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  • Feeling that click with culture

    Los Angeles Daily News, CA
    San Gabriel Valley Tribune, CA
    June 5 2005

    Feeling that click with culture
    Ethnic dating sites expanding

    By Naush Boghossian , Staff Writer

    Talin Aintablian never really "clicked' on the dating scene with guys
    who shared her cultural background.

    But when her brother met his fiancee on HyeSingles.com - an online
    dating site for Armenians - she decided to give it a try. Much to
    her surprise, she says, she met "the one.'

    "If I had been dating someone when I met Patrick, I would have dumped
    him right away because I knew this guy had to be the one,' Aintablian,
    32, said of her boyfriend of three months, Patrick Tourian.

    While general online personals and dating sites have been around for
    years, a new online dating niche has emerged and is seeing surging
    growth in the Los Angeles area: Sites catering to ethnic groups.

    With an estimated 600,000 Iranians and 400,000 Armenians in Los Angeles
    - the largest populations outside those countries - the sheer size
    of the communities is fueling much of the growth.

    "These sites are especially popular in the Los Angeles area because
    of the huge concentrations of people there from other countries and
    cultures who are seeking similar people so they can pair up more
    successfully and outside of their tight family circle,' said Judith
    Meskill, editorial director of Weblogs Inc., the largest online
    publisher of weblogs.

    "These services allow people restrained by religious or familial
    responsibilities to find more people with their backgrounds.'

    Julie Albright, a lecturer in the Department of Sociology at USC, said
    the sites also help those facing the same issues as larger society -
    including busy schedules and few places to gather - to meet in an
    easy and relatively inexpensive way.

    "It opens a wide pool of availables to you while dating. You can walk
    to the local Armenian cafe and meet one person, but online you can
    meet 30. It increases your odds for a love match,' said Albright,
    who researched attraction online and is studying attraction and
    deception on the Internet.

    "What's beautiful about the Internet for these ethnic communities
    is it enables people to sort through a lot of people and focus in on
    those types of qualities they desire,' she said.

    Aintablian, a Hollywood resident, said the online site helped her
    find not only a culturally compatible partner but somebody with whom
    she had a lot in common.

    "You're running them through some kind of screening process so it makes
    it easier to have a potential date with somebody that has the same
    interests and desires,' she said. "He's like me. He's American but not
    really Americanized because he hasn't lost his culture and traditions.'

    For his part, the 36-year-old Tourian said he turned to the Internet
    to find an Armenian girl because his options were limited in Arizona.

    "I found this to be a great way to try to find Armenians,' the business
    owner said. "It brings the whole community together.'

    That's the philosophy of Said Amin, CEO and founder of World Singles,
    the leading online dating company for ethnic communities that runs
    IranianPersonals.com , HyeSingles.com and ArabLounge.com .

    Since its founding four years ago, the company has expanded to include
    14 niche sites. And membership is growing.

    IranianPersonals now has more than 120,000 members, nearly a quarter
    of them from the Los Angeles area; HyeSingles has 16,000 members,
    nearly two- thirds of them from the Los Angeles area.

    "Birds of a feather flock together. As the database grows, it will
    draw more people,' said the 32-year-old Amin.

    One 28-year-old local high-tech industry worker who used
    IranianPersonals.com said she not only met somebody who speaks her
    language and shares her culture, but somebody who has even more
    specific traits in common.

    She said the site's open-ended questions like "How important is it
    that your children learn to read and write Farsi?' and "How do you feel
    about the Israeli-Palestinian crisis ... and what do you suggest as a
    solution?' gave her a glimpse into her potential partner's character
    and outlook on life.

    She and her architect fiance plan to get married next year.

    Analysts of the nearly $500 million online dating industry agree
    that such successes will help propel these types of sites to continue
    to proliferate.

    "I think you'll see more and more of it. In theory, if there was a
    market shakeout because so many people are launching these types of
    communities, I think you'll find niche-oriented sites will find more
    attraction,' said Michael Jones, president of Idea Oasis, Internet
    Dating Executive Alliance/Online Association for Social Industry
    Standards.

    One site that has continued to attract attention is JDate, the Jewish
    dating site launched in 1997 that is considered the leader of ethnic
    online dating.

    JDate accounted for nearly 25 percent of its parent company Spark
    Networks' $65.1 million in revenues in 2004, and its online dating
    service has grown so large that it is rolling out premiere offerings
    to try to continue to attract and retain customers.

    In early May, it launched Joe's Club in Los Angeles in which,
    for a yearly membership fee, the company will provide personalized
    matchmaking and bring together at a local restaurant eight people
    from the site that they believe are compatible.

    "The reason for that success, whether they're Armenians or Jews who
    are sharing a common ethnicity or a religion, is they're looking for
    long-term partners who share their values and traditions,' said Gail
    Laguna, spokeswoman for Spark Networks.

    But while niche sites continue to flourish they have not been immune
    from some of the same problems that plague general dating sites.

    Teni Khachatourian of Los Angeles decided to give HyeSingles.com
    a try. But while she may have expected run-ins with online losers
    and dorks, she never expected to meet a man, date him for a month,
    then find out he was married.

    "I don't think anyone ever expects to meet a married guy in a singles
    arena. But in an Armenian site where the community is so small and
    everyone knows each other, it would be so risky, so I would think
    that's the last place a married guy would put up a profile with a
    photograph,' said the 27-year- old film publicist at Columbia Pictures.

    "The lesson is that it's not different if you're online or at a bar
    or at a singles event. Being single, you have to be aware and as
    cautious as possible.'

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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