
The Biggest Dating App Faux Pas for Gen Z? Being Cringe
When it comes to online dating, Giovanni Wolfram, a 25-year-old living in Santa Fe, New Mexico, isn't all too worried about whether his fellow dating app users will find him attractive. Rather, his biggest fear is that he might come off as 'cringey.'
'You can get away with being ugly,' Wolfram says. 'But being cringey is just like—that's a character that's imprinted on you.' Since he first joined Hinge at 18, he has worked hard to scrub his profile of sincerity. He's kept his responses to Hinge's prompts sarcastic and ironic, sort of as a litmus test. Some people take his snark seriously, but those people don't get a response from him.
'Intellectually, I'm really all about sincerity and earnestness,' says Wolfram, but he worries about 'being perceived as one of those guys who is too earnest and too sincere.'
Sincerity, earnestness, irony-free declarations of contentment—these are all things many young adults edit out of their online personas. Much of what Gen Z considers 'cringe' might strike others simply as directness and honesty, but one generation's authenticity is another's red flag. Young adults' tendencies toward lightheartedness and jokes in their online self-presentation may point to the way many of them are dealing with feelings of vulnerability and disillusionment.
Jordan Meisel, a New York psychologist whose clientele includes college students and twentysomethings, has noticed the demographic's reluctance toward sincerity. 'I think there's just an awareness that it's far more vulnerable to create a persona that feels accurate to who you are as opposed to who you think you're supposed to be or who you'd like to be,' she says.
It's easier to make a joke, Meisel says, because when you present yourself seriously, you run the risk of there being laughter anyway—at your expense. 'Emotionally speaking, you can't hurt me if I never show myself to you,' she says. Be Not Cringe
When Wolfram is messaging potential matches in the dating apps, it's humor or nothing. 'A lot of times I will just not be able to think of something funny enough. And the idea of being sincere is so repulsive that I just won't answer,' he says.
Wolfram says he rarely matches with people whose profiles are 'too earnest'—for example, if they share that they enjoy 'lazy days in bed with a joint.'
I ask Lila Goodwillie, a 25-year-old New Yorker, whether 'cringeyness' would repel her from someone's profile. 'Unfortunately, yes,' she says. 'I'm not proud of that, because I feel like when I meet people in person, I kind of like nerdy guys. I kind of like guys who are a little dorky and maybe a little bit cringe,' she says.
But on the apps, her taste is distorted. 'People are getting more picky,' she says. 'People are getting turned off by the cringe factor.'
To illustrate this, she points out some of the famously clichéd, tired tropes she sees in dating app profiles: the guy holding a fish he caught, the 'military guy,' the guy who posts shirtless selfies from the gym. Over time, she has identified more archetypes she finds cringe: the guy who writes 'ask me about the time I went motor biking across Vietnam,' the guy who uses the 'two truths and a lie' prompt, the voice note guy, the guy whose profile includes videos of himself playing guitar. At this point, it's difficult to escape the fate of being slotted into one of many cringey categories.
To Goodwillie, earnestness also suggests an open-armed—and deeply uncool—embrace of dating apps as a mechanism for finding love. 'My mom always says, 'You're going to meet someone when you least expect it,'' she says. 'I kind of feel like I always have that in the back of my mind when I'm looking at profiles. I'm like, 'Oh, I'm not taking this very seriously. I'm just going to see what happens and maybe I'll meet someone, maybe I won't.' So I feel like I tend to gravitate toward the profiles that also seem like they have that same sort of casual attitude about it.'
Will Gray, 26, of Nashville is also put off by profiles he feels are too serious. He's seen responses to Hinge prompts he interprets as too sincere, like, 'What I'm looking for: a man who will always support me through thick and thin no matter what.'
'I'm being very judgmental. I guess that's part of what the apps do—they make you judgmental,' he says.
He held his distaste for earnest responses in mind when creating his own profile. When it came time for him to answer the app's prompts, he wanted to come off as sarcastic and lighthearted, feeling the 'the threat of being too serious.' He describes his profile 'semi-serious' and 'somewhat sarcastic.'
'That's partially just me not wanting to be vulnerable, or being insecure,' he says. Long-Term Love
Gray admits that this self-consciousness can hinder young people's ability to get what they likely want out of the apps: love and companionship. 'The people bringing that serious and earnest energy, frankly, probably have the most long-term success, because they're being open and vulnerable and earnest and clear about what they want.'
Anabelle Williams, 25 from Brooklyn, agrees with Gray that directness on the apps is probably a significant indicator of success. Her friend who indicated she was looking for a long-term relationship is now in one with someone who also clearly stated that same desire.
But in Williams' own online dating life, someone stating what they're looking for is 'the biggest red flag I could have ever seen,' she says, describing it as 'embarrassing.' 'When I would see somebody saying 'looking for a long-term relationship,' I was like, 'OK, you're not looking for me. You're just looking for anyone.'
Similarly, Liam Katz, 24, also of Brooklyn, describes sincerity on dating apps as 'unnatural.' He compared an earnest-seeming online dating profile to 'a picture of someone alone in front of the Statue of Liberty.'
'When you're at a party with someone, very seldom are you going to be like, 'Oh yeah, by the way, I don't smoke cigarettes very often, I'm looking for a short-term relationship, and this is my sign.' That's not how people start talking,' Katz says. He calls that level of immediate disclosure 'ridiculous.'
'Usually it starts with you kind of joking around about something,' he says. 'That's kind of lost a bit, where I think dating apps are so, like, 'I'm looking for someone who's this, this, and this, perfect. This person fits my match, let's go out.' And I think that's kind of lame and sad.'
The culture of harsh judgment on dating apps makes users hyperaware of how they're perceived. In the same way Katz finds others' profiles cringe, he's conscious about not wanting to come off that way himself. 'It's scary because you know how harshly you judge people on the app' Katz says. 'We're all doing the same thing.' Tears for Fears
Meisel, the psychologist, finds that young adults have plenty of pejorative terms to describe sincerity. 'For people who are going to college and meeting a lot of new people for the first time, a huge fear is that they're going to come off as cringe , try-hard , pick-me . There's just all of these weaponized terms that really control the social landscape,' she says.
Her younger patients often struggle at first to identify that it's precisely this fear that's getting in the way of their happiness. 'It's common that people come in feeling lonely, feeling disconnected, socially anxious, but they're not quite sure why. And then in our conversations it becomes clear that these fears are playing an integral role in maintaining this distance from other people.'
Meisel thinks this aversion to vulnerability is related to a larger sense of disillusionment with the world. 'It is very vogue to be cynical, to be pessimistic, to be an end-days thinker,' she says. 'I think taking a protective stance is in line with having a cynical view of the future.'
'Vulnerability, in the form of genuineness, is the opposite of that,' she says.
In some ways, Gen Z is following in the footsteps of their elders—millennial irony was a much-discussed phenomenon of the early 2010s. But that ironic distance has given way to more sincere norms as millennials have arrived in middle age.
Wolfram finds millennials' sincerity 'revolting.' He points to how they respond to dating app prompts in the way they're intended to be responded to. If the prompt asks the user to share their likes, for example, he often sees millennials 'write two paragraphs of lists of everything that they actually like,' he says. 'It's very confusing.'
Gen Z's fear of cringeyness might be cut from a different cloth than millennial irony. Wolfram thinks his 'slice of Gen Z' is 'much, much more irony-poisoned' than those just slightly younger or older, in part because the looming threat of being judged online has haunted his cohort from an early age. 'A lot of it is learned,' he says. 'I remember when I was a kid, I posted on Facebook this really sad-boy meme, and I got made fun of for it.' Guilty by Association
Fully escaping the accusation of cringeyness in online dating might be a lost cause, because another cringeworthy offense, apparently, is simply being on a dating app in the first place.
'I feel like dating apps in general are already a little cringe,' says 24-year-old Manhattanite Erica Dick. She wants the profile of a prospective partner to reflect her discomfort. 'There's absolutely this idea of 'Let us acknowledge that this is weird.' I guess I'm looking for someone else who is feeling the same way as me.'
Since dating apps are already a tacit admission of the desire for a relationship, a profile that suggests you're not taking the app too seriously may be part of an effort to offset the 'cringe' inherent in just being there. Multiple people mentioned that, on Hinge, many list their 'most irrational fear' or the 'riskiest thing' they've ever done as 'downloading this app.'
But Meisel thinks there's hope. She sees some of her younger clients rebelling against the fear of cringe. 'They're seeing how that vulnerability and sincerity is necessary in order to create meaningful deep relationships.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
4 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Iconic ‘60s Singer and Satirist Dies at 97
Iconic '60s Singer and Satirist Dies at 97 originally appeared on Parade. The year is 1967. The black-and-white TV screen reveals an impeccably dressed, bespectacled academic in his late 30s. His fingers fly over the ivory keys of a baby grand piano. The first words out of his mouth are 'when you attend a funeral.' What follows is a familiar narrative about loss making you think of your own relatives weeping for you at your funeral, sung with appropriate pomp and circumstance. Then… something shifts. 'Don't you worry,' the singer knowingly smiles at his audience. 'For if the bomb that drops on you/ gets your friends and neighbors too,/ there'll be nobody left behind to grieve.' The song, 'We Will All Go Together When We Go,' picks up as he merrily continues to sing of the likelihood of impending nuclear destruction. The audience is unabashed with their delight, for the man on the screen is not your average run-of-the-mill entertainer. He is, instead, the legendary satirist Tom Lehrer, 97, who passed away in his home in Cambridge, Massachusetts on Saturday, according to Variety. Born in Manhattan in 1928 to a Jewish family, math prodigy Lehrer started his higher education at Harvard when he was 15. Known for his razor-sharp wit and darkly funny, politically savvy songs, the Harvard-educated mathematics professor had a surprising entry into entertainment, and an even more unexpectedly short tenure there. In a 1997 interview with Elijah Wald, Lehrer described what led him to write satirical songs in the first place. He had no yearn for fame or even any real love of performance, despite his natural stage presence. Instead, 'I would listen to the radio and think, 'I can write a song as good as that,' and the problem is, they already have people who can write songs 'as good as that' so what do they need one more for? What is necessary is somebody that can write something different.'' Lehrer was certainly different from anyone who came before him, and his unique blend of musical wit would inspire generations of entertainers to come. In the wake of his death, his fans – including the famous ones – flocked to social media to pay their respects. 'My last living musical hero is still my hero but unfortunately no longer living,' Alfred 'Weird Al' Yankovic, 65, posted to Instagram. 'RIP to the great, great Mr. Tom Lehrer.' Fans filled the comments section with 'RIP's and condolences aplenty. 'I'll miss him forever,' wrote one distraught fan. In the early '50s, Lehrer self-released a few albums while still a professor by trade, with teaching posts including Harvard, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and the University of California, according to The BBC. 'I don't like people to get the idea that I have to do this for a living,' Lehrer deadpanned to one live audience in discussing his academic roots. 'I could be making, oh, $3,000 a year just teaching.' After the release of his first album, 'the word spread like herpes,' Lehrer quipped to Wald, describing how his self-released record went old school viral, selling a shocking 10,000 copies according to Variety. Before long Lehrer was performing in nightclubs, concert halls, and recording live concerts for television, his next record rising to number 18 on the American charts. In his songs, Lehrer explored socially taboo subjects with his signature light tunes and unabashedly frank lyrics. Along with exploring nuclear conflicts in the aforementioned 'We Will All Go Together When We Go,' Lehrer took on sexuality in 'The Masochism Tango' and 'Smut,' racism in 'National Brotherhood Week,' and addiction in 'The Old Dope Peddler.' He also made time for some lighter subjects, like mocking classic spring ballads in his own ode to the season, 'Poisoning Pigeons in the Park.' He was in the height of his career in the '60s and '70s when, abruptly, Lehrer left the entertainment industry, eschewing fame in favor of a quiet life as a math teacher one quarter of the year, and a 'cheerful layabout' for the rest of the time. "I learned 25 years ago that you didn't have to shovel snow,'' he told Wald in the 1997 interview. "You didn't even have to see snow, and that was a great revelation to me.'' After his retreat from the public eye, Lehrer's popular satire returned to the press in 1980 when they were put together in the musical revue 'Tomfoolery.' Now, despite his passing, Lehrer's songs and his signature wit will live on forever, if the overflowing comments section of Weird Al's Instagram post is any indication. One fan perfectly mimicked Lehrer's signature sense of humor with a reference to his song 'Poisoning Pigeons in the Park' in the comment, 'The pigeons are safe, BUT AT WHAT COST.' Another fan commented with a reference to Lehrer's aforementioned song about bereavement, 'We Will All Go Together When We Go.' 'I thought we'd all go together,' the fan wrote along with a crying emoji. Iconic '60s Singer and Satirist Dies at 97 first appeared on Parade on Jul 28, 2025 This story was originally reported by Parade on Jul 28, 2025, where it first appeared. Solve the daily Crossword
Yahoo
22 minutes ago
- Yahoo
The Morris Twins Finally Speak About The Beef With Jokic Brothers
The Morris Twins Finally Speak About The Beef With Jokic Brothers originally appeared on Fadeaway World. After nearly four years of silence, the Morris twins have finally opened up about their infamous altercation with Nikola Jokic and his brothers, an incident that sparked one of the NBA's most intense off-court storylines in recent memory. Appearing on a recent podcast, Marcus and Markieff Morris provided their unfiltered perspective on the 2021 scuffle that left Markieff sidelined for months and fueled a long-standing beef with the notoriously protective Jokic brothers. For the first time, the twins now break it all down, and they aren't holding back. Markieff Morris explained: "It was social media. It never went anywhere... It's a cheap shot. I did a basketball play. If you see the angle, I put my hand up, like I let it know I'm coming towards you. I fouled you. It's like a hard foul in the game." "If you hit me from behind, I think it's a cheap shot. I turn my back... If you asked me, I would have never ran. Like I'm physically walking. I'm walking away. So I'm not even in the mode of knowing you're about to hit me." "Like it's like a car crash. I'm just sitting regularly in the car, just hit you in the back. You're like, woo. So my thing was, I shoved the, I was going to do it. I don't take nothing back from it." "Like, I gave it out a ton of times. So when you get hit, it ain't like I feel sorry for myself..." The incident, which took place during a regular-season game between the Miami Heat and the Denver Nuggets, began with Markieff delivering what he described as a hard, intentional foul on Nikola Jokic. The three-time MVP retaliated by shoving Markieff from behind, a move many fans and players deemed a "cheap shot." The altercation left Markieff with whiplash and a neck injury that kept him out for 58 games. In the aftermath, the Jokic brothers, known for their intense loyalty to Nikola, took to social media, threatening the Morris twins and fueling a dramatic narrative that spilled out well beyond the court. For months, the situation remained quiet, with both sides avoiding escalation. But the threat of something more physical always lingered. Now, the Morris twins make it clear: if things had ever gone further, they liked their odds. Despite the bravado, the twins' tone wasn't overly aggressive, more defensive than instigative. The interview seemed to serve as a chance to finally clear the air and assert that they never feared the Jokic brothers, nor did they regret their actions. Time may have cooled tensions, but the scars, both literal and emotional, from that chaotic moment still story was originally reported by Fadeaway World on Jul 24, 2025, where it first appeared.
Yahoo
29 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Ty Haney Officially Returns to Outdoor Voices
She's back. Confirming a badly kept secret in the apparel industry, Ty Haney has officially returned to Outdoor Voices, the brand she founded in 2013. More from WWD Obagi, Milk Makeup Owner Waldencast Enters Filler Market With New Acquisition Ulta Beauty Acquires Space NK as It Speeds Up International Expansion How Blu Scarpa Plans to Scale With The Help of Fiat Heir Lapo Elkann Actually, Haney has been quietly working with the company for nearly a year, creating product and brainstorming on how to reimagine the brand. But with a capsule collection ready to launch on Aug. 4, it was time for the official reveal. 'I formally started last August,' Haney told WWD. 'It's been so much fun to reactivate, reconnect to the vision, work on product and evolve what was an awesome brand into an awesome brand for today.' The first hints that something was afoot came last week when Outdoor Voices erased its Instagram feed, added the brand's former motto 'Doing Things' to its web page and followed just one person, Haney. That led to widespread speculation that she was returning. Her official role is founder, partner and co-owner and she will lead product, brand and creative, along with community engagement and activations to help refocus the brand identity and engage with new generations, as well as core consumers who already have a connection to the company. Haney said she has repurchased a company stake and is working with a team that includes Katie Siano, president; Tiffany Wilkinson, the former creative director who has rejoined the brand in that role, Jessica Guzman, the new design director, and Mariel O'Brien, general manager and chief operating officer. Last June, Consortium Brand Partners, a fund manager and brand-building company founded by three former Marquee Brands executives, purchased the troubled activewear brand for an undisclosed price. Corsortium, which is led by Cory Baker, Michael DeVirgilio and Jonathan Greller, is one of the new players in the brand management business, joining Authentic Brands Group, WHP Global, Bluestar and the founders' former firm, Marquee. Over the years, Outdoor Voices had faced numerous financial challenges, internal management rifts, excess inventory that had to be sold at off-price channels, cash flow issues, a revolving door of executives and store closures. Last spring the company's 16 remaining stores abruptly closed after Outdoor Voices reportedly stopped paying a number of its vendors and neglected to pay rent on some of the stores for months, according to published reports. Once a direct-to-consumer darling, Outdoor Voices established a strong Millennial following for its colorful leggings and tops and its exercise dress with shorts underneath. It also created a popular social media presence with its hashtag, #DoingThings, where customers would share images of themselves enjoying athletic activities. The company frequently hosted events such as group exercise classes. In 2018, the brand was valued at $100 million, but that dropped to $40 million in 2020. Haney abruptly resigned from the company in February 2020, and Mickey Drexler, an investor and chairman since 2017, stepped down the following July. The two reportedly clashed over management styles, among other issues. Haney was succeeded as chief executive officer on an interim basis by Cliff Moskowitz, the former president of InterLuxe, a New York investment firm. Haney returned to Outdoor Voices in June 2020 when it received funding from NaHC03, the investment management company run Ashley Merrill, founder and CEO of sleepwear brand Lunya. She became the new chairman of Outdoor Voices and Haney took an active role as one of the company's board members. Merrill took on the role of interim CEO last fall, but both she and Haney soon exited. Haney said she was introduced to Consortium by Keith Miller, an early investor in Outdoor Voices, around the time of the purchase. But because she was already busy running her other two successful start-ups — Joggy, a plant-based energetics brand, and Try Your Best, or TYB, a Web 3.0 platform that brings together brands and consumers to build value — it wasn't on her mind to rejoin OV. TYB recently closed an $11 million series A funding round. 'I have two companies that I've been running since I left after Outdoor Voices, and they're both going very well. So I It wasn't really on my mind to consider reengaging with OV,' she said. 'But I got to meet Cory and his partners from March to August, and really get a sense for what they were excited about, and vice versa, and I got comfortable with the idea, and excited and energized about being part of it again. So I've formally joined back.' She believes the niche that Outdoor Voices dominated in the early days still represents an opportunity today, albeit in an updated way. 'You'll see in the product imagery, the collection still is rooted in movement and all materials meant to sweat in, but it's much more bold and fashion-forward and lifestyle-oriented underneath this umbrella of recreation. So a fresh and exciting perspective and really pushing it into a new version of itself.' She admitted that there were some dark days during the first go-round, but she looks at it as a learning experience. 'I look back on my experience with OV, and 90 percent that first chapter was awesome — 10 percent was hard. But I'm grateful for the masterclass in learning.' The biggest lesson she learned was that any successful company needs to have a seasoned chief operating officer. Because no one had that position at OV, there was a 'massive gap from an operating leadership perspective,' she said. So Haney said when creating Joggy and TYB, her first hire for both was a chief operating officer. At Outdoor Voices, that role will be assumed by O'Brien. 'I've been a lot more thoughtful in my businesses since then,' she said. When Consortium bought the company, its plan was to stabilize the business and eventually add categories, open stores and explore international distribution. That's the game plan it is following for its other acquisition, Draper James. Consortium also owns Jonathan Adler, in which it bought a majority interest last January. David Peyser Sportswear is also an investor in Outdoor Voices. 'The consumer doesn't see [Outdoor Voices] as depressed,' DeVirgilio said last fall. 'We have to put time and money into this brand, and we will,' Baker added at the time. 'Our job is to reengage the consumer with good product in an authentic way.' The team is even more positive now that Haney is front and center again. 'We are thrilled to welcome Ty back to the company she founded,' said Baker. 'She is a visionary founder whose creativity and strategic insight are unmatched. With her at the helm, the brand is returning to its roots with renewed purpose and energy. This is a homecoming in every sense — and one that positions OV for an exciting new chapter.' Haney said although the new Outdoor Voices will be online initially, she envisions the company eventually getting back into retail. 'For the foreseeable futures, we'll be owning and creating strength with our own website. But given how important the IRL kind of activations and physical touch points are to a movement brand, I am certain that we'll start to open stores at some point.' The capsule that will launch next week will feature technical apparel and accessories that honor the brand's heritage, but in a modern way. Haney said the brand will also be hosting an activation in New York in September. Haney was born in Long Beach, Calif., and grew up in Boulder, Colo., where she ran track competitively. But the brands she wore to run were always boasting that they could make someone 'harder, better, faster, stronger,' she said in 2018. So she set out to create an activewear brand focused on having fun rather than performing at the highest level. 'As you get older, activity takes on a whole new meaning: it's less about this harder, faster kind of pressure-oriented positioning and all about freeing fitness from performance, and that's what OV is built on.' Haney is now a mother of two and wife to country singer Mark Wystrach, lead singer of Midland. Best of WWD EXCLUSIVE: Maje Names Charlotte Tasset Ferrec CEO Nadja Swarovski Exits Family Company Amid Ongoing Corporate Shakeup Aeffe MD Exits Fashion Group Error while retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error while retrieving data Error while retrieving data Error while retrieving data Error while retrieving data