Brunette Beeg

Brunette Beeg




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Brunette Beeg
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It’s been a debate that has raged as long as dating and sex have been a thing.
We’ve all heard the well-worn notion that men prefer blondes, that blondes have more fun etc.
As if somehow your hair colour dictates how much you will enjoy life.
But, as a former natural blonde, I’ve never paid that much attention to all that.
I’ve changed my hair colour regularly since the age of 15. Particularly, as my friends have pointed out, after a difficult break-up. Like a complete cliche.
So, after the final end of a messy, long on-off relationship in October, I changed my hair colour once more – to brunette, for the first time.
I’d been blonde, ginger, bright red, but never brown.
I was very free, very single and very much ready to mingle with my new brunette hair.
I’d tried dating apps during the very ‘off’ period of my aforementioned romantic entanglement. Then I’d been very blonde, and had been pleasantly surprised by my success on it in terms of messages and dates.
Would I find similar success as brunette me?
It was time to put his ‘blondes are better’ theory to the ultimate test.
That test was to take place on Tinder, the behemoth of dating apps.
I decided to spend three days as a blonde on Tinder, and three days as a brunette to see which version of me would have more success.
So do blondes really have more fun?
To make this experiment as fair as possible, I set up the following ground rules:
1) I would spend three days using photos of me as each hair colour
2) I would start a completely new profile each time, so my prior use of Tinder before the experiment wouldn’t affect results
3) To get a fair sample, I would swipe right 200 times for each in the same location
4) I wouldn’t message my matches first as I wanted to measure matches vs actual people talking to me
And once those were decided, I was ready to get swipe-happy.
It’s my current hair colour, so it made sense to start with being brunette. I filled my profile with a mix of photos of just me and photos with friends, and a fairly innocuous bio with a bit about me and my personal interests.
Then I started swiping. Things started off a bit slow – initially I only had a handful of matches from the 200 swipes. By the end of the three days this is what I ended up with:
I had 28 matches, meaning I’d matched with 14 per cent of people I’d swiped right on.
However, only six of those then actually messaged me.
So, in the end, three per cent of people I said yes to decided they wanted to talk me.
That wasn’t an encouraging statistic to start with, especially as I hadn’t been selective.
So began the conversations, and I hate to say it but it was very tame affair – hardly any of the poorly thought-out sexual innuendos, come-ons or requests for dick pics that Tinder has become so famous for.
I suppose I couldn’t fault this lad’s friendliness:
I love getting flowers, even virtual ones. But otherwise, all a bit disappointing.
I did enjoy this guy’s joke about my job too. Good effort to get to know me.
But those were honestly the highlights.
After a fairly muted experience as a brunette, I deleted the profile and started again as a blonde.
I’d been blonde for most of my adult and teenage life, so I made sure to use fairly recent blonde photos of me, such as university photos, so age wouldn’t be too much of a factor. I used the same bio as my brunette profile.
The difference was unbelievably obvious and it was immediate.
I was literally getting a match every other swipe. It was ridiculous in comparison to the brunette profile and it took forever to get through 200 swipes because the It’s A Match! screen kept popping up.
It wasn’t just a feeling either. It was reflected precisely in the number of total matches I received over the three day period. I had 101 matches, meaning just over half of the men I swiped on swiped on me too.
By the end of the three days, 20 of those men had sent me messages.
So, 10 per cent of those who matched with me ended up messaging me. That’s at least three times more than when I was brunette.
Not only that, but the Tinder we know and love came out of the woodwork.
In the shape, for example, of this beautifully crafted message:
This guy didn’t mince his words either:
I’m not really sure how this one got the impression I was a ballbuster from my profile…I don’t make a habit of hitting men in the balls:
But, it has to be said, I was having a lot of fun being blonde.
Was undeniably blonde me. Without a shadow of a doubt.
After some reflection, I came to the conclusion it might be to do with the type of pictures I chose as well – maybe my experiment wasn’t as clean as it could have been. The ones of me blonde were admittedly more glamorous with more shots of me on nights out. In one I’m dressed up for Halloween and pulling a pose.
Maybe the men who swiped right on me did so not so much because I was blonde, but more because I was giving an impression of myself having a good time?
What can I say? I was probably more fun at uni *sob*.
On the upside, I looked far more likely to find someone to have a real conversation with when I was brunette – like the guy who was interested in my work.
So even if I wasn’t going to have as many matches with brown hair, my chances of finding something more real might have been higher (if I could find enough to actually chat to).
And that’s a comfort. To me anyway.
Screw the haters, regardless of whether you’re blonde, brunette or even ginger.
If you think your hair colour is fabulous, or even if you don’t, but you just like being you, then who cares what other people think.
The right person will like you because you like you too.
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