I wore a cheesehead on Tinder and learned the secret to online dating

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Cheesehead

Eloise Kirn

Me, wearing a cheesehead while eating cheese.

I recently engaged in a little Tinder experiment: I wore a cheesehead in all of the pictures I uploaded to the dating app.

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Why did I do this?

I wore the cheesehead to examine two hypotheses: 1) Everybody loves cheese, and 2) Humor is the sexiest quality.

I should explain that I have recently become a cheese reporter of sorts. On my first day at INSIDER, I was assigned to write a video on Swiss cheese. The video went viral and I've been on the cheese beat ever since.

My mother, who has a dry sense of humor, found this particularly funny. I had moved from Texas to New York to become a "serious writer" and was now writing the word "gooey" five times a day. So she shipped me a cheesehead from somewhere in Wisconsin with a note that said: "Put this on your desk and it will help you make friends. Don't take yourself so seriously - dummy! Loosen up. Live a little. Love, your biggest fan."

Raclette_NYC_kirn_fang_thumb

@zara_world

My first article featuring cheese.

She had a point about humor and friendship, so I
decided to put her theory to the test.

I welcomed the cheesehead into my dating life. I had my roommates take five photos of me wearing the cheesehead and uploaded them all to Tinder. I then replaced my personal information with this bio: "Just a girl in a cheesehead, looking for love."

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I tried to make the first photos as generic as possible. They had to visually convey what most people write in their bios: "I'm adventurous, educated, and well-traveled." This way, the only difference between me and your average looking, 23-year-old blonde, was the cheese.

The focus was to hook possible matches, while progressively taking the cheesehead to more absurd levels. Photos had to walk the fine line between psychotic and cute, so I posed on a bed eating cheese while reading the book On Romance Writing, took pictures in the rain, trying on a wedding dress, and first thing in the morning.

2 cheesehead pics

Eloise Kirn

What occurred next was bizarre. I like to call it "The Cheesehead Phenomenon."

On average, I swipe right approximately 20% of the time. For this experiment, I swiped right around 50% of the time. Of course, this meant getting more matches, but the ratio of messages to matches also increased.

In only two weeks I matched with over 300 people and received messages from over 60% of them. The photographs weren't any more or less attractive than my usual ones, and my bio actually contained less information.

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Message inbox blurred

Eloise Kirn

Messages began to come in fast and the amount of people I matched with easily quadrupled. But it wasn't just quantity, it was quality.

All of a sudden, people had something to say. Besides the generic "hellos" and "sups" there were suddenly context-specific jokes. Guys were attempting to say something nice or clever that they hadn't already messaged to ten other girls.

The cheesehead allowed me to stand out, but also provided an easy conversation starter.

Tinder Messages blurred

Eloise Kirn

Surprisingly, none of the messages were explicitly sexual.

No one sent inappropriate pictures or crass pick up lines. The cheesehead made me an actual person with thoughts, feelings, and a sense of humor. For the first time since I've been on Tinder, men's intentions seemed hopeful, not horny. They even suggested lovely sounding dates, not just excuses to "chill."

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Nice messages blurred copy

Eloise Kirn

I realized that the secret to landing a date on Tinder isn't looking hot - it's being approachable.

If you want to meet a genuine human being, all you've got to do is be weird, give people something random to talk about and listen to your mother.

Or buy a cheesehead. That works too.

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