Go on a blind date. We'll pick up the tab.
To apply, please fill out this application.
A photo is required to complete the application. We'll email you only if you've been chosen for a date. No phone calls, please. You must be at least 21 years of age and a resident of Massachusetts, Rhode Island, New Hampshire, Maine, or Vermont. You must be available for a date that we set up, agree to attend that date, and be willing to sign our declaration of eligibility and release. We will not provide transportation to or from the date, and we will reimburse dinners up to $100 (if you go over, you'll have to pick up the difference).
*** Employees of The Boston Globe and their family members are ineligible. Any photographs or written material you submit becomes the exclusive property of The Boston Globe. Please read The Boston Globes Privacy Policy here.
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Here's to the goofballs
( 12/19/2012 12:00 AM )
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Taking a chance (and giving someone else one)
The evening started out awkwardly for these two. "She was nervous," he said after the date. But what she said was key: "As I got to know him better, I found him more attractive." Why don't more Cupid daters give each other a chance? ( 12/16/2012 12:00 AM )
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Baby it's cold ...
A colleague told me last week that his daughter, who is 13, reads the "grades" at the end of Cupid before the actual column. She gets mad at daters who describe a perfectly lovely evening together then give the blind date a bad grade and say they never want to see the person again. So what will she think about this? ( 12/10/2012 11:11 AM )