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Man caught on Dating Website
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http://www.startribune.com/484/story/824348.htm
Man sought in Arkansas double slaying captured in Wisconsin
Associated Press
Last update: November 20, 2006 – 12:00 PM
LITTLE ROCK — A personal ad on a dating Web site and a phoned-in tip from a television viewer helped police arrest a suspect at Rothschild, Wis., in the murder of an elderly Arkansas couple.
Calvin A. Bennett, 26, likely will return to Arkansas under police guard Monday night, said Sheriff Butch Morris of Howard County in southwest Arkansas, who is investigating the Nashville couples' slaying.
Wisconsin authorities arrested Bennett on Sunday after a segment on the killings was aired Saturday night on the television show "America's Most Wanted.'' The television viewer's tip led police to Canadian online dating Web site www.plentyoffish.com, run by Vancouver, B.C.-based CEO Markus Frind.
Registered on the site as "soshysothernguy80,'' Bennett's user page showed him in a baseball hat and red T-shirt. He listed his ideal first date as "a nice romantic dinner with soft music, followed by a romantic walk or a carriage ride.'' He said he also likes to cuddle.
Frind said a U.S. Marshal contacted him by e-mail Saturday night. Within 10 minutes, Frind had gathered messages sent by Bennett to five women on the site — ranging from "call me'' to "I'd love to talk to you and get to know you,'' Frind said.
From the messages, Frind could tell Bennett had moved into a home of a site user. He also found Bennett's cellular phone number.
With that information, an Arkansas State Police investigator contacted Wisconsin authorities. About a dozen officers arrested Bennett as he tried to leave a home in Rothschild, Wis., said Lt. Frank Hanousek of the Marathon County, Wis., Sheriff's Department.
Hanousek said the home was owned by a woman Bennett had met on the Internet.
Deputies spotted a 2001 gray Chevy Silvarado pickup that matched the description of one Bennett had been using outside the home and blocked it in. When Bennett attempted to leave shortly before noon Sunday, he was arrested without resistance, Hanousek said.
Morris said three of his officers Monday afternoon would fly to Wisconsin to speak with Bennett.
"It is our understanding he would sign a waiver of extradition today and if that happens they would fly him back tonight,'' Morris said Monday.
An extradition hearing was scheduled Monday afternoon before Marathon County Circuit Judge Patrick Brady.
Bennett is wanted on two counts of capital murder in the Oct. 30 slayings of Pierce "Ben'' Odell, 79, and Mary Odell, 78. Sheriff's officials say each was shot once in the head and the bodies were found outside their home near Nashville. Bennett had no personal connection to the Odells prior their deaths, Morris said. The sheriff said robbery appeared to be the motive for the crimes.
Since the arrest, Frind removed Bennett from the Web site. But he cautioned that the arrest shouldn't dissuade people from attempting to find matches online.
"I've made 112 million introductions since the site started,'' Frind said. "One in 8 million people get hit by lightning in the U.S.''
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Online Dating Sites: Know What You Sign Up For
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Nov 13, 2006 6:16 pm US/Eastern
Online Dating Sites: Know What You Sign Up For
Sara Underwood
Reporting

(CBS4) BOSTON This past year alone, consumers spent $550 million dollars on dating Web sites.
But what do these sites really offer? CBS4 looked at some of the most popular ones and what they mean for users.
Christy and Barry were recently married. They are just two of the 20 million people who have used an online dating service.
"I finally found that one person that I was able to share the rest of my life with," says Barry. "I couldn't have been happier on that day."
"He's everything to me," says Christy. "He's my whole world and I'm just happy to be his wife."
Consumer reports just checked out five of the best known sites: http://www.eharmony.com, www.match.com, www.americansingles.com , www.true.com and www.personals.yahoo.com .
A reporter set up a profile at each site for a month. She paid anywhere from $24.95 at Yahoo! Personals, to $59.95 at eHarmony. If you subscribe for more than a year, the fees are less.
Most of these sites let you set up a profile for free, but you can only fully communicate with members once you subscribe.
And the sites use different approaches to finding that special someone.
Four of the sites allow you to view profiles of anyone you'd like to find. But eHarmony restricts you to only those people they think are a match for you.
If you're worried about whom you might meet online, True.com promises "safer dating." The site says it checks everyone's information against a criminal database and marriage records.
Consumer Reports says before you commit to any online dating service, make sure you take advantage of the freebies being offered first. Also read the terms of service and privacy policies, and clarify all charges before paying.
After all, you want any new relationship to start out right.
Consumer Reports says all the match sites have automatic renewal which means you have to make sure you cancel your subscription when you're done with it.
For two sites--True.com and Match.com--you need to call customer service to do this.
And one final note: If you're considering using one of these sites, set up a separate e-mail account for both privacy sake and to keep your regular inbox from getting too cluttered.
(© MMVI, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved.)
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Plentyoffish.com to Attempt Speed Dating World Record, 3,000+ Attendees Expected
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Free dating site, Plentyoffish.com, stirs Burlington, Ontario singles into
action for Guinness world record attempt at the largest speed dating event
under one roof.
VANCOUVER, British Columbia, July 10 /PRNewswire/ -- The town of
Burlington, Ontario in Canada, near Niagara Falls, has been stirred into
action for a world record attempt of a slightly unusual kind. On July 22,
2006, free dating site Plentyoffish.com (http://www.PlentyofFish.com) will bring
together over three thousand eligible singles for what will be the largest
speed dating event held under one roof. The record attempt has been
pre-approved by Guinness officials and will establish the first such world
record.
Crystal Parsons and Ken Price are the event hosts. Ken stated, "We
should not have a problem breaking 3,000 attendees, which is a little crazy
considering the size of our town." The population of Burlington Ontario is
157,000. Many Burlington Ontario businesses have come aboard with support
including Philthy Mcnasty's Burlington location where the pre-party and
post party brunch will take place.
Crystal Parsons owns an event management company and met her fiance
through Plentyoffish. "I have been successfully running speed dating events
for years now with many marriages and babies to show for it. After a
discussion with Markus, the owner of Plentyoffish, we decided that this
record attempt was workable and we started planning," she said.
The event will be held in a 30,000 sq ft room at Cedar Springs Health,
Racquet & Sports Club, 960 Cumberland Avenue, Burlington, Ontario, Canada.
Press is encouraged to attend. The event will be televised and covered by
the local media.
Markus Frind started Plentyoffish.com out of his Vancouver apartment
after being frustrated at high priced internet dating alternatives. Markus
commented, "I think the top paid dating sites are a little surprised at how
my site has grown recently." Markus still runs Plentyoffish as a one man
operation and refuses to sell the site, despite several offers in the tens
of millions of dollars. Users continue to sing the praises of
Plentyoffish.com and the site keeps on growing and encroaching on
Match.com, Yahoo Personals and eHarmony territory.
About Plentyoffish.com
Markus Frind started Plentyoffish.com in 2003 as a free dating site,
and as a way to teach himself ASP programming. The site gets over 200,000
logins every day and received 3.2 million unique visitors in June 2006. It
is the #3 dating website in Canada and #6 in USA for May 2006 (see
http://www.OnlinePersonalsWatch.com).
Press inquiries and press passes:
Crystal Parsons, Plentyoffish.com World Record Attempt Host
President / CEO
Lasting Impressions Consulting Co
crystal@beimpressed.ca
905-714-9151
Questions about Plentyoffish.com:
Plentyoffish.com Contact:
Markus Frind, CEO/Founder
Plentyoffish.com
mfrind@plentyoffish.com
This press release distributed by PRWEB (http://www.prwebdirect.com), a
service of eMediaWire.
SOURCE Plentyoffish.com
http://www.prnewswire.com/cgi-bin/stories.pl?ACCT=104&STORY=/www/story/07-10-2006/0004393600&EDATE=
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Tech leaders, wannabes gather in San Francisco
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http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2006/06/23/SUPERNOVA.TMP
Tech leaders, wannabes gather in San Francisco
Supernova2006 good for networking with Internet crowd
Verne Kopytoff, Chronicle Staff Writer
Friday, June 23, 2006
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Technology industry leaders and aspirants gathered for a major Internet conference in San Francisco Thursday against the backdrop of an online boom that many said is showing signs of excess but is in no danger of a broad collapse.
Supernova2006, an event produced in concert with the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School of business that runs through today, brought together such luminaries as Jonathan Schwartz, chief executive of the Silicon Valley giant Sun Microsystems; and Craig Newmark, founder of Craigslist, the classified advertising and community Web site.
Speakers at San Francisco's Palace Hotel addressed everything from the popularity of online video games such as Second Life, which immerse users in virtual worlds, to policing bad behavior on Web sites (only a small number of users are actually responsible, they said) to personal expression through Weblogs, or blogs.
Six years after its famous collapse, the Internet industry is enjoying a streak of plenty thanks to growing advertising and the deep pockets of venture capitalists. The largesse has funded a wave of new companies, many of them claiming some kinship to the term Web 2.0, a buzzword for technology that encourages sharing, user input and community.
But the wave has also raised questions about whether there is a glut of startups, particularly in the areas of photo sharing, social networking and search, where dozens of copycat companies compete. Virtually everyone interviewed at the conference acknowledged that venture capital is flowing freely throughout the industry, at times for dubious investments.
"There's a frenzy of startups," said Markus Frind, founder of PlentyofFish.com, a free one-man online dating service in Vancouver, British Columbia.
"How many news readers do you need, or calendars?" he asked, referring to online products that many companies have bet their businesses on.
Frind's online dating service faces its own array of competition. But he insisted that he is making a profit from online advertising -- as proof, he has posted the image of a $900,000 check from Google on his blog -- and declared "I'm probably the only company here making money."
Piyush Shah, founder of Moso.in, a startup that is working on social networking products for mobile phones, said that if there is a bubble now, it's smaller than the one in the late 1990s. Today's companies are leaner, can shift business plans more quickly if their original one doesn't work and are based on better ideas, he said.
At the conference, simply listening to the speakers wasn't enough. Attendees sitting in the audience simultaneously read e-mails, blogged and browsed the Web from their laptop computers or BlackBerry handheld Internet devices.
For many, listening to speakers was less important than having the opportunity to talk with other attendees in the hallways hoping to glean some wisdom.
Executives talked of being in "stealth mode" (the period during which a company is working on a product and wants to keep it secret) and the "wisdom of crowds," a favored piece of jargon culled from a popular book of the same title. The idea holds that a decision based on as many opinions as possible is best.
From the stage, Schwartz, from Sun Microsystems, which sells computer servers to many Internet companies, joined in the lovefest of all things Web. At one point, he said the cost of starting an online company has gone down to nearly nothing and underscored that 1 billion people use the Internet.
"The amount of money in the consumer Internet is unfathomably large," he said.
For more information on Supernova2006, go to www.supernova2006.com.
Page D - 1
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ASK ADVICE CHICK: Answers to YOUR Dating, Sex, Life, & Love Questions!
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http://eurweb.com/story/eur27072.cfm
By © Kimberly Williams - AdviceChick@ameritech.net
E-mail to a friend | Printer friendly (June 22, 2006)
Dear Advice Chick,
*I know you usually deal with dating and stuff but a sister needs some beauty advice. Can you suggest a quick morning shower regime for me? It takes so long to shower, dry off, and then lotion up. How can I get clean and smooth in 5 to 7 minutes?
Advice Chick replies,
Girl, you know I LOVE bath products! Let me see. If you want a quickie clean and soften session, I suggest the Caress System. I have their glowing effects shower gel, and their in-shower lotion.
The in-shower lotion is really, really good. You just shower and rinse as usual. Next, apply the in-shower lotion to your entire body (including your feet) while you’re still in the shower. Finally, rinse the in-shower lotion off. Exit the shower, and start your day.
Let me know how you like it!
Add the syndicated Advice Chick Column to YOUR radio show or publication! Interested? Send an email to advicechick@ameritech.net or call Kimberly at
312-893-0538.
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SOCIALITE DENIES FLINGS WITH UK POP STARS
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SOCIALITE DENIES FLINGS WITH UK POP STARS
Movie & Entertainment News provided by World Entertainment News Network (www.wenn.com)
2006-06-21 13:59:14 -
The British socialite who claimed to have enjoyed flings with singers ROBBIE WILLIAMS and JAMES BLUNT now insists she was only ever platonic friends with the pop sensations.
TARA PALMER-TOMKINSON was left fuming in April (06) when she discovered her
YOU'RE BEAUTIFUL singer beau had a girlfriend after allegedly claiming he was single. He has since been dating Czech model and tsunami survivor PETRA NEMCOVA.
She overcame her heartache with a brief tryst with Williams, gushing about their happiness in a recent British TV interview.
But now the leggy brunette is adamant her relationships with both men were never more than platonic.
She says, "No, no, no - everyone always gets the wrong end of the stick.
"With Robbie, I was talking about relationships in general - and relationships include friendships.
"James has always just been a friend too. I was so pleased to see those pictures of the two of them (Blunt and Nemcova). If anyone deserves a bit of happiness, it's her."
Entertainment News by: www.pr-inside.com
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Lifestyle lifestyle search
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http://www.metronews.ca/lifestyle/mind_and_body/details.asp?id=15370
Beautiful people have harder time dating in cities

Were Nick and Jessica doomed from the start?
Back when dating first began, your family chose your mate based on how many goats they had. Easy, right? Even in present times, dating in small towns is simple — you go for the person who has all their teeth and no meth problem. But in metropolitan areas things get complicated.
Everyone, it seems, is a walking, talking “catch.” But with all the problems city people have dating, it begs the question: are we all just too damn hot?
“I was dating this guy who was perfectly fine,” recalls Myrell, 26. “Good looking, steady job, nice family, the works. But I couldn’t get it out (of) my head the fact that there is always someone taller, richer, and better looking right around the corner. So I just couldn’t stay with him.”
Myrell’s situation isn’t the old case of nice guy or girl finishing last. We are talking hot and nice, and still finishing last. With so many singles out there, the one who is just “pretty,” and who would be a hot commodity anywhere else in the world, has a hard time.
“Most of us are in the middle ground where the average guy won’t talk to us and the top-notch guy won’t talk to us,” laments Cassie, 26.
But, as we all know, looks fade. So why is it we choose biceps over knowledge of Baudelaire, cha-chas over character?
“When you date somewhere that is not in the city,” says Dave, 27, “it’s a case of ignorance is bliss. If you lived in suburban Michigan and drove your car to work, you just wouldn’t see as many people. Here, you see so many good-looking people that it starts to affect the way you judge prettiness. You can’t help it.”
As Lois, 25, puts it, dating in the city is “like survival of the fittest. We’re all so attractive that the smallest faults must serve to weed out the weak.”
But, before everyone maxes out their credit card for a few weeks of some nip and tuck action in Mexico, remember that ugly, average, and super bodacious people all get into relationships. Take the wise words of Kevin, 33, who, when asked if he thought singles were too good looking, answered, “Nah, we just think we are all too good looking.”
Dorothy Robinson /Metro World News
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