Indiscretion is no longer discreet. Gone are the days of clandestine meetings, sideways glances across an office, illicit gestures in a dark parking lot. Now you can get those same thrills and more in your email box for only a $49 joining fee. It seems too ridiculous to be true, but this is what we have come to, a multi-million dollar cash cow of a business to make it easy for people to sign up online to meet their perfect affair.
So lucrative is the venture that the corporate slogan: “Life is short–have an affair” has been pasted on billboards and running in television advertising throughout the world. Yet, promoting the most hurtful betrayals that many people will face in their lifetime as the fun, spice of life is not always as easy as it looks. The company has fought unsuccessfully for the right to plaster the slogan on citywide transportation in its hometown of Toronto; even after they offered money to subsidize rider fares. Their offer was vetoed by five of the six members of the transportation committee, but not before the leader was found to have cheated on his longtime partner several times, ruining his run for mayor. Likewise, the NFL turned down an advertising bid during the coveted Super Bowl hours.
This same ambivalence about the rightness of their participation in the site’s offerings, runs through many of the close to 8 million members profiles which uses fake names and hides their photos behind a password protected firewall. Some are brazen too, including photos on their pages and mostly unafraid to be found out. They feel justified, and few users don’t report any feelings of guilt about their participation. The seekers aren’t leaving their partners, who become entities, mostly reduced to pronouns in the course of their business on the site. Many members refer to themselves as honest, except for what they are engaging in at this moment.
“This is just a fact of life. Monogamy is not in our DNA,” says founder Neil Biederman, although he is married himself and says he would be devastated if he found his wife was employing his service. She has no qualms about the moral ramifications of her husband’s occupation: providing the material and platform for millions of affairs. For her, “It is just a business…” Biederman believes that the popularity of his site and by and large the nature and driving force behind affairs is sex, more specifically about not getting the sex that they want from their partners.
Yet a recent undercover Redbook report, discovered a much deeper and in some ways ironic truth about much of what is being sought out on Ashley Madison. The site, which is to ostensibly facilitate no-strings-attached affairs contains a lot of men who are trying to forge real emotional bonds. One might even say they were all looking to fall in love.
So lucrative is the venture that the corporate slogan: “Life is short–have an affair” has been pasted on billboards and running in television advertising throughout the world. Yet, promoting the most hurtful betrayals that many people will face in their lifetime as the fun, spice of life is not always as easy as it looks. The company has fought unsuccessfully for the right to plaster the slogan on citywide transportation in its hometown of Toronto; even after they offered money to subsidize rider fares. Their offer was vetoed by five of the six members of the transportation committee, but not before the leader was found to have cheated on his longtime partner several times, ruining his run for mayor. Likewise, the NFL turned down an advertising bid during the coveted Super Bowl hours.
This same ambivalence about the rightness of their participation in the site’s offerings, runs through many of the close to 8 million members profiles which uses fake names and hides their photos behind a password protected firewall. Some are brazen too, including photos on their pages and mostly unafraid to be found out. They feel justified, and few users don’t report any feelings of guilt about their participation. The seekers aren’t leaving their partners, who become entities, mostly reduced to pronouns in the course of their business on the site. Many members refer to themselves as honest, except for what they are engaging in at this moment.
“This is just a fact of life. Monogamy is not in our DNA,” says founder Neil Biederman, although he is married himself and says he would be devastated if he found his wife was employing his service. She has no qualms about the moral ramifications of her husband’s occupation: providing the material and platform for millions of affairs. For her, “It is just a business…” Biederman believes that the popularity of his site and by and large the nature and driving force behind affairs is sex, more specifically about not getting the sex that they want from their partners.
Yet a recent undercover Redbook report, discovered a much deeper and in some ways ironic truth about much of what is being sought out on Ashley Madison. The site, which is to ostensibly facilitate no-strings-attached affairs contains a lot of men who are trying to forge real emotional bonds. One might even say they were all looking to fall in love.
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