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In reply to the discussion: Antonio Sabato, Jr is speaking at the Trump Convention [View all]demmiblue
(36,920 posts)11. And the international celebrity spokesperson for AnastasiaDate (May 2013):
<snip>
In the early 1990s when the company first launched, it used catalogs to introduce men to Russian women. The company launched its first website in January 1997 and expanded its business in more cities throughout Russia and the Ukraine.[7] By 2003, it experienced global growth beyond northern Asia.[8]
Following the growth of AnastasiaDate, the company spun off three websites during 2007, each connecting western men with women from different areas of the world: AmoLatina, AsianBeauties, and AfricaBeauties.[8]
<snip>
The site is mostly used by wealthy American men between the ages of 35 and 60.[2] The site makes money by charging users who want to meet Eastern European women. As of 2012, such users buy credits "priced on a sliding scale, starting at $15.99 for 20 credits, and going up to $399.99 for 1,000. Each minute of simple, instant messaging-style chatting costs one credit. Special, premium smilies like a vibrating, multi-color 'LOL' cost extra. Cam share (audio not enabled) costs six credits a minute. Video chat with voice costs even more." The Fortune article observes: "And thanks to people like me willing to pay to talk with beautiful young women like Anastasia who was paid to respond -- the trade is doing pretty well".[2]
With the growth of online services like AnastasiaDate, the International Marriage Broker Regulation Act was passed in 2005 to regulate the industry.[2] News outlets call AnastasiaDate the leading "premium international dating" website and have observed its efforts to seemingly rebrand the mail-order bride industry, within which it is grouped.[2] The Guardian journalist reported that "none of the men I became close to on my tour ended up in lasting relationships, and the majority appeared to fall victim to a number of sophisticated scams". A girl on the site who was interviewed "explained the whole sordid array of techniques, from a light impersonalised online-chatting version to a full-service chauffeur-driven platinum fraud, where men are rinsed of cash for a full week in Odessa, thinking they are cementing a lifelong relationship while actually they are being strung along on platonic dates that end with them dispatched to the airport with heavy hearts and empty wallets". [17] The same article added that "AnastasiaDate insists that it weeds out scams whenever it finds them, and has banned some women from the site."[17]
Even acting within the regulations, international dating sites like AnastasiaDate could potentially exploit women in less-developed countries and male suitors in developed countries.[2][17] A 2014 report in The Guardian found examples of exploitation for both genders.[17]
In the early 1990s when the company first launched, it used catalogs to introduce men to Russian women. The company launched its first website in January 1997 and expanded its business in more cities throughout Russia and the Ukraine.[7] By 2003, it experienced global growth beyond northern Asia.[8]
Following the growth of AnastasiaDate, the company spun off three websites during 2007, each connecting western men with women from different areas of the world: AmoLatina, AsianBeauties, and AfricaBeauties.[8]
<snip>
The site is mostly used by wealthy American men between the ages of 35 and 60.[2] The site makes money by charging users who want to meet Eastern European women. As of 2012, such users buy credits "priced on a sliding scale, starting at $15.99 for 20 credits, and going up to $399.99 for 1,000. Each minute of simple, instant messaging-style chatting costs one credit. Special, premium smilies like a vibrating, multi-color 'LOL' cost extra. Cam share (audio not enabled) costs six credits a minute. Video chat with voice costs even more." The Fortune article observes: "And thanks to people like me willing to pay to talk with beautiful young women like Anastasia who was paid to respond -- the trade is doing pretty well".[2]
With the growth of online services like AnastasiaDate, the International Marriage Broker Regulation Act was passed in 2005 to regulate the industry.[2] News outlets call AnastasiaDate the leading "premium international dating" website and have observed its efforts to seemingly rebrand the mail-order bride industry, within which it is grouped.[2] The Guardian journalist reported that "none of the men I became close to on my tour ended up in lasting relationships, and the majority appeared to fall victim to a number of sophisticated scams". A girl on the site who was interviewed "explained the whole sordid array of techniques, from a light impersonalised online-chatting version to a full-service chauffeur-driven platinum fraud, where men are rinsed of cash for a full week in Odessa, thinking they are cementing a lifelong relationship while actually they are being strung along on platonic dates that end with them dispatched to the airport with heavy hearts and empty wallets". [17] The same article added that "AnastasiaDate insists that it weeds out scams whenever it finds them, and has banned some women from the site."[17]
Even acting within the regulations, international dating sites like AnastasiaDate could potentially exploit women in less-developed countries and male suitors in developed countries.[2][17] A 2014 report in The Guardian found examples of exploitation for both genders.[17]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AnastasiaDate
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I just looked over his twitter account--he is an Obama basher and just retweeted Sheriff Clarke
riversedge
Jul 2016
#6
At least after he does this he'll be able to blame "political persecution" for not getting jobs.
tanyev
Jul 2016
#10
The "You know what I mean, Vern?" guy is dead. Sabato was next in line.
Hassin Bin Sober
Jul 2016
#21