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"Nope, still gay." | Chemistry.com commercial
"Nope, still gay." | Chemistry.com commercial
By Carlos C. Franco
05/01/2007
Carlsbad, California -- Chemistry.com has been putting out some ads about their dating site which rely on the crux, of what would appear to be, the broad-spectrum rejection of certain members from other dating sites, more specifically eHarmony. "Chemistry[.com] is a new site from the team at Match.com" as quoted from their website's "About Us" page, and offers many if not all of the amenities as its competitors. The attitude of the ads, however are very much set apart from its rivals.
So far there seems to be no backlash for these ads, as well as no explanations for where they got their information. Could the dismissals of “Over a million people rejected by eHarmony” be explained by any other means than the implicated bigotry; a simple algorithm for inactivity bias perhaps? Should Match.com be allowed compete with the advantage of supposedly exposing injustices perpetrated by other dating services without exposing their own rejection rate; and under a new brand name to boot?
It may not seem like such a big deal, and yeah the commercials are funny; but as soon as we start to surrender our critical thinking to comedic, fallacious, appeals to our (now very sensitive) awareness’ of injustice and tolerances, aren’t we just as bad off as when we were blind to our collective lack of them?
To see the commercial, please visit: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XsSNo38E6EU
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May 1, 2007 at 07:12 pm by carloscfranco, 3540 views, 2 comments
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Brian A Kennedy
Brooklyn, New York, United States





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Brian A Kennedyat 07:03 on May 2nd, 2007
carloscfranco, good story! And yes, it does seem kind of weird that a dating service is boasting about how it's full of people who would have been rejected from other sites...
at 09:48 on May 3rd, 2007
I posted the ad to youtube because rarely does a commercial make me laugh out loud, and eharmony has a history of rejecting or telling applicants they are unable to enter their profiles into the system for various reasons -- which they only tell you after you've gone through the lengthy questionnaire. It has happened so often to various people, not just gays and lesbians, that it's pretty easy to do a google search on the company and find info on their reputation.
As someone gay and single who's had to suffer through eharmony's commercials about finding that perfect someone (before I got tivo and a skip button), I'm glad to see someone trying to take wind out of their sails. Thanks for linking to my upload!