Dateless in Denver: He Ditched the Job, She Ditched Him
He gave two weeks’ notice; she dumped him without notice.
He gave two weeks’ notice; she dumped him without notice.
She knew he was cheap, but his gum-saving was particularly hard to stomach.
The most common word women use to describe men in Colorado is “rude,” according to a poll from DatingAdvice.com. Colorado men disagree.
Colorado was one of just 22 states in which women used a negative word to describe the men. And this one hurt.
They met on Match. He wanted to go to Winter Park; she wanted to go to Vail. And the date went nowhere…fast.
The jorts should have tipped me off that this date was going nowhere.
Over half of Denver respondents admitted to doing the dirty in public parks, nature trails or wooded areas.
Poetry Brothel, a worldwide poetry society, makes its Denver debut at Mockingbird on Sunday, October 13.
The date started with a simple hike. It ended with cops.
After “The Nine Kinds of Single Women You Meet in Denver,” he’s looking for a happy story.
Let your freak flag fly a mile high at two major sex conventions this month.
How many do you recognize?
Don’t like what you’re reading? Share your own dating story!
In this installment, a transplant offers a quick tour of men in the Mile High City.
“We know the limits: We don’t sell sex toys, we don’t have live sex. We’re an educational space only. … We can have our big picture windows and we don’t have to hide a thing.”
When worse comes to verse on a date.
The last time she saw her date, he was running down Colfax.
“Finding love is never too late,” suggests a poet, while a Wyoming man urges Colorado women to head north.
At least you can cry in your beer.
Bartender to the rescue!
The plan was to walk around and just soak in the awesomeness of Denver’s Art District on Santa Fe. Things did not go according to plan.
Weeks after he sharted on her lawn, he sent a photo of himself standing atop a mountain with a note: “This could be you and me but we’re both playing different games.”