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1.What does Elizabeth Biondi want to do? Be ...
2.What fueled the dating explosion? ...
3.What does Matchmaking Instiute offer? ... for would-be Cupids in the
States.
4.Why have some singles grown increasingly weary of attending web datings?
Because they are faced with ...
Elizabeth Biondi wants to be a matchmaker. After a devastating breskup with
a boyfriend, the Detroit social worker decided to channel her romantic energy
into someting constructive. She had always enjoyed setting frienda up on dates-
why not strangers? So Binodi, 25, hopped on a plane to New York City and
enrollde in matchmaking school. Biondi is in good company. Dating services have
blossomed over the past few years to become a billion-dollar industry. Although
the Internet fueled dating explosion, reallife matchmakers with names like Great
Expectations an It's Just Lunch are popping up around the U.S. like valentines
in J.Lo's mailbox. The Matchmaking Institute, which offers the first
certification course for would-be Cupids in the States, opened and is attracting
students from as far away as Singapore. The Internet is playing a double role in
matchmaking's revival. On the one hand, the ubiquity of online dating-1 in 10
Web surfers uses those sites, which get 40 million hits a month - has eased
Americans' hang-ups about paying a third party to set up dates. On the other
hand, Web-dating singles have grown increasingly weary of the attending
aggravations - the overly flattering photos, the fibbing bios, the
lessthan-honnrable intentions, the inevitable let down of that first date. |
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