Here's some people from YOUR Local Area Who are already into Online Dating...
matchmaking News Archive
10-Feb-2008
Surrendering to tractor pull of love (MSNBC) Rural Americans ? farmers and others who know their way around a barn and a milking machine ? are finding love through an online matchmaking service just for them.
Business Lights Up At Matchmaking Sites (Hartford Courant) I recently came across this news: "Three Million Newly Single Americans Facing 2008's Valentine's Day Alone." The direness of the situation could shake anyone to the core, and online dating services (one of which posted the headline) will be quick to try to lend a hand.
Online dating site updates put new spin on matchmaking (Lawrence Journal-World) It?s the week before Valentine?s Day, and you might be looking for a special someone. Maybe you?re one of the millions of people who haven?t tried an online matchmaking service. Or maybe you tried one awhile ago and were disappointed by the number of people more interested in casual dating than in establishing serious relationships.
Matchmaking site helps couples find love on the prairie (WFMJ Youngstown) CARLISLE, Pa. (AP) - Rural America is peaceful and bucolic. But it also can be lonely and isolating. The nearest neighbor might be two miles away. Work often starts before dawn and ends after sunset. And knowing everyone in town is great -- unless you're looking for someone new to date.
As the Online Matchmaking World Turns (TechNewsWorld.com) It's the weekend before Valentine's Day, and you might be looking for a special someone. Maybe you're one of the millions of people who haven't tried an online matchmaking service. Or maybe you tried one a while ago and were disappointed by the number of people more interested in casual dating than in establishing serious relationships.
Surrendering to tractor pull of love (AP via Yahoo! News) Sonya Rinker was looking for a guy: someone who was kind, respectful and had a special place in his heart ... for tractors. She wanted a man who could share the thrill of a good tractor-pull show, who could see beauty in a shiny row of green and yellow of John Deere tractors.