EFTA01034244.pdf
dataset_9 pdf 259.6 KB • Feb 3, 2026 • 10 pages
From:Intelligence Squared <info@intelligencesquared.com>
To: <jeevacation@gmail.com>
Subject: How do we find love in the digital age? The Great Dating Apps Debate
Date:Tue, 02 Apr 2019 06:34:04 +0000
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When Harry Swiped Sally:
Dating Apps Are Killing Romance
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When Harry Swiped Sally: Dating Apps are Killing Romance
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In partnership with:
TUESDAY 11TH JUNE, 7PM
ROYAL GEOGRAPHICAL SOCIETY
Featuring Georgia 'Toff Toffolo, Dr Bernie Hogan, Hermione
Way, Toni Tone and Dr Xand Van Tulleken
BUY TICKETS
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How do we find love in the digital age? Over the centuries people have placed
their hopes in the hands of the gods, matchmakers or chance. Now tech
companies have made it their mission to pair people up. They claim that
romance is a numbers game — the more we play, the better the odds. But is this
really the case?
Dating-app enthusiasts argue that smartphones have allowed us to connect
with people outside our social circles and geographical locations. Finding love
IRL (In Real Life), they say, is inefficient and overrated. Harry or Harriet can
now swipe Sally from the convenience of his or her bedroom. Millions use
dating apps every day to find a compatible partner, from scoring a date on
Tinder and Bumble to finding the perfect match through eHarmony and
OKCupid. Want to meet a farmer or a life-partner who lives gluten-free? Apps
can find you a match within seconds. Try doing that in a dark, crowded bar.
That's a dangerous illusion, argue the dating-app sceptics. These apps are like
junk-food — addictive and bad for your health. They lead to unfulfilled
experiences and have turned being ghosted and feeling disposable into an
everyday experience. Why settle on a match when someone better might be
just a swipe away? We have fallen under the spell of tech companies that have
their bottom lines, not our happiness, at heart. Worldwide spend on dating apps
has skyrocketed from £234m in 2016 to £448m in 2017, allowing executives to
profit from our swiping addiction. Instead of allowing romance to blossom
organically we are entrusting our hearts to money-making algorithms.
Are dating apps killing romance or are they the matchmakers we've waited
centuries for? Join us on June 11th hear the arguments and decide for
yourselves.
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Speakers for the motion
Dr Bernie Hogan
A Senior Research Fellow at the University of Oxford's
Internet Institute and Research Associate in the
Department of Sociology. His work focuses on social
networks, social media and theories of relationships.
Georgia 'Tof Toffolo
Media personality and reality TV star, best known for
appearing on E4's Made in Chelsea and winning the
seventeenth series of ITV's U a Celebrity...Get Me Out
of Here! A social media influencer with nearly two
million Instagram followers and her own Youtube
channel. she is passionate about politics and made
headlines when she called Jacob-Rees Mogg a 'sex-
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god'.
Speakers against the motion
Toni Tone
Online talk show host and lifestyle and relationship
commentator on social media. She is best known for
her popular Twitter threads, averaging over 15 million
Twitter impressions a month. She is also Manager for
Student Communications at the University of Oxford
where she runs social media branding workshops and
oversees campaigns against sexual harassment on
campus.
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Gr Hermione Way
Former Head of European Communications at Tinder,
where she helped grow the brand across multiple
countries. Previously she co-founded Vibease, the
world's first smart vibrator. She now works as a
consultant specialising in accelerating brand growth
and viral campaigns.
Chair
Dr Xand Van Tulleken
Medical doctor and broadcaster who has presented
numerous shows for the BBC and Channel 4, often
alongside his twin brother Chris. He's presented
documentaries including Sugar V Fat, How to Lose
Weight Well and How to Find Love Online, where he
attempted to find the perfect match through exploring
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the science of online dating.
lit How I Found My Voice
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How I Found My Voice, with Sir Philip Pullman
Our New Podcast: Episode 3 with Sir Philip Pullman
How I Found My Voice is a new Intelligence Squared podcast that explores
how some of the world's greatest artists and thinkers became such compelling
— and unique — communicators.
Samira Ahmed speaks to the best-selling author Sir Philip Pullman, most
famous for the acclaimed His Dark Materials fantasy trilogy. From reading
Rudyard Kipling as a child to discovering the power of poetry and how to be a
storyteller as a teacher, they discuss the moments that shaped and inspired his
voice.
LISTEN NOW
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- Document ID
- 31afce2e-5f0a-4632-b206-daa3c9fd1b7e
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- Created
- Feb 3, 2026