Controversial Founder Of 'Bang With Friends' Says His Life Changed After Taking The '36 Questions To Fall In Love' Quiz
Jan 29, 2015, 20:06 IST
This is a post from Colin Hodge, the CEO of DOWN, formerly Bang With Friends. It was originally published on Medium and being rerun with permission.
Perhaps you've seen this click-bait article by now?-?Mandy Len Catron's NY Times article To Fall in Love With Anyone, Do This. It revives psychologist Arthur Aron's carefully designed series of questions to make a couple fall in love. Spoiler alert: Mandy followed the guide herself and fell in love with her partner.
It's simple: three back-and-forth sets of 12 questions, which are progressively revealing, followed by an intimate four-minute eye-staring sesh. Maybe after reading this, you'll have the cojones or ovaries to give it a go yourself. The following is my true story from the trenches as the CEO of the dating app Down.
I met Hanna on a flight back to SFO from Europe. I was stuck in the middle seat and running on a tweaked-out sleep schedule. She was conked out hard, so I had hours to ponder about the face behind her mysterious sleeping mask, which I assumed (hoped) doubled as a 50 Shades of Grey foreplay prop. When she stirred awake with about two hours left in the flight, I was pleasantly surprised by the woman behind the mask. We would both later confess that we seriously doubted our own abilities to attract anyone during that flight: she wasn't wearing makeup (actually a plus in my book) and my dimples were the only redeeming quality on a tired, sleepless face. We bantered for awhile and eventually came around to the defining moment: how would she react when I disclosed that I created "Bang With Friends" and still run the evolution of it, Down?
I could fill a hooker's black book with the myriad of reactions I've had from that revelation, but that's for another post (coming soon). It turned out, Hanna had a very mature, sex-positive point of view and totally dug my work. We were getting along well, yet she seemed a little distracted. Even so, I couldn't help but think that it could finally happen?-?no, not the mile-high club (yet)?-?I could fall in love on a flight! Admit it: you secretly wish that the dreamboat strutting down the aisle squeezes in next to you in seat 18B. I have a theory that there are two types of people who are flying while single: those who are secretly hoping to meet that dreamy, serendipitous match…and those who are goddamn liars. The hopeful romantic in all of us flutters at the sight of a cute fellow passenger landing nearby.
Due to her beckoning post-flight burrito and an admittedly large dose of grogginess, Hanna rushed off the flight without grabbing my phone number. She stalked me down on Facebook easily though, we briefly exchanged friendly salutations, and then went our separate ways, diving back into busy-body SF world. As I do whenever I make a new Facebook friend who catches my eye, I swiped down on Hanna in my app. It's a good habit to get into?-?trust me. Fast-forward a month and my phone tickles my thigh?-?it's that glorious match notification on Down.
Flickr.com/MartinMutch
Our first date was steamy. Like a piping hot shower scene with Mila Kunis kind of steamy. We both felt extremely comfortable around each other and shared way more than usual for the typical first date. As the night wound down, she asked me to share my take on this '36 questions' article knocking about. After both expressing some curiosity, we tipsily agreed to try the exercise ourselves on our next date.