Showing posts with label economics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label economics. Show all posts

May 26, 2014

My WhatsYourPrice Adventure (Part 2)

So it's been a while since I've written about the online dating site for sugar daddies (ahem, generous men) and golddiggers (I mean, uh, women), What's Your Price. At the time I was intrigued by the prospects, but never got around to writing about the outcome of my adventure.

What happened? Well, honestly I figured out much more effective methods to meet women online, and no longer had any need for a gimmicky website like What's Your Price. But since so I've received so many requests to follow up my first piece, here it is, by popular demand, Part 2 of My What's Your Price Adventure.

May 12, 2014

Why You Should Date Black Women

I've had a lot of success in online dating. Shit, I even wrote a book about it. But recently I've had even more success. How? By dating black women. Now, before you get all worked up, this wasn't a conscious decision I made one day. It's just something I noticed. I sort of though something was going on, but I didn't really pay attention until one of my friends whispered to me that he'd noticed that black women seemed to love him. When I started to keep track, I realized that I was having a lot more success with black women than any other race. But why? It turns out there are two factors at play here:

April 28, 2014

Online Dating Links

  1. Online dating tips from our old friends at The Onion.
  2. Looks like this guy has experience the "photo from above" deception in my book's list of profile photo red flags.
  3. A great video on the economics of sex. Bottom line, it's good to be a man.
  4. Guess what? Online dating saves you money.
  5. Hey did I mention my book? Check it out here.

July 7, 2011

Men vs Women and the Great Recession

If you’re frustrated about the harsh impact of the latest US recession on men, read this article to make yourself feel better:
[Men] have been benefiting disproportionately from the modest job growth during the recovery... [W]hile the number of jobs held by men has grown by 768,000 since the recession officially ended in 2009, the number of jobs held by women today is actually lower than it was at the recession’s end: There are 218,000 fewer nonfarm payroll jobs employing women today than there were two years ago.
Or if you subscribe to the women-as-victims narrative try this discussion of the same study with the headline Recovery Is Bypassing Women. But if you want the whole story, you're going to have to read the original source report: