want to know, is this a thing that's going to last forever? Or is this a pandemic phenomenon that we're going to all forget, ever happened, repress it, maybe mention it to our therapist once, and then that's it. Yes. So virtual dating, I guess the first half of
Starting point is 00:03:03 virtual dating is like a concept that was already part of normal dating. It's just like swiping on Tinder or OKCupid or Hinge, which I guess is more of a scroll type action, but you know, whatever. And then the virtual component is that because we have been under stay at home orders and because people have been encouraged not to hang out in close proximity with people who don't live with them, you just don't do the whole thing where you meet up in a bar, which you can't do. You don't do the whole kissing thing. You don't do any of that. you just like FaceTime or Zoom or Skype or insert alternative secure video conferencing software
Starting point is 00:03:46 here to see if you have a connection, which all of that I think makes sense. We're kind of interested in what happens after the first time you FaceTime with somebody when, you know, how do you build momentum? Can you build momentum? Is it actually dating? And will there be like remnants of virtual dating in post-pandemic romance. Yeah, like how effective is virtual dating really? And I think broadly, geographic location has become increasingly less important. Like when you're doing remote work, it doesn't matter where you are. I could be doing in a forest or a beach or in a city.
Starting point is 00:04:21 And it really does not matter as long as I have an internet connection. But, you know, with dating, these dating apps have kind of made it seem like maybe geographic location doesn't matter for that either. So we want to know how effective it really is to date from afar. And so here's some stats. We're just going to throw some numbers at everybody. OKCupid said that it saw a 62% increase in daters on OKCupid going on virtual dates in April compared to March. And it started including COVID-19 questions in people's profiles so they could talk about how they feel about the pandemic. E-Harmony reported a 27% increase in messages in April. Match said that daily swipes were at an all-time high during its last earnings report, which was mid-pandemic.
Starting point is 00:05:00 So obviously all of these stats are a little bit older. but they are from the peak of the pandemic, which is when we would expect most people to be using their apps and video calls the most. So presumably while the pandemic kind of wanes and then comes back during the year, we'll see people stay on the apps, but probably change how much they're using them depending on the state of lockdown in their state or country. So we figured we should reach out to a dating app expert, aka someone who works in the field, and find out how things are going on the ground. So back in March, way back when, we talked to Pretty Joshy, the VP of Strategy at Bumble, about what they were seeing with numbers during the pandemic. And it's true, more people are using the app.
Starting point is 00:05:44 We saw an 84% increase in video calls that were glazed between users. And what we are hearing from our users is that this is basically a way for them to connect safely because they can't actually connect IRL right now. And because we interviewed her back in March, I reached out to get a little bit more of updated numbers. So Bumble actually saw a 69% increase in video calls on Bumble during the week ending May 1st versus video calls during the week ending March 13th. And the average video call slash phone call time on Bumble is 28 minutes. So people are really like doing the thing. They're doing the virtual dates. There were also some product changes to actually deal with the influx of people using the app.
Starting point is 00:06:30 Most significantly, Bumble adjusted. their quote unquote distance filtering for finding matches. Prior to this world, everyone was able to really interact with or meet people within a hundred mile radius. But now because, you know, you can't really meet anybody, IRL, and a lot of people are kind of quarantining in communities that they aren't necessarily a part of because maybe they've gone back to their parents' houses or something. What we've tried to do is give them the ability to connect with folks that might be a part of the community that they'll eventually go back to. And they also added. voice notes, which actually voice notes are kind of having a moment right now.
Starting point is 00:07:06 Yeah. I remember earlier in the whole, like, how do we date from inside our apartment's conversation? A friend of mine was saying that she was going to start sending like, sultry voice memos, which I honestly thought sounded really fun. I actually tried it out a little bit when I was long distance dating during the pandemic. I mean, it wasn't actually sultry, but I did send a lot of voice memos. I love voice memos. They're, I think, more intimate than a sexy pick because they go on for longer. Plus, we're all alone anyway. It's like you have time and space to listen to this voice message. It's not like you're on the move. RIP is a move. Okay, so Bumble is not the only dating app that's creating all these product features. Others are, of course, doing it as
Starting point is 00:07:47 well. So Tinder is letting everyone around the world swipe for free to find quarantine buddies. This is usually a paid feature, but now they're making it free. They also launch something called global mode, which completely gets rid of geographic filters entirely for free so you could be mashing with people wherever and vice versa. Hinge is also letting people tap a button to say they're ready for a video call date, which kind of interesting, but I guess it's supposed to facilitate the conversation so you don't have to be awkward about like, are you open to video calls? If you're having a conversation with someone in the messages, then you just like hit a button
Starting point is 00:08:19 being like, I'm ready. Yeah. And it shows up at the bottom of your chat. And it's like, okay, I guess that means she's good to go or he is. Okay. I don't know how I feel about that, but okay. And then Facebook still has a dating thing. They launched their video call dating.
Starting point is 00:08:35 And Tinder is also going to launch one-on-one video calls too. So everyone is going all in on video calls, virtual dating, the badges, lack of location filters, everything. I will say that while I do support this in principle, in practice, as someone who has really bad webcam face, I don't know that it will work for me. You really have to work your angles and your lighting. You have to know what you're doing. Tinder, I think, for me, is the most interesting one, primarily because it's, I would assume, the world's biggest dating app. And Nelai and I are editor-in-chief at the Verge. We actually talked to the CEO of Tinder, Ellie Seidman, for the Verge's other podcast called Vergecast, and got a little bit more of the behind-the-scenes details about why they invested in video dating and also why they care about this as a phenomenon. Video is not about video. Video is about live and videos about the ability to get connection. When we do it on Tinder, we actually, the positive side is we bring to bear all of our experience
Starting point is 00:09:35 with safety. You know, the things that are completely off platform, we have, you know, most cases zero ability to do anything about. There happen outside of our purview. So there are a lot of benefits. So really what he's saying is that Tinder is going to keep us safer on our video calls than maybe they would be if we were just using FaceTime or Google Duo or whatever else people use. And this applies to privacy too, so you can actually keep some of your personal information secret from your matches. People often want a certain amount of privacy as they're developing a relationship, as that relationship is forming, and they don't know where it's going to end up. They don't know if it's going to last. And so giving out your FaceTime ID, giving out your snap
Starting point is 00:10:14 handle, et cetera, like giving out all these other things may not be what you want. Ellie was actually saying that before the pandemic, video calling was on the list of features they want to launch, but it was very low on that list. So the pandemic just sped it up. But I'm curious, Kate, if you were on Tinder, would you want to use a video call feature with someone you don't know yet? If it became like a norm to do a quick screening video call with someone before you took a whole night out of your week to meet up with them in person, I think I would be into that. I mean, not on the dating apps right now, but that seems useful to me. I can't even count the number of times that I've like dragged my butt to Bushwick or to a piano bar in midtown. And then as soon as
Starting point is 00:10:59 the person comes in and says, hello, I know that I am not going to vibe, which maybe sounds shallow, but I think it would be better for everyone if you can just like video chat be like, and then not have to have that embarrassing like 20 minute date where one person is ready to book it. Exactly. There's been not so many days, but definitely a couple days to stand out in my mind where I'm like, oh, if I had had a video call to just screen you preliminarily, we would have been good. We could have avoided this whole awkward thing where I've had to chug a glass of wine and then make up an excuse to leave. Yeah. There are people who will expose themselves like real quick and then you can just cut it off. Yeah. If you're going to make problematic comments, the problematic comics are going to come out in that video call one way or the other. So I'm imagining that after the pandemic, video calls kind of like we're talking about might stick around as a screening system. It just makes sense, especially for women, for safety, to avoid ghosting, all the things like video call, cool. But what I'm really curious about is during the pandemic, if while we're stuck with digital dating, which is text and voice and video, whether people are actually talking about more meaningful things and thereby building a relationship, or if they're kind of just shooting the shit talking about being. depressed pandemic, like fireworks in Brooklyn, whatever, versus actually trying to, you know,
Starting point is 00:12:31 get a little deeper. And Pretty from Bumble told us that with people being stuck inside, they are having more meaningful conversations in the app. And Bumble says that it knows this because they have an algorithm that apparently assesses conversation. We have a proprietary algorithm that basically helps us understand what a meaningful conversation could look like. And that we can see, has increased since the time of kind of COVID and everyone being quarantined and likely putting potentially more intent, right, behind the conversations that they're trying to have. And so now we're seeing that about one and four conversations are turning into these meaningful conversations and meaningful chats, for lack of a better word, that I can then only hypothesize are turning into
Starting point is 00:13:19 good forms of relationships, however folks are defining them. I wish Pretty gave us more info because this is like really shocking to hear. But it's also not that surprising considering we give all of these apps lots of data about ourselves, even if it doesn't really seem like we are. So they can see what we're talking about and can kind of analyze that information. But yeah, just suffice it to say these apps know what you're doing. I would assume that they're probably talking about like the number of messages people are exchanging or the length of those messages, which could have been, you know, a temporary pandemic thing, people are just dumping their anxieties on each other. It could have been sexting. People were extremely horny at the beginning of quarantine. I don't know if we used that word on this show,
Starting point is 00:14:04 but it's possible that the meaningful conversation was a blip. We don't know how long that's going to last in the online dating world. Yeah. Like temporarily people were vulnerable because they had no other outlets except for like therapy and a few friends. But as we go back to potentially at least being able to go on dates outside, I think, people might go back to their game playing ways. But because, you know, Kate and I are not in the dating scene right now, we wanted to talk to a few daters who are on the ground experiencing this and get their take on how it's been going for them and whether virtual dating is here to stay. First, we talked to Catherine Smyth, a writer and author of the memoir, All the Lives We ever lived, Seeking Solace in Virginia Woolf. I also just finished a piece about coronavirus, ding-ding, loneliness, singledom. So she truly knows about isolation and loneliness.
Starting point is 00:15:03 Those are some key thieves. I'm talking you from Rhode Island, but I actually live in Brooklyn most of the time. Catherine got a taste of social distancing a few months before we did in America. I had matched with a guy named Ian earlier in the year in January, and then he had actually gone to Hong Kong where he teaches at a university because he was. was in Hong Kong, he was going through social distancing two months before I was. So he was the first person who introduced me the term social distancing, actually, on Valentine's Day. And I had no idea what he was talking about. And he was like, oh, yeah, no, that's when you don't see anyone.
Starting point is 00:15:40 And I was kind of like, oh, well, whatever, because this is a problem unique to China. Of course, two weeks later, she was ordered to stay at home as well. She then noticed a side effective at home dating the dreaded check-in text from scummy exes and former flames. I was also noticing that all these other men from my past were kind of popping up, you know, people that I hadn't heard from in months or else people that I had just started dating, you know, back in Brooklyn who, you know, were at this kind of indeterminate place in our relationship where it really wasn't clear what it was going to be and it was just kind of put on hold. I'm very disappointed in my exes, unsurprisingly, that they have not hit me up at all.
Starting point is 00:16:24 I'm all offended. Like, don't you kind of reflect on our relationship when you're all alone and have no one else? Yeah. The two that I had were not very exciting. One was from somebody I will never speak to again in my life. And another one was just from some internet boy I went out with like three times. So they weren't like, they didn't have the drama of Catharines. But I do understand the impulse to reach out within your preexisting contacts rather than going
Starting point is 00:16:51 on to the app. You know, it's we're lonely, we're sad, we want the familiar. Go with something you already know, even if you might get an extremely harsh text back. That's what I heard from a lot of my friends who are dating to is that they were texting people who they had either gone on one date with and it fizzled or people who they meant to meet up with or at least we're hooking up with just because it's a little bit easier than starting fresh. Like the advent of COVID kind of feels like like the silence in a game of musical chairs where all of a sudden the music stops and you're just like, oh, I guess I'm stuck with whoever it was that I was kind of casually dating.
Starting point is 00:17:24 So as we were talking about before, since so many people are working from home, geography is becoming a lot less relevant in dating. So a lot of people are figuring they might as well video chat with someone who lives nowhere near them. In Catherine's case, Hong Kong. I reached out to him and I was just like, I'm lonely. And he wrote back, hug with all these parentheses, which I'd never seen before. And I was like, oh, that's weirdly comforting. And then he was eventually like, you know, we should do one of those weird FaceTime first date things. And I was thinking, you know, that's not something I would ever normally do in real life.
Starting point is 00:17:58 But I was kind of like, sure, yeah, let's do it. Another interesting consequence of the pandemic has been the slide into complete lack of fashion. Nobody that I know is getting dressed anymore. We all look like slabs. Webcams aren't very flattering. And Catherine, knowing this, decided to have her date with Ian over the phone instead of on FaceTime so that she would not have to try to put herself together for the video call. So we ended up just talking on the phone for three and a half hours.
Starting point is 00:18:29 And it was really nice and like a very strange way to get to know someone. And he had this kind of a really amazing radio personality voice. I can imagine that in a phone call that long, you have some pretty meaningful. conversations, maybe even more so than you would in an IRL date, which don't tend to last three and a half hours in my experience. So is social distancing making for better dates? I mean, no, it definitely doesn't feel like a real date. Like, you know, if you're both like, say, in a bar and you, you know, have a couple drinks. You're kind of just like warming up to each other and getting to like all the impulses that are coming at you are the same impulses, you know,
Starting point is 00:19:07 and you're seeing the same things. And you're, whereas, you know, like, he's looking out at these beautiful hills of Hong Kong and, you know, enormous towers. And I'm, like, sitting on my deck in the dark. According to Catherine, there's still something missing with this new form of dating. Like, I miss, like, touch, you know, like, not necessarily that, you know, we would have gone to bed. But, like, just even this, the fact that that's not an option felt very, like, a little bit of an end to climax.
Starting point is 00:19:33 As we've said, we live in a world of unknowns now. Calenders have no meaning. We don't know why we own them. horrible to think about the future. Dating was already so disorienting and alienating, and now it is worse. There's something about not knowing when this is going to end that makes it feel, I think, a little bit daunting. You know, like, I think part of the excitement of like going online and talking to someone is this like promise of possibly, you know, getting to see them and hitting it off. And it feels to me like what's a little bit like, you know, what's the point?
Starting point is 00:20:09 So Catherine kind of makes it sound like this whole experiment around virtual dating just is not working out that well and that maybe the whole effort is kind of useless. She definitely had some issues, but she wouldn't go so far as to say that it's useless. I think it's actually a very probably great way to get to know someone. To me, the barrier feels like what happens next and the fact that like how long can you sustain this kind of like endless talking when you don't really know, like, are you going to be able to. to meet up in a month? Are you going to be able to meet up in like four months? You know, I just feel, I think it's like that indeterminacy is really, really hard to maintain like an excitement. Okay. So the fact that Catherine is not willing to completely write off virtual dating makes me think that we haven't totally gotten to the core here of whether virtual day will completely
Starting point is 00:21:03 stick around, but at least makes me think aspects, if not most of it, has lasting potential. Yeah. Video chat. Like, we're sold on video chatting. I think. think. Yeah. And the numbers show that more people than ever are using dating apps than before. So clearly there's people out there who are trying the apps for the first time. And I wanted to talk to someone who I knew was new to the dating apps. And that person is my boyfriend's brother, Max, whose Tinder and Hinge dating stories have been keeping me quite entertained. I don't know if I 100% love it, but it's working and it's okay. I think I'm setting myself up for post-coronavirus. my wrist. So the thing about Max is that he always hated on the dating apps pre-pandemic and refused to
Starting point is 00:21:49 use them. So I was super surprised when suddenly he pivoted to downloading them as soon as the pandemic set in. I think it was just because, like, one, I couldn't go out. And like normally, like, how I would meet someone is, like, out and about at a bar or meeting with friends or whatnot or just through mutual friends. Now I obviously really can't go out much and socialize. Then I was like, okay, I need to socialize. I'm happy. And for a newbie, he's been very successful. He chatted with two women, both of whom he's gone on FaceTime dates with. And the first one went really well until she pulled the ultimate dating sin.
Starting point is 00:22:25 We had another one set up. And she, like, Snapchat had me before. And she was drinking tequila. And I think she, like, drank too much tequila. So she actually ghosted me on our second date. So that was kind of a corona red flag for me. Actually, this happened to another friend of mine, too. now that I'm thinking about this, someone else I know got ghosted during the pandemic. And I can't believe it. How do you ghost during a pandemic when we are all under no illusions that you have nothing else going on? Also kind of rude at a time where everyone's really nervous about people getting sick. You know, just a polite. I no longer feel like talking to you. I guess that's not polite, but you know, a polite version of that. Then no one has to worry that you have become ill with a communicable virus. But going back to Max, Max's is.
Starting point is 00:23:10 Second woman he went on a date with actually might have some potential. This girl is actually pretty awesome. And we talked consecutively for a few weeks after the fact. We never were just drinking wine, hanging out, and talking over FaceTime. And we got to know each other pretty well. We were talking about maybe cooking together. She loves cooking. She seems like a really good cook based off of the food that she showed me.
Starting point is 00:23:32 And I was actually cooking the other night. Generally, he's feeling pretty good about this woman, but the relationship has reached a standstill. after some time though we like kind of like disconnected just because there's no physical connection there it was just because we obviously can't see one another after a certain point it was kind of like where's this you know where's this going the conversation was meaningful enough to make him want to keep talking to her but it's still missing that essential physical aspect we were talking like for weeks on hand and it's like you know we're really getting to know one another but like I just feel like I don't know. I feel like if there's no like actual physical connection or like being able to actually be with one another in person, I just feel like it's limiting and it kind of doesn't feel, you know, 100% real. And I also don't want that to take away from what we could have in person, if that makes sense. You know, Max makes it sound like the virtual dating situation and the dating apps is just kind of a bandaid over the situation. Like he's fine. He's doing it. He's making it work for him. But this is just a placeholder. He is ready to get back to in person dating. I mean,
Starting point is 00:24:35 the first weekend that restaurants were open, he's like, I'm going to a restaurant and I'm sitting outside. Like, he's ready to go back and be social. He's ready. So I think, you know, this doesn't speak too highly of virtual dating sticking around, specifically for people who have never been interested in dating online before. It seems like he doesn't want to go on any more FaceTime dates, but he is maybe like comfortable with Tinder now as a concept. Yeah, I think he's seeing the potential of meeting a bunch of people. Like, it does broaden your horizons as far as how many people you can. can meet in a day. Right. It's unparalleled. So with both Catherine and Max, they are kind of in
Starting point is 00:25:19 this spot of like not really knowing what the future is going to hold, if they're going to be interested in continuing virtual dating. But that isn't to say that people haven't successfully managed dating from afar by virtual dating. And, you know, people who do long distance relationships have had to make the internet work for them for a very long time and way before the pandemic hit. So we wanted to talk to someone who has been in that situation for some time to see how the pandemic is affecting them. You know, they've been using these tools for a really long time. So we want to know what they can tell us about the future of virtual dating. So we chatted with a man named Matt whose partner lives in another country and was already in a long-distance relationship before the pandemic started.
Starting point is 00:26:03 My name's Matt Willie. Right now I am living at my childhood home in New Jersey. He and his partner Mike, who lives in Canada, are a true Tinder love story, but the pandemic is throwing off their plans. I met my partner, Mike, four years ago now, when I was on a business trip in Montreal, and we met on Tinder at the time. We're now working on a visa application, and that requires us to live in separate countries. So we're pretty used to long distance at this point. You know, we have gotten into the groove of it and understand each other's business. boundaries and communication. Matt is feeling what both Max and Catherine kind of talked about
Starting point is 00:26:45 feeling this no end in sight type of mindset. In the past, we've been able to visit each other once a month or so. And that's really been like what's rooted us to the relationship, I guess. You know, obviously now that the border's closed, that's changed. So since then, we've kind of had to reckon with not knowing when we'll see each other again, which is something that we've never really had to deal with before. Matt and Mike have figured out ways to stay in touch normally, but now that they can't see each other in person at all, the need to keep up communication is even more urgent. It's honestly impressive how many different platforms and chat formats they've been using. One of the main things we do is we watch TV together. That's always been a way that we relax. And recently, we've been really
Starting point is 00:27:35 into the Real Housewives. It's just such a good way for us to like chill out at the end of the night. Ultimately, we usually end up using like Facebook Messenger call or FaceTime. You know, we also play Animal Crossing together now or play Mario Kart together, things like that, where, you know, the online play element makes it feel like we're closer. And then we try to like throughout the day keep that call going as much as we can. And I'll just, you know, prop my phone up against the wall while I'm writing or while I'm drinking my coffee and writing and just trying to keep the connection open. So still, we're seeing technology as a dating enabler, but that only seems to be a temporary replacement. It's a buffer for when you can eventually be together in person. And in the
Starting point is 00:28:26 end, unfortunately, Kate, Real Housewives is not a replacement for her real house. physical intimacy doesn't translate very well. That's also something that we've had to deal with for a long time, but always with that knowledge that next month we'll see each other again. You know, next month we can lay in the same bed or, you know, so I think that probably is what translates least well for us is how much you want to be able to give somebody a hug right now. There are also real life gestures and activities that are genuinely romantic, but don't don't really work when you adapt them into a digital context. Things like having a candlelit dinner or just things where you would usually put some extra
Starting point is 00:29:12 effort into a date can feel cheesy when you're on the internet because it's like, why am I lighting these candles in my bedroom and this year? So I think a lot of what I've come to realize is like you kind of have to change your expectations a little bit of what is romantic or intimate. You know, now it feels somewhat romantic to just sit down and watch The Real Housewives with Beverly Hills. Whereas, like, cooking the same dinner and lighting a few candles can feel cheesy or, like, it doesn't translate as well.
Starting point is 00:29:45 Yeah. And the pandemic is just a huge hurdle for them because more than anything else, going through hopefully what's a once-in-a-lifetime event would be really nice to do with a human being by your side. The feeling that while this absolutely ludicrous thing is happening in the world, like, I can't be with him for it. Like, we can't really go through it together. That's the part that bothers me more is the present moment and not being able to help each other through it as much as we'd like to. Obviously, we love Matt and his partner and wish them the best.
Starting point is 00:30:19 They seem to be working really hard to keep their relationship steady. And we have no doubt that they'll make it through the picture. pandemic. Yeah, I guess I feel optimistic in that we both seem to be in a similar place with it, which is uncomfortable, you know, not okay with it at all. But I think that starting the relationship long distance kind of gave us a little more clarity on that fact that like, you know, the next time we do see each other, whenever that is the way we feel about each other isn't going to change. It seems like the big takeaway here is one that originally, When dating apps came out, it was kind of positioned as like, oh, this is how you're going to meet
Starting point is 00:31:14 people. Like, this is the new way to make introductions. No longer do you have to go up to someone at a bar and hope for the best. But this pandemic situation in virtual dating sort of suggests to me that more than that, you can facilitate, like you can get through the first couple dates worth of material online and you're probably doing okay. But it's when you get to that fourth date where you're like, okay, we're ready for that physical connection probably. Yeah, I think we kind of decided, correct me if you feel differently, but is that this isn't really going to completely overhaul the dating experience, but it is maybe shifting somewhat our ideas about which parts of the dating process can happen online and which parts can't. Exactly. Now, since we did some of these interviews a while ago, we wanted to give you all a little update on our guests. So Catherine says that she is still single, although Ian broke up with her over a text because of the piece she wrote, which I guess just speaks to the fact that the pandemic is making it awkward to break up with people even if you've never met them in person and people still feel like they can do that over text.
Starting point is 00:32:22 And then as far as Matt and Max, I think the pandemic and their use of virtual dating really was just a placeholder because as soon as they had the opportunity to meet up with people in person, they did. So Matt was able to finally cross the border into Canada in June to see his partner and he's with him now. And Max went on a date first thing with one of the women he was speaking to, the ghoster actually. And it seems to have gone fine. So I think what we're seeing here is just that virtual dating has some merits, but clearly in person is preferable. Right. It seems like the features we really like and can see sticking around is definitely the video calls as screeners, which again is kind of that first couple dates, preliminary info slash just that initial are you even someone I want to talk to in person screener.
Starting point is 00:33:09 I should mention that in the course of thinking about this episode, I briefly became obsessed with this Reddit community called NeverMets, which is for people who are in internet-only relationships, which some of them are extremely sweet. They're just like teenagers who flirt in Minecraft for like months and months on end. So we shouldn't say that online dating doesn't work for anybody because some people do find it really romantic. For sure. And when I spoke to the Tinder CEO, he seems to suggest that the younger generation, like Gen Z, are the ones who could pull off virtual dating more than millennials. Gen Z, the 18, 19 year olds who arrive on Tinder today, they've grown up with the social internet. They've had that in their life from a very young age.
Starting point is 00:33:52 So when they arrive, they've already hung out in digital environments. It might have been Fortnite, right? That could have been the place where they were hanging out with their friends. So the idea of like hanging out and developing a relationship and developing a connection, letting it unfold in a digital environment is not a new idea. But as far as whether geography matters, you know, a lot of these dating apps are starting to get rid of their geographic filters. You know, on one hand, I do think that makes some sense because you can have things in common with people around the world and find valuable things in everybody.
Starting point is 00:34:24 But at the same time, I'm like, well, you're going to have to overcome some hurdles if you can't see each other in person. Like eventually you're going to be like, oh, we want to probably meet up and see each other in person. So I don't know how long those filters and the global mode for Tinder is really going to be appealing. Right. Like in New York right now, people are still not taking this subway. So I probably wouldn't if I were on the apps agree to go on a date with someone who lived in a different borough. I would really like keep my circle tight.
Starting point is 00:34:50 Right. But I would maybe be willing to meet up with someone in person at this point. Yeah. Same here. Totally same. you know, I guess to close this out, I did want to pull again from that Tinder CEO interview because I really wanted to ask him whether technology was advanced enough to replace the IRL experience of dating and kind of get his take. So this is what he had to say.
Starting point is 00:35:11 I think that this varies for everyone. But, you know, our view, you know, my view personally, but our view more broadly as a team at Tinder is that there is a limitation. There is only so far you can go that, you know, we're physical. And that's important and that's wonderful. And that's been true for, you know, millennian, millennia and millennia and it's not going to change because of COVID and is not going to change. It's not going to change. There's a very important place to play for hanging out virtually, but I think there's
Starting point is 00:35:41 a very important place to play for the physical world. And we'll have a better sense in a year's time of like how this shakes out, what percentages or what. But I'm definitely betting on the physical world being very important and here to stay. So that's it. that is the one-off bonus episode of Why'd You Push That Button. I hope we are back soon. Kate, anything else you want to plug here? You've been doing a lot of great reporting work. Yeah, we've even neglected to mention this at the top of the episode, but I work at the Atlantic now,
Starting point is 00:36:24 and this is a lot of the type of thing I've been covering there, just how people are using the Internet to cope with the strange feelings of the pandemic. So you could give me a Google if you wanted, find my new home. And everyone can follow me on Instagram at Asha Carmen. I hope one day we get to come back with another season. That would be really cool. But we have no news for you on that front. So don't ask any more questions about that as much as we love you. All right.
Starting point is 00:36:53 That's it for us. See you all later. Bye. Bye.

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