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Table for eight ... minutes
The latest trend among singles is 'speed dating'

Pamela McLoughlin, Register Staff September 29, 2002
Anita and Eric, two singles looking for a love connection, get to know each other during an eight-minute blind date at The Gathering restaurant in Milford. Chris Volpe/Register
MILFORD — "Mar 505" is on a first blind date with "Eric 902," so naturally, they start talking about each other's interests.

Eric, a 50-year-old salesman tells Mar, also 50, that that he likes kayaking, canoeing and camping. She tells him she loves horseback riding and flying kites.
"I have a kite in my car," Eric responds with a lilt in his voice because of the common ground.

Mar responds: "I have a saddle in my trunk."

But instead of saddling up or galloping on the beach, the two get up at the sound of a bell and meet another date at another table.

By the end of the night, they and a group of about 25 other singles will have gone on eight, eight-minute dates to become part of a new concept that puts dating right up there with fiberoptic cable, instant messaging and the three minute egg.

"I think it was fabulous — everyone had a terrific time," said event organizer Tracey Hydeck.

Eight minute dating has been big in places like Boston, New York and California for a couple of years, but is just making its way to Connecticut.

Hydeck, an area organizer, recently brought the first area events to Knickerbocker's and the Gathering restaurants.

THE RULES

Here's how it works: An "event" is booked at a local bar or coffee shop by Hydeck and people looking for a date sign up at http://erlang.voxel.net/. They pay $33.88 — or $28.88 with a $5 coupon — and on the big night, an equal number of men and woman in the same general age group meet.

At the door, Hydeck gives them a score card of sorts and tags bearing their first name and a number. They aren't allowed to exchange last names or phone numbers.

Hydeck begins by telling them the rules: As participants go from date to date, they use the card to keep notes about each date and check off a box if they are interested in contacting that person for another date, friendship or business.

"This is pretty painless by the time you get through the third or fourth date," she tells them.

After the event, daters go home and log their choices into a computer. The eight-minute dating folks find the mutual matches and e-mail those folks with contact information.

"I feel like I have nothing to lose," said Angela 709, a 36-year-old medical assistant. "I have a great life and I just want someone to share it."

Angela, who recently returned to the dating scene after raising a daughter by herself, didn't get a match at Knickerbocker's, but had lots of fun and will try again at an event taking place at the Playwright in New Haven Oct. 22. Best of all, Angela said, she also met other single women to do the dating scene with.

"The quality of the men wasn't bad," she said.

CHEMISTRY LESSON

The eight-minute daters — who came from as far away as Danbury and Hartford — said they are tired of bars, dances, the internet, sporting events and long blind dates that seem like an eternity when they don't work out.

"It's hard to meet people if you don't meet people at work and you're not in the bar scene," said Mike 100, an assistant produce manager who's pressed for time to meet women because his son, 13, visits often on weekends. "I find going on line very time-consuming and not that fruitful."

Joanne 704, a law student and business owner, said she's always looking for men because she just loves to date.

"My longest on-line (relationship) was only a couple of months," she said. "The problem is that it's hard on-line to get the physical attraction."

Robi 703, said the eight-minute technique is like the "duck, duck goose," of dating, but she liked it and would do it again because it was so much fun.

That night at Knickerbocker's, she picked Frank 101 for friendship, but he wanted more and checked off all three relationship categories.

It was easy to predict Frank's choice when they had "their date."

About four minutes into it, Frank made his feelings known: "This is worth it already — you look beautiful, very good," Frank said, sizing her up.

Frank, who said he was "high level auto mechanic," told Robi he is 41.

"I know I don't look it — it must be all the money I invested in vitamins," he added

In contrast, Frank 101, showed an instant lack of chemistry on his fourth date — and she wasn't exactly on fire either.

"Have you been meeting some nice guys?" he asks her 30 seconds into the date.

When she responds, "Yes," he comes back with a patronizing, "That's wonderful."

Three weeks later, Frank, his bottle of Smirnoff Ice, and his vivid descriptions of his ex-wife were back at the Gathering event, but this time he was Frank 905.

TRY AGAIN

When you get as lucky Steve 305, things can get stressful.

He tried eight-minute dating on the advice of friends in Boston who said it "takes the pressure off."

Steve got three matches and on his first full-night dinner date with a pick he really likes, found himself explaining why he needed to test the others too.

"I think she was the number one pick," he said.

Most of the icebreaking questions are typical: family situation, profession, likes, dislikes. Some conversations hardly get off the ground and others turn philosophical or intellectual in only eight minutes.

"Eight minutes isn't long enough," Larry 908 said, after his date with Susan 501, a money manager with two sons who broke the rules and told someone that she thought he was cute, too.

Some have become veterans.

Barry 904 said the Gathering event was his third shot at eight-minute dating.

"I'm shy," he said. "This is better than going to a dance where you don't connect." Barry said the first time around he got confused, didn't take notes and picked women who were "too young."

The second time around, he got six matches and dated everyone of them — but apparently didn't meet Ms. Right.

The age range at the Gathering event was 40-50, although some pushed it a little past.

Sallie 900, age 54, was apparently there for an education.

"I'm doing it just as a learning experience," she said. "Everything is based on chemistry."

JoAnn 509, a hairdresser from Bridgeport, was hopeful going in.

"I stopped into the salon and told them where I was going tonight and they (co-workers) laughed, but then a doctor in the chair said, 'Don't laugh, my brother met his fiancee that way,' " JoAnn said.

But she sees a more systemic problem in the dating scene.

"When you reach a certain age, there are too many women," she said.

JoAnn, who once paid $600 for a hot guy at a charity auction — and got six dates out of it — told Eric on their date that she'd try anything — except skydiving.

Her dating conversation with Eric was a little bumpier, however, than Mar's dating conversation.

Perhaps it is because he started the conversation by pointing to his knick-name "Hatchet" on his name tag and explaining, "It's just a joke."


Pamela McLoughlin can be reached at mailto:pmcloughlin@nhregister.comor 876-6800.

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