2012年9月27日星期四

Get Ready For Your Millionaire Matchmaker Interview

Wealthy Dating

Everybody must be very familiar with the millionaire matchmaker TV show hold by Patti Stanger. Have you ever thought of being displayed on the show? One reader showed us her experiences with the Matchmaker interview. Maybe, it”s helpful for you guys who are looking forward to participating.
Step 1: Put down the bowl of rocky road. (And pretend you didn’t already have one before it.)
Step 2: Get your upper lip waxed, woman. Because even if you can’t see the hairs, they’re there and Stanger will notice. It’s practically a goatee, frankly.
Step 3: Get your hair professionally blow-dried straight. (And ensure you’re entirely straight in other ways too.) If you’re like me with hair that is too short to even comb, grow it. Fast. Make sure it’s blond or brunette. Which is somewhat unfortunate for myself and, well, 95 percent of people of colour. (And redheads. So last year.)
Which leads us to Step 4.
Step 4: Become white. And be a bunch of other things you’re not and never could be. (I don’t even have to list them, you know exactly what they are.)
Step 5: Never, ever be a gold digger. If you feel any cognitive dissonance over this step at all, given how you’re interviewing to sit in a room full of women in order to meet a millionaire you know nothing about and would probably never care to date otherwise then you obviously don’t understand this business and you will be blacklisted immediately. Excommunicated. Thrown into the depths of normal-people, non-millionaire hell.
Step 6: Dress to show and not show your womanly assets. Stanger insists upon this and it shall be. Don’t understand what it entails? Read the latter sentences of step
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Some Quick Tips For Dating Older Women

Wealthy Dating


The reasons why some men date older women are as varied as the women themselves. These women, because of their experience, often have more wisdom and self-assurance than younger women — perhaps they may also possess more self-reliance and tolerance.
So, for you men who’ve fallen head-over-heels in love with an older woman, I’ve developed six tips on how to enjoy your newly found romance:
1. Be a gentleman. An older woman wants to be treated with respect, like any woman does.
2. Don”t get ahead of yourself. Don”t worry about the future until you actually might have one.
3. Stay calm. You may be excited, but don”t overdo it.
4. Be charming. Don”t underestimate how powerful your smile can be.
5. Don’t focus on looks.
6. Keep conversation interesting and light.
Content provided by the users on the online millionaire matchmakermillionairectag.com.
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Millionaire Matchmaker: Single Mom Dating Shows

Wealthy Match

Are you a single mom who wonders what it would be like to be on a dating show? Stacy Kessler can tell you. Featured on the pilot episode of Bravo”s “The Millionaire Matchmaker,” Kessler is an actress/model/host/lifestyle coach and single mom of four who gave it a try in the hopes she”d meet Mr. Right. She didn’t — but she sure learned a lot.
“I actually went in with the honest feeling that I might meet somebody,” says Kessler. “I wasn’t completely optimistic, but I went in with that attitude. Whatever else I got out of it, I was real. It was quite an experience, because it came from the number-one reality TV production company. But dealing with a character like Patti Stanger was quite an eye-opening experience for me.”
For one, Kessler felt misunderstood by the Millionaire Matchmaker. “It was a nightmare,” she says. “It was really difficult, because she”s so stuck in her ways. Her character doesn’t really develop. She”s kind of got her one thing going.”
So what personal lesson did she learn by doing the show? “Everything”s worth trying, regardless if it”s for your personal life, your sexual life or your career,” says Kessler. “The risktakers are the ones who get ahead. You can”t get anywhere in life without taking risks.”
But even risktaker Kessler, mom of three boys and girl aged 11, 16, 17 and 20, finds dating difficult. “The truth is, you can be a single mom and date,” she says. “You can be a career woman and not a mom and date. But being both a career woman and a single mom … dating doesn’t really happen without real effort. Dating as a single mom with even one kid is hard, but the more you multiply, the harder it is. Time management is critical.”
In raising her brood, Kessler shares the same struggles we all do in balancing career and kids. “There are challenges and pleasures in every day,” she says. “The challenge is trying to pursue my dreams and achieve my goals while I facilitate my children to achieve their dreams. Being highly organized helps!”
Done with dating shows, Kessler is focused on building a career in entertainment as an actress and TV host. She has also assumed the position of lifestyle coach on her YouTube show “The Lingerie Script,” which is aimed at empowering 40-something women. “It”s something tasteful, classy and unexpected,” she says of the show, which includes expert diet and exercise tips.
Why was important for her to target her own age group? “Successful women with children who, number one, are happy — which is the most important thing in life — and are personally and professionally successful … achieving all that is a tall order,” she says. “A lot of people just can”t do it alone. But if I can do it, anybody can.”

2012年9月26日星期三

Millionaire Dating: How To Flirt With Someone?

Wealthy Match

(Millionairetag.com Advice) Find a perfect match is very important. But some flirt skills are also important. Try to get accepted once you meet the right guy. Here we will spend some space on flirting.
Flirt is a very effective way to meet your potential mates and see if they are really compatible with you. Sometimes, a ball or a party may help you open the door to a romantic relationship with someone. Just because of this, it”s important for you to master the flirt skills which make you feel ease and comfortable when you flirt with someone.
First, lower your expectations. Don”t expect too much before the flirt. Or you will be disappointed later for sure. Most of the time, you just flirt with someone in a short time and maybe you will never talk with him or her again and you know little about this person”s real life. So just take it easy and don”t expect too much. Remember, you are just flirting.
Second, use body language. Does the person look friendly? Will he or she be interested in you? You can read that from the body language. Sometimes you be get mislead by body languages, then don”t make the decision too early and watch for more. Just follow your intuition if you are definitely unsure. Most of us have our natural ability to recognize body languages.
Third, eye contact is very very important for the loving ones. Holding eye contact with the people for 5 second is widely used tactic, but don”t stare. And when a guy looks at you, just do a small smile, make your cheeks blush, and then quickly look down at your lap. Glance back up after about 5 seconds if he is still looking at you, then he probably got the sign.
Forth, start conversation with the people you are interested in. If you don”t know him or her well, just make a small talk simply. You may start a simple conversation like this: “It’s a nice day!”, “Weekend is always happy!”, etc. Actually what you say is not important. You just break the ice and make the conversation start. Once you get a positive response instantly, just continue. Or if the person doesn’t respond or seems not interested, probably you are not the right one for him/her. Just start from what you can see there or something around, but don”t talk too much about yourself or ask lots of personal questions. In short, don”t make your conversation full of questions and answers. That brings no good feelings.
Then, short your attention and respect to your flirting mate. Everyone wants to be concerned, respected. So don”t forget to laugh at their jokes, listen to their stories and show your attention to what they are doing. It”s more important to seem interested than interesting. Being a good listener is more important than being witty.
Last, if both of you feel the same interest in each other, a close contact just like a mobile phone number is absolutely needed before separating. For most people, it”s very important because they may get rejection. But, we still need to do that. Just be brave, tell him/her you are really interested in meeting him/her again. Most of the time, you will be accepted, unless you are really annoying or bothersome.

2012年9月24日星期一

Find And Date Rich Men & Young Women Online


Now a days, many young girls are inclined to date rich men, who are named as sugar daddies. These rich men would spoil them and provide anything they want in life. For the rich men, money is not a problem. What they are looking for is the happiness.
With an rich mate, the ladies may feel they are real women who can enjoy the luxury and gorgeous things in life. And the rich and wealthy men may provide these young women with great life which many others are dreaming of.
Many young women today are becoming part of the trend to find that sugar daddy by joining the online sugar daddy dating clubs or millionaire dating clubs that can bring them millionaires and rich men. They are quite confident in finding a millionaire or a sugar daddy with the online dating system.
Many of these online dating sites offer a way for the young girls and rich men to meet each other by winks, emails, online chat, as well as video talk, etc. Of course, many rich men join them with the aim of finding pretty,hot girls.

Millionaire Matchmaker Brings Her Advice To New York

Wealthy Match


Once up on a  time, the millionaire matchmaker becomes the most important TV show for the American singles, especially for those who want to date a millionaire, or a rich and wealthy. Two years later, we still find these Patti’s words will be helpful for those who want to find and date a millionaire. So, we’ll recall one of the most impressive moment which was happened a moment ago.
On a misty late morning the Tuesday after Labor Day, Patti Stanger, namesake star of the popular Bravo reality program The Millionaire Matchmaker, was standing in her Marina del Rey, Calif., office a raw industrial space with red-painted walls and matching red chairs shaped like lips preparing to douse one of her clients in the cold water of her now-notorious realism.
Today we’re going to do an internal makeover on a girl, Stanger told me as she forcefully flipped through an issue of Life & Style magazine in search of an ad in which she had posed for Sensa, the appetite suppressant responsible for her recent 25-pound weight loss.
She can’t seem to get from A to B, and she always listens to my advice and doesn’t do it, Stanger continued about the refractory client, a persnickety woman in her late-30s who pays for dating advice as part of Stanger’s real-life, brick-and-mortar matchmaking business, the Millionaire’s Club, on which the show is based. Today’s going to be tough love with her, Stanger said. She needs to straighten her hair, for one. She can’t get arrested with her rat’s nest.
When the client arrived, she perched on one of the lip chairs to wait while Stanger gave a phone interview. Dressed in flared jeans and brown wedge shoes, the client projected a 70s vibe, enhanced by her hair, a mass of wild dirty-blond curls, and undermined by her French-manicured toenails. After a testy exchange about her hair is it working for you, the curly hair Stanger queried the woman said her romantic life was abysmal. Stanger dug in.
What are you doing to attract men? She asked. Are you smiling? I always smile! There was sadness in the client’s voice.
OK, so where are you meeting guys?
She told Stanger she met a man at a restaurant and went out with him three times, until she got bored. Stanger pounced. What do you expect, people to entertain you like a puppet show.
The woman confessed that she ultimately wasn’t attracted to the guy because he was meek. Stanger charged on, advising, Don’t judge it till you kiss it and ordering the woman not to come back until you find someone you’re sexually attracted to.
That’s going to be a long time, the woman told her.
Oh my god! Stanger hollered. Let’s just be soooo negative!
This abrasive-to-the-point-of-abusive style of matchmaking has made Stanger famous, and her show, whose fourth season had its debut on Tuesday, a hit. I can’t tell you the amount of times I watch the show, and my jaw is on the floor, said Andy Cohen, Bravo’s senior vice president for original programming and development. I can’t believe what comes out of her mouth.
Last April’s finale garnered a series high of almost 1.6 million viewers. Even those who generally consider themselves too refined for reality TV the microwave dinner of the entertainment world are closet fans. Watching Patti rather savagely describe what’s wrong with these guys and why they have trouble getting/keeping themselves in real relationships is strangely invigorating, wrote a blogger for the feminist magazine Bitch before fretting: Can I continue to watch this show and write for Bitch in good conscience?
This season, Stanger and her goth-attired associates moved their enterprise from Los Angeles to New York City, where they confront clueless millionaires who, much like their California analogues, believe that wealth should guarantee them a young, gorgeous mate. Alas, this is not true on either coast. New York makes Sex and the City look like a cakewalk, Stanger announced during the first episode, in which she attempted to pair off Bryce Gruber, the captious, tightly coiled millionairess owner of the luxuryspot.com, and Derek Tabacco, an endearingly amenable Staten Island Internet entrepreneur. (Later in the season, Stanger will contend with Freddie Mitchell, the retired Philadelphia Eagles wide receiver, and Judith Regan, the fallen media queen, of whom Stanger says: When she dates, she’s an angel.)
In the practical, thoroughly Darwinian universe of Patti Stanger, anyone in search of a partner should simply follow her guidelines. Women must enhance their appearance by whatever means necessary: religiously caring for their skin (I don’t care if you’re tired do you want a husband or not), or growing out and straightening their hair (Men like long, flowing locks. They just do). Men, for their part, need to remember that a woman must be wooed. I don’t care if you have to take me to Olive Garden, she said, you’ve got to take out the c.c. you know In other words, the credit card. And both men and women must adhere to the dictum on which Stanger refuses to budge: No sex without an exclusive, committed, monogamous relationship. (The producers make sure to capture the expressions of the men as they process this wholly radical idea.)
Isn’t this all a bit old-fashioned, even reactionary? I consider it realistic, said Stanger, who comes from three generations of matchmaking women. We are programmed, since the beginning of time, to be this way. You ain’t gonna change the DNA just because it’s a new generation, a new millennium, whatever.
Stanger’s own dark hair is aggressively straight and as glossy as marble; evidently she follows the advice she dispenses. She looks eerily young, at least a decade short of her 49 years, a feat that does not appear to have been achieved by artificial means. Instead of her usual outre on-screen uniform (the mini dress, dangling holiday-ornament earrings and towering high heels) she was wearing a casual all-black ensemble of jeans, blouse, flats. The diamond heart pendant glimpsed in every episode, an apt amulet if ever there was one, rested in the divot above her clavicle. A modest bracelet of deep-amber beads dangled from her wrist. Tiger’s-eye, she said. They demagnetize negativity. I attract a lot of takers.
Stanger uncensored, irreverent and disarmingly charismatic is but the latest in a long line of female relationship gurus, from Helen Gurley Brown, to Ellen Fein and Sherrie Schneider, the co-authors of The Rules, who purport to know a thing or two about the sexes. But unlike Gurley Brown, whose message was addressed to the woman who had sex (preferably lots of it) out of wedlock and was less interested in marriage than in, as she wrote in her 1962 classic, Sex and the Single Girl, squirming, worming, inching, and pinching her way to the top of the career ladder, that is Stanger holds pair-bonding as the ultimate goal. I don’t believe anyone’s better off single, she said. I don’t think marriage is for everyone, but at the end of the day, everybody wants to fall asleep in the spoon position.
Her rules for getting clients there are not, it bears noting, the same as those other Rules that rose to infamy in the late 90s. There’s some overlap, to be sure (that you can’t change men, everyone seems to agree), but Stanger does not advise women to be passive, retiring, delicate orchids. Hers is not a calculated, gaming method for seducing a man by effacing yourself. (Write Light and Breezy e-mails and Don’t Answer on Weekends or Holidays are two chapter titles in The Rules for Online Dating, published in 2002.) Instead, she recommends staring at men, striking up conversations, and always, always returning calls.
Although the show’s title speaks to an antiquated Cinderella fantasy of marrying a rich man, Stanger’s actual message is more sentimental than materialistic. The 4:1 rule: every four times he takes you out, do something nice for him, she posted on Twitter (a repository of her philosophy distilled). Her traditionalism is, at times, paradoxically progressive: Do not ever ask for anything of monetary value. He is your potential soul mate, not your bank.
During each episode, the male millionaires Stanger sets up receive a verbal drubbing as they neglect or outright refuse to follow her uncompromising directives. She tells these hapless men how to act, how to dress, what kind of date to plan. You want to do it my way, or you want to be single forever she asked Tabacco, the Staten Island entrepreneur, as he sputtered in protest upon hearing her no-commitment-no-sex commandment. You’ll be in the nursing home hitting on the nurse because there’s no one else to hit on, she warned Lonnie, a player from the first season who tells her head prefer a young girl with big fake guzungas. And when a squat former child actor flew into a rage as she tried to rehab his wardrobe, she sighed: He’s an angry Hobbit, what can I do?
There are few pleasures as guilty as witnessing Stanger compress her theories of dating into pungent epigrams. They want Madonna in the bedroom, Martha Stewart in the kitchen and Mary Poppins in the nursery, she says of the men who seek her help. Did the flagpole rise on anyone she asked Jeff, a software developer who dresses like the illusionist Criss Angel. She often puts this notion far more crudely: The penis does the picking.
Indeed, she acknowledges the mystery and importance of chemistry a concession to the modern idea of romantic love that a classical matchmaker would not make but she also pushes men toward women (and gay men toward men) who are age-appropriate and accomplished. To a homosexual male client who admitted that his sole criterion for a mate is good-looking and in shape, she replied: But looks fade, and dumb is forever, an aphorism that has been celebrated all over the Internet.
I asked Stanger whether she considers herself a feminist. We had moved into the conference room at the Marina del Rey office, its walls adorned with framed posters from romantic old movies like Casablanca and Roman Holiday, and Stanger was soliloquizing about the challenge of retaining our feminism, as well as our femininity, at a time when so many women are surpassing men financially.
She slammed the table with one palm. I’m sorry! I didn’t pick Gloria Steinem to be my poster girl. I want my dinner paid for and I want my car door opened. But here’s the deal. At work, if I can multitask and make more money for your company, then you should pay me more than a man, if not equal. When you’re in a relationship, it’s completely different. If I make money, and you’re not willing to swim the ocean, climb a mountain, and bring back the bacon she suddenly began to yell, like Emilio Estevez in The Breakfast Club then you don’t deserve me! Then snip-snip-snip she gestured as though employing scissors as a tool of castration and I’m onto the next hunter.
In the end, most of her tips for getting her clients over themselves and into a match are basic and as old as the hills. Go out to dinner (Coffee is cheap, drinks are an audition, lunch is an interview), don’t talk only about yourself (No one wants to be an extra in the movie of your life, she tells an ego maniacal film director), be genuinely open to a real commitment. The Millionaire Matchmaker lays out an ethical code of dating, which both parties must follow in gender-specific ways. If reductionist, it also seems manageably straightforward pay for dinner, get the girl; blow out your hair, nab the guy and this surely accounts for much of the show’s appeal.
A self-made career woman originally from Short Hills, N.J., who began in the garment business and worked a series of one-off jobs as a psychic on a phone network, a coupon-insert saleswoman and a director of marketing for the dating service Great Expectations before founding the Millionaire’s Club in 2000, Stanger is a fascinatingly improbable ambassador for her ideas. She has been engaged but has never married. She announced her recent breakup, from Andy Friedman, a real estate executive and her boyfriend of more than six years, via Twitter in August. His reluctance to have or adopt children was the publicly stated reason for the split, but during a phone conversation Stanger said that money was also an issue: I don’t want to financially take care of a man. He was ready to retire and I make way more money than him. And I wasn’t ready for that. I was ready to build an empire with someone.
Can she lead clients to the aisle, not having walked down it herself? The question annoys her. The biggest coach in the NFL what’s his name? has he ever played on the team? Did he ever get a Super Bowl ring? Does that mean he can’t teach?
Over a lunch of yam noodles and low-carb lobster rolls at a sushi restaurant near her office, Stanger abruptly announced that she was getting nervous about dating again following her broken engagement. She was about to emerge from a self-imposed 60-day exile she calls Dating Detox. How do I date now? I can’t even go out in public. I went out Friday night with my friends and everyone harassed me.
She’s in good hands, Destin Pfaff, her mohawked guy Friday, said, smiling at Stanger while speaking of her in the third person. She’s in better hands than she realizes.
What kind of man would be right for her? As I asked this, it occurred to me that Stanger might be an inveterate dater, a compulsive consumer of her own product, like a designer who wears her own clothes.
Patti needs someone who’s attentive but also distant, Pfaff said. Someone that can put up with a powerful woman.
Is this someone I know? Stanger asked.
Do people really want to be paired off? That is the fundamental question raised by repeated viewings of The Millionaire Matchmaker. If only Stanger’s clients could rise above their pettiness, narcissism and perfectionism and wholeheartedly accept her advice, each show reminds us, they would live happily ever after, or at least happier for a while. Yet even when she offers them a plausible match based on intuition honed through years of experience, they find a way to push back the plate dissatisfied. Stanger is like a Cupid or fairy godmother who grants her charges a wish, and then watches in horror as they wish for exactly what she has warned them against.
Stanger claims that the Millionaire’s Club has a 99 percent success rate. On the show, she doesn’t come close to that number, no doubt because smooth sailing does not make for juicy television. But Stanger is right even when the pairing is wrong; she always knows when (and this may be a reality show contrivance) a client has chosen against his or her best interests. We can almost see her thinking, to borrow a phrase from Puck, another matchmaker of sorts, Lord, what fools these mortals are!
The show reminds regular folks that seemingly privileged people are, despite their wealth or beauty, flawed human beings who often reject each other on trifling grounds and are unable to translate their hopes into realities.