Exploiting the Pledge Process
Joe Concha If the New
York Times Wedding Announcements page is any indication, men simply arent getting
hitched before the age of thirty-three.
Is the reason for such delay insecurity and indecision, or
is there simply a premium on quality opportunities to find someone to essentially share
every moment with until death, or divorce, do you part?
If the latter is the correct answer, then Cupid must be
scratching his head. Howwith email, cell phones, Botox, hair coloring, Viagra,
Tantra workshops, 8-minute dating and Match.comcould it take longer to find a life
partner? Even without these modern meeting advantages, our parents wrapped this whole
aspect of life up before even being old enough to legally to buy the champagne to toast
the engagement. In the 21st Century, technology has made our cynical generation even more
cynical, if thats possible.
But a cunning, ingenious strategy in meeting scores of
women has accidentally emerged from the formerly uneventful world of Internet real-estate
classified ads. Not only does this approach help otherwise inept guys pick up girls, it
even makes the whole process convenient
And the oddest part is, its intentions are seen as
(shortness of breath)
noble.
I stumbled onto this mechanism a few years ago when
attempting to fill shares in my Sea Girt beach rental by placing an on-line advertisement
on Hobokeni.com, which is the most popular place for groups or solo shares to find
existing share houses to, uh, share. In my case, I had a $40,000.00 shore rental but not
enough people to make the share price affordable. Overall I was in need of a combination
of twelve female quarter, half and full shares to compliment twelve of the same on the guy
side for the Empires starting roster. The thinking was that if we were going to fill
the remaining spots, we might as well make those selections esthetically pleasing.
Honestly, how often do we have in life the opportunity to
play God, or at least the host of Match Game? By placing an ad online, we would not
only solve the logistical issue of decreasing the cost-per-share, but would also be
allowing ourselves the unique opportunity to get acquainted with women who want something
we have: An already-organized beach house one block from the ocean.
In order to meet as many groups of applicants as possible,
we planned happy hours "interviews" at our convenience.
What a country...
Our ad was pithy and specific:
Title- Joe Conchas Sea Girt Beach House
Text- Great group of Hoboken/NYC guys looking for like-minded females to round out
civilized beach house. Huge deck, garage, cleaning service, Bar-B-Q, wall-to-wall
carpeting, A/C, W/D, and plenty of parking available. Six bedrooms, 3.5 baths with plenty
of beds and space. People and location can't be beat
Memorial Day through Labor Day
rental sits fours blocks from the ocean and less than a mile to the Parker House. Full and
half shares available. Pictures of rental and house members available as well. Return
photos mandatory. Member FDIC.
Email: Seagirt2008@yahoo.com
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| Melissa of Hoboken sent this Sundressphoto
with her Empire application |
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By specifying age, gender and price, we basically
eliminated 70% of the applicants (men, geriatric women, proletariats, etc.) that we
couldnt waste precious seconds interviewing.
Twenty-four hours after being placed live on the
Hobokeni.com Summer Shares section, my new email inbox looked like the Now Serving sign at
Dunkin Donuts:
Inbox 21
The only thought that came to mind was what Roy Scheider
wryly suggested to his Captain in the original Jaws after sizing up his prey:
"Youre gonna need a bigger boat."
I needed a house the size of the entire complex on Melrose Place.
Overall, I received over fifty responses for the ad in four
days. Most lived in Hoboken or Manhattan. From there our itinerary had our
"evaluators" moving from bar to bar in Manhattan and Hoboken on a nightly basis,
appraising various clusters of potential house pledges on a cocktail-by-cocktail basis.
For some reason, each group always looked better by the end of these rush parties than
when they began.
Summers at the Jersey Shore for adults two to twelve years
removed from college serve simply as a weekly escape from the reality of actually having
to grow up. To that end, meeting random people on what is essentially group blind dates
isnt awkward because both parties have three things in common: A love for alcohol,
meeting new people, and moral bankruptcy. Needless to say, the conversation at these happy
hours was easy like Sunday morning.
After two weeks of alcohol-soaked evaluations and cruel
next-day email reviews, we found the thirteen people we were looking for. However, the
success then prompted an evil epiphany that dawned on one of my housemates.
"Why dont we keep the ad up and keep the Happy
Hours going?" asked Clayton, a 34-year old alpha male who never has any problems
securing dates.
"But we already filled all of the shares," I responded, oblivious to his
nefarious intent.
"No, I mean, who needs to know that there are no more spots left?" he said with
an evil smile. "Have you ever met more groups of women this quickly?"
So after getting over the fact that we were indeed going to hell, ads for
houses that didnt exist continued to be posted and rush party Happy Hours occurred
as a result. For some, these Happy Hours periodically ended up turning into happy meals
and happy mornings. All of the prospects for the phantom house were then politely told
their trysts made sharing a summerhouse impossible because of the awkwardness it might
create.
Evil.
Since deception knows no boundaries, the exploitation of
this idea expanded. Two members of the house advertised for a female roommate they
didnt need. Both told their more attractive interviewees in follow-up phone calls
that the reason the apartment was no longer available was because they were too attractive
to platonically share an apartment with, but that they should definitely get together for
a drink sometime (it worked three times). The explanation somehow created a situation
where a guy can look sweet while delivering bad news.
Evil.
Will any of these ruses result in an appearance in the
Times Wedding Announcements pages? Probably not...it would be tough enough to tell
the "how we met" story at the engagement party
But needless to say, if the people who were duped put
two-and-two together after reading this story, the only section anybody will be appearing
in is the Obituaries.
Joe Concha is Realhoboken.coms Senior Writer and
re-opens the Empire in Spring Lake in two weeks. Email questions or comments to joe.concha@foxnews.com or use the message
board on the homepage. |