Testimonial for Dating Sites
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Load more
Recommended publications
-
Dating, Digital Media, and Diaspora: Contextualising the Cultural Uses of Tinder and Tantan Among Australian Chinese Diasporas
DATING, DIGITAL MEDIA, AND DIASPORA: CONTEXTUALISING THE CULTURAL USES OF TINDER AND TANTAN AMONG AUSTRALIAN CHINESE DIASPORAS Xu Chen BA, MA Submitted in fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy School of Communication Creative Industries Faculty Queensland University of Technology 2020 Keywords Chinese diasporas Dating apps Digital cultures Ethnicity Sexual cultures Social media Dating, digital media, and diaspora: Contextualising the cultural uses of Tinder and Tantan among Australian Chinese diasporas i Abstract Bringing together perspectives from digital dating, sexual cultures, and diaspora studies, this project investigates how Australia-based Chinese users engage with Tinder and Tantan, two dating applications (apps) that have emerged from different cultural contexts – one Western, and one non-Western. Tantan is a popular dating app in mainland China. It was designed to mimic Tinder which, like other Western social media platforms, is blocked in mainland China. Although the study of dating apps has become a burgeoning research field over the past decade, little work has been done – and then only recently – on diasporic uses of dating apps. Research focusing on digital diaspora has shown that social media are essential to the maintenance and negotiation of diasporic identity among Australian Chinese diasporas. Within this digital-diasporic research, however, little attention has been paid to the role of dating apps, despite the popularity of both Chinese and Western dating apps among Chinese diasporic communities. To address this lack of attention, this research places a much-needed focus on the role of dating apps within digital diaspora studies. At the same time, it expands the emerging critical focus on diaspora within dating app studies. -
Snapchat Launches Own Multi-Player Gaming Platform 4 April 2019
Snapchat launches own multi-player gaming platform 4 April 2019 long holiday weekend, something that makes us feel like we're sitting with friends, controllers in hand," he said. "Unfortunately, these games are hard to find on mobile (...) it's hard to get everybody to install the same game, and it's hard to chat." The six games will be directly accessible from Snapchat's popular messaging feature Chat, offering users the possibility to play while at the same time exchanging messages. "Bitmoji Party," developed by Snapchat parent Snap and inspired by Nintendo's "Wii Party," for example features players, brought to life with 3D Bitmojis, as they compete across four fast-paced Snapchat—the popular messaging app—is lauching its mini-games. own multiplayer gaming platform "You can launch Bitmoji Party right from the chat bar, allowing you and your friends to instantly play together, no install required," Wu said. Messaging app Snapchat, which is widely popular among younger users but has struggled to turn a "Alphabear Hustle" is described as a fast-paced profit since its creation in 2011, on Thursday word game in which players work together to spell unveiled new features including an integrated words, collect cute bears and build their own gaming platform, an expansion of its original series personal bear village. and new parnerships with developers. "Zombie Rescue Squad" deals with a zombie "Friendship is more than just the things you chat apocalypse that calls on players to "rescue about," said Will Wu, the director of product at survivors from the hungry hordes and gather as Snapchat as he unveiled Snap Games at a Partner many supplies as you can. -
A Comparison of Mobile Application Adoption Between Chinese and Us College Students
WHY DO WE CHOOSE THIS APP? A COMPARISON OF MOBILE APPLICATION ADOPTION BETWEEN CHINESE AND US COLLEGE STUDENTS Chenjie Zhang A Dissertation Submitted to the Graduate College of Bowling Green State University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY August 2018 Committee: Louisa Ha, Advisor Patrick D. Pauken Graduate Faculty Representative Lisa Hanasono Kate Magsamen-Conrad © 2018 Chenjie Zhang All Rights Reserved iii ABSTRACT Louisa Ha, Advisor The present cross-cultural study applies the regulatory focus theory developed by Higgins and modifies the cultural dimensions proposed by Hofstede to explore and compare the relationships between cultural values and the focused strategic means college consumers use in China and the US. In total, 377 Chinese and 403 US college students participated in a survey to reveal the relations between variables of app download and their cultural values. In addition, for a deeper and insightful understanding of the app download behavior, the method of semi-structured interview was used to raise participants’ and the researcher’s consciousness of and critical reflections upon app download processes and experiences. The research results are five-fold: First, Chinese college students share similar scores of four cultural dimensions with the US college students, and there is no difference in indulgence between the two countries. Second, country is a more powerful variable than cultural dimensions in model testing in terms of differentiating consumers’ regulatory focus. US consumers are more likely to be promotion focused and Chinese consumers are likely to be prevention focused. Third, promotion focused consumers are likely to seek both hedonic and utilitarian gratifications, and to heuristically process information. -
Student Sugar Dating: Sugar Babies' Perceptions of Their Decisions to Begin, Continue, Or Desist
STUDENT SUGAR DATING: SUGAR BABIES' PERCEPTIONS OF THEIR DECISIONS TO BEGIN, CONTINUE, OR DESIST Taylor Ann Lenze A Thesis Submitted to the Graduate College of Bowling Green State University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of MASTER OF ARTS December 2020 Committee: Hyeyoung Bang, Advisor Kristie A. Foell Christy Galletta Horner © 2020 Taylor Ann Lenze All Rights Reserved iii ABSTRACT Hyeyoung Bang, Advisor Sugar dating is defined as a mutually beneficial relationship between two partners where one, the sugar baby, is compensated by the other, the sugar momma or daddy, for his/her time. Sugar relationships are rapidly increasing in popularity among college students as a way to earn money yet there is a dearth of scholarly research on this trend. Despite parallels with the sex industry, sugar dating is not necessarily sex work. This thesis describes how sugar dating websites appeal to students, and it explores student sugar baby experiences and reflections on their decisions to start sugar dating, and then to continue or desist upon finishing school. The study has two parts. Firstly, content analysis of the leading sugar dating websites in the United States and Germany, seeking.com and mysugardaddy.de respectively, offers contextual information on the appeal of sugar dating to students in countries with very different cultural and legal norms around sex and sexuality. Secondly, eight semi-structured interviews with sugar babies, examined using interpretive phenomenological analysis, explore student sugar dating experiences. The websites revealed three main appeals to potential sugar babies: money and luxury, mentorship, and sex appeal. All of these topics were mentioned in the interviews; however, the participants focused especially on their worldview and potential conflicts of sugar dating, the dangers and drawbacks they experienced, and their personal agency. -
The KING's Telephone Consultation & Training
The KING’s Telephone Consultation & Training Sessions Outline, Guidelines, Protocol, and Confidentiality Agreement Client’s First Name or Telephone Pseudonym: [insert real first name or pseudonym here] Day, Date, and Time of Desired Telephone Session: [insert desired day, date, and time here] Scheduled Duration: [insert a time frame of 20 – 90 minutes here] Fee: [$75.00 deposit for complimentary sessions] Professional Disclaimer: Alan Roger Currie (from this point forward referred to as ‘The KING’) is not a licensed or credentialed psychiatrist, psychologist, marriage therapist, and/or sex therapist. The KING is a Book Author, Public Speaker, Workshop Facilitator, Professional Dating Coach and Sex Coach, and a Professional BDSM Dominant Sir & Polyamory Advisor who offers advice and recommendations to clients for changes and improvements in their behavior patterns, as well as offers sexual entertainment to female clients and couples who seek out his services. None of the advice and recommendations expressed by The KING is medical or clinical in nature. All of The KING’s advice and recommendations are based solely on his own strong opinions that were formed from his own life experiences and observations that have been accumulated from his countless conversations and interactions with men, women, and couples (married and unmarried) over the last three plus decades. The KING does not assume any responsibility or liability for any erroneous, improper, or incorrect applications of The KING’s advice and recommendations. The KING nor any associate of Mode One Multimedia, Inc. assumes any responsibility in the event that the client misinterprets The KING’s advice and recommendations in a manner that potentially results in psychological and/or emotional duress or physical injury. -
Look at Me: Japanese Women Writers at the Millennial Turn David Holloway Washington University in St
View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by Washington University St. Louis: Open Scholarship Washington University in St. Louis Washington University Open Scholarship All Theses and Dissertations (ETDs) Spring 4-22-2014 Look at Me: Japanese Women Writers at the Millennial Turn David Holloway Washington University in St. Louis Follow this and additional works at: https://openscholarship.wustl.edu/etd Recommended Citation Holloway, David, "Look at Me: Japanese Women Writers at the Millennial Turn" (2014). All Theses and Dissertations (ETDs). 1236. https://openscholarship.wustl.edu/etd/1236 This Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by Washington University Open Scholarship. It has been accepted for inclusion in All Theses and Dissertations (ETDs) by an authorized administrator of Washington University Open Scholarship. For more information, please contact [email protected]. WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY IN SAINT LOUIS Department of East Asian Languages and Cultures Dissertation Examination Committee: Rebecca Copeland, Chair Nancy Berg Marvin Marcus Laura Miller Jamie Newhard Look at Me: Japanese Women Writers at the Millennial Turn by David Holloway A dissertation presented to the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences of Washington University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy May 2014 Saint Louis, MO TABLE OF CONTENTS ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS. iii INTRODUCTION: Ways of Looking. 1 CHAPTER ONE: Apocalypse and Anxiety in Contemporary Japan. 12 CHAPTER TWO: Repurposing Panic. 49 CHAPTER THREE: Writing Size Zero. 125 CHAPTER FOUR: The Dark Trauma. 184 CONCLUSION: Discourses of Disappointment, Heuristics of Happiness. 236 WORKS CITED. 246 ii ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS If any credit is deserved for the completion of this dissertation, it is not I who deserve it. -
Dating Expectations in Social Media
Aalto University School of Science Master’s Programme in Information Networks Annukka Jänkälä Dating expectations in social media: From profile pictures to a date and beyond Master’s Thesis Helsinki, January 18, 2017 Supervisor: Professor Tapio Takala, Aalto University Advisor: Asko Lehmuskallio Ph.D. (Social Sciences), University of Tampere ii Aalto University School of Science ABSTRACT OF Master’s Programme in Information Networks MASTER’S THESIS Author: Annukka Jänkälä Title: Dating expectations in social media: From profiles pictures to a date and beyond Pages: vii + 127 Date: January 18, 2017 Major: Information Networks Supervisor: Professor Tapio Takala Advisor: Asko Lehmuskallio, Ph.D. (Social Sciences) Computer-mediated communication (CMC) has widely been seen as inferior to face-to- face (FtF) communication because of for example the lack of immediate feedback and nonverbal cues. However, the social information processing theory sees CMC as equal to FtF communication because people want to build social relationships also in CMC. The hyperpersonal theory goes even further by stating that the reduced cues in CMC foster more affection and emotion compared with FtF communication. This thesis aimed to explore this field further from the view of singles seeking a romantic life partner online. The study was conducted by interviewing 13 current and former Tinder users with semi- structured interviews. Some of them also provided their Tinder profiles and/or conversation histories for further analysis. The subjects were young adults with no children, living in the Helsinki metropolitan area of Finland, and most of them had or were pursuing a university degree. They were seeking a life partner rather than one-night stands. -
Running Head: COLLEGE WOMEN’S MOTIVATIONS for SUGAR DATING 1
Running head: COLLEGE WOMEN’S MOTIVATIONS FOR SUGAR DATING 1 COLLEGE WOMEN’S MOTIVATIONS FOR SUGAR DATING A THESIS SUBMITTED TO THE GRAUDATE SCHOOL IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE MASTER OF ARTS BY KIMBERLEY KIRKEBY DR. JUSTIN LEHMILLER-ADVISOR BALL STATE UNIVERSITY MUNCIE, INDIANA JULY 2019 COLLEGE WOMEN’S MOTIVATIONS FOR SUGAR DATING 2 Acknowledgements First and foremost, I wish to thank my advisor and committee chair, Dr. Justin Lehmiller. His guidance, wealth of knowledge, and astounding teaching methods were not only invaluable to the completion of this project but have provided me with tools I will undoubtedly rely upon repeatedly throughout my student and academic careers. I feel extremely fortunate to have had the opportunity to learn from him. I would also like to express my gratitude for my additional thesis committee members, Dr. George Gaither and Dr. Johnathan Forbey, whose insight and feedback improved the quality of this work. A sincere thank you also goes to Dr. Lori Boyland and Dr. Joe McKinney for the encouragement, support, and mentoring they have provided me while working as a graduate assistant over the past two years. Getting to know them has been among my favorite experiences of my time at Ball State. I will truly miss them moving forward. Last but not least, I would like to acknowledge my parents, Mary Sandoval and Kevin Kirkeby. Without their continued support and encouragement, my academic goals would not have become a reality. I am eternally grateful for all they have done to help me succeed and for believing in me even when I did not believe in myself. -
Data Cultures of Mobile Dating and Hook-Up Apps
Original Research Article Big Data & Society July–December 2017: 1–11 ! The Author(s) 2017 Data cultures of mobile dating and DOI: 10.1177/2053951717720950 hook-up apps: Emerging issues for journals.sagepub.com/home/bds critical social science research Kath Albury1, Jean Burgess2, Ben Light3, Kane Race4 and Rowan Wilken5 Abstract The ethical and social implications of data mining, algorithmic curation and automation in the context of social media have been of heightened concern for a range of researchers with interests in digital media in recent years, with particular concerns about privacy arising in the context of mobile and locative media. Despite their wide adoption and economic importance, mobile dating apps have received little scholarly attention from this perspective – but they are intense sites of data generation, algorithmic processing, and cross-platform data-sharing; bound up with competing cultures of pro- duction, exploitation and use. In this paper, we describe the ways various forms of data are incorporated into, and emerge from, hook-up apps’ business logics, socio-technical arrangements, and cultures of use to produce multiple and intersecting data cultures. We propose a multi-layered research agenda for critical and empirical inquiry into this field, and suggest appropriate conceptual and methodological frameworks for exploring the social and political challenges of data cultures. Keywords Online dating, apps, mobile media, geo-location, sexuality, data culture Introduction studied mainly with regard to specific aspects and par- ticular demographics, especially gay men (Blackwell The practice of everyday life is entangled with digital et al., 2015; Brubaker et al., 2016; Gudelunas, 2012; media, especially mobile media (Goggin, 2006), and this Light, 2016a; Light et al., 2008; Mowlabocus, 2010; extends to sex and intimate relationships (Light, 2014). -
Social and Human Considerations for a More Mobile World (2004)
INTERNATIONAL TELECOMMUNICATION UNION Document: SMIS/04 WORKSHOP ON SHAPING THE ITU/MIC 26 February 2004 FUTURE MOBILE INFORMATION SOCIETY Seoul, 4-5 March 2004 SOCIAL AND HUMAN CONSIDERATIONS FOR A MORE MOBILE WORLD BACKGROUND PAPER © ITU February 2004 This paper was prepared by Lara Srivastava <[email protected]>, Telecom Policy Analyst, International Telecommunication Union (ITU). The author wishes to acknowledge Maria Cristina Bueti and Alex Young for their assistance. The New Initiatives project on “Shaping the Future Mobile Information Society” is managed by Lara Srivastava <[email protected]> under the direction of Tim Kelly <[email protected]>. Country case studies (Japan, Korea, Morocco, Norway) on the future mobile information society, and a background paper on the future broadband convergence network, can be found at http://www.itu.int/futuremobile. The series editor is Joanna Goodrick <[email protected]>. The opinions expressed in this study are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of the International Telecommunication Union or its membership. 2 Table of contents 1 Introduction ............................................................................................................................................... 4 1.1 Context .............................................................................................................................................. 4 1.2 A more mobile market...................................................................................................................... -
Preferences of Mobile Dating App Users: a Semantic Network Analysis Approach Jessica Welch
Preferences of Mobile Dating App Users: A Semantic Network Analysis Approach Jessica Welch Historically, differences have existed between heterosexual men and women regarding the traits they value most in a potential romantic partner. For example, men have typically prioritized their partner’s physical attractiveness, while women have typically valued job stability and income. These differences in partner selection between men and women have persisted in multiple studies of both traditional dating and online dating, even though other dating norms have changed in the past few decades. The most recent trend in dating is the use of mobile dating apps, but researchers have yet to examine whether these gender differences persist on this new platform. My study attempts to address this information gap by using a semantic network analysis approach combined with frequency distributions to investigate whether gender differences in partner selection are still present when interactions occur via mobile dating apps. Results indicate that men and women value similar attributes when assessing someone’s mobile dating app profile; both groups highly valued potential partners’ physical attractiveness, although women participants using mobile dating apps also prioritized partners’ intelligence and college major. Future research is required to determine whether gender differences in partner preference are disappearing across all forms of dating or if these results are specific to the platform (i.e., the use of a mobile dating app). Because this sample was limited to cisgender college students from a single Midwestern university, future research should also target a more diverse group of participants across age, gender, sexuality, and ethnicity to determine whether these results are generalizable. -
The Secret Life of a Sugar Baby
Whittier College Poet Commons Journalism Student Scholarship & Research 12-12-2018 The Secret Life of a Sugar Baby Madison Crimi-DeMichele Follow this and additional works at: https://poetcommons.whittier.edu/journalism POETINIS: DRINK IN THE TRUTH Only you can see this message This story's distribution setting is oA. Learn more The Secret Life Of A Sugar Baby Cash-strapped college students seem to be seeking arrangements Madison Crimi-DeMichele Dec 12, 2018 · 7 min read Too much sugar? “Once, I was single, I said, ‘fuck it.’” is 8:00 a.m. on a recent Monday and everyone on Whittier College’s campus It seems to be cranky and cramming for nals. I am walking across the quad with someone who appears to be an average college student. Jessica (the subject’s name has been changed to protect her privacy) is cute and short with an athletic build. Overwhelmed like everyone else, she is trying her best to meet due dates, budget her money and attempt to have a life at the same time. She’s a typical college student with one big exception: she was a sugar baby. A sugar baby engages in a quasi-romantic relationships with a sugar daddy (or sugar mama) who is typically older and wealthier. In exchange for time, companionship and sometimes more, sugar babies receive money, gifts or other compensation. Sugaring, as it is called, appears to be a trend among cash-starved college students. So, maybe Jessica’s experience as a sugar baby isn’t all that unique after all. Jessica tried sugaring after some friends and cousins told her about SeekingArrangement.com, which says it oers “relationships on your terms”.