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Posted: 2016-03-09T20:31:22Z | Updated: 2016-03-09T23:07:46Z Now You Can Swipe Right To Find A New Best Friend | HuffPost

Now You Can Swipe Right To Find A New Best Friend

Tinder co-founder Whitney Wolfe wants to solve your adult friend crisis.
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NEW YORK -- Whitney Wolfe is just 26 years old, and she's been crazy busy. Since finishing college, she's lived in six cities and started two companies. 

Making friends has not been at the top of her mind.

"I literally have no friends," she told The Huffington Post recently, by way of explaining why she's now pitching a new friend-making feature on Bumble, the feminist dating app she founded last year. It's called BFF, and essentially lets you hook up with potential besties by swiping right and left, according to your whims. 

American women are waiting longer than ever to get married -- the average age of first marriage for women in the U.S. is 27 , up from 20 in 1960. That means friends are the new husbands -- increasingly important  for support, connection, fun, and everyday stuff like helping you move or making sure you don't die alone in your apartment when you have the flu.

 

Making friends as a young adult has never been simple, but now technology makes things worse. Busy Youngs spend hours with their phones, connecting and reconnecting with the same old friends on Facebook and Instagram and Snapchat. 

Wolfe hopes that BFF solves the problem. But friendships are, in some ways, more complicated than romantic relationships. For starters, they're trickier to end. What if you meet someone and don't like them all that much? You can't say "let's just be friends." The feeling of rejection seems potentially more palpable.

An informal survey of my colleagues revealed that most of us are a little freaked out at the idea of a "friend date" with a stranger. Many thought that something like BFF would best serve someone who's new to a city and really doesn't know anyone. Wolfe also pitched the feature as great for when you've just landed somewhere new.

The young women I spoke to were more inclined to meet new friends via shared interests like work or different activities, rather than using an app. As for me, I'm well past my 20s and married with kids. Like most of the Olds, I mostly make friends either at work or via my kids' friends' parents. I wouldn't say it's going super well, but that's another story.

I decided to give BFF a try.

Swiping through my friend matches made me kind of anxious. I had a hard time making judgments about women just based on photos -- who knows if they're cool or not? Because I'm making snap judgments based on looks, it doesn't seem at all dissimilar from dating and, ultimately, I'm a smidge too misanthropic to chat anyone up to find out more about them. 

But I'm far from the target audience. Wolfe said a majority of Bumble users are 23 to 29 years old. 

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Whitney Wolfe wants women to use Bumble to find their next bestie.
Jordan Doner

In less than a week, Wolfe says there have been more than 1 million swipes in the BFF feature, and 60 percent are women looking for friends. Bumble itself has 3 million users.

Bumble is the first dating app to pitch an exclusive friend-making feature. Compared to other meetup-type apps, it has the built-in advantage of a larger user base. People looking for love or sex or whatever may float over to BFF for a breather more naturally than they'd download something new.

Wolfe said that people were already using Bumble as a way to make friends, by putting a line in their profile. The new feature -- it launched last week -- is just the natural outgrowth of that more fluid situation.

A former Kappa Kappa Gamma at Southern Methodist University, Wolfe helped found Tinder and grow it into a phenomenon by pitching the app to sororities around the country. She then bravely filed a sexual harassment lawsuit against her co-founders -- alleging truly repellent behavior on their part -- and drawing reams of press attention before settling it for a reported $1 million

Because of the settlement, she can't talk about the suit now -- though of course everyone asks.

She's positioned Bumble as basically the anti-Tinder, a dating app that actually empowers women. Ladies must make the first move on the app, which employs the same swiping mechanism as Tinder. She's got backing from a somewhat secretive, fairly legendary, Russian entrepreneur. Two former Tinder designers are also now working on the new app.

Bumble, which hasn't yet made any money, currently only employs about seven people out of its Austin headquarters. There's just one male employee. 

"I think there's a lot of other social apps that don't have a lot of women at the helm," Wolfe said. "I wanted to do it differently."

Before You Go

11 Photos Every Dating Profile Must Include
You MUST have a photo of you holding up the leaning Tower of Pisa, or grabbing the moon/sun in your hands.(01 of22)
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(credit:Mr Moss/Flickr)
Because that means you have a sense of humor.(02 of22)
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You can't actually get your hands around the moon, silly! Swiping right all day!

(credit:IthacaBarbie/Flickr)
You MUST have a photo of you in front of a mountainous canyon.(03 of22)
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(credit:Bader-Butowski)
Because that means you acknowledge that nature is BIG.(04 of22)
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You're truly in touch with the world. We should get a drink and get in touch with each other.

(credit:Soft_Light)
You MUST have a photo with you and your nieces and/or nephews.(05 of22)
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(credit:Shutterstock / BlueOrange Studio)
Because you want kids but you definitely don't have any yet.(06 of22)
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This person seems qualified to raise and nurture tinier versions of themselves!

(credit:Alamy)
You MUST have a photo of you doing a muddy obstacle course.(07 of22)
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(credit:Jeff J Mitchell via Getty Images)
Because not only are you in shape, but you can get a little dirty too.(08 of22)
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(credit:Bruce Bennett via Getty Images)
You MUST have a photo of you visually on fleek.(09 of22)
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(credit:Getty Images)
Because you also clean up nice and will not embarrass anyone if meeting at a fancy restaurant.(10 of22)
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The tie means he won't say childish things to me. Let's give it a shot!

(credit:Shutterstock / Minerva Studio)
You MUST have a photo where you're making a goofy face to the camera.(11 of22)
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(credit:Alamy)
Because you're goofy and fun and you don't take life too seriously.(12 of22)
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The playfulness of his expression in this photo is directly proportional to the playfulness of his attitude!

(credit:Shutterstock / Maxim Kalmykov)
You MUST have a photo of you with serious sunglasses face.(13 of22)
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(credit:JAG IMAGES)
Because you can mean business, and what's going on behind those stylish shades??(14 of22)
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MYSTERIOUS.

(credit:Getty)
You MUST have a photo of you just chillin' at the beach.(15 of22)
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(credit:Danielle Donders)
Because you're at the beach, just chillin'.(16 of22)
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Whatever, no worries, all good.

(credit:Shutterstock / haveseen)
You MUST have a photo with a pet.(17 of22)
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(credit:Elena Eliachevitch)
Because there is something you love that's not yourself.(18 of22)
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If she can love that dog, then that means she can love me as well!

(credit:Getty Images/Blend Images)
You MUST have a picture of you with alcohol.(19 of22)
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(credit:Getty Images/Ingram Publishing)
Because you're an ADULT, and you do adult stuff.(20 of22)
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Adulting is fun!

(credit:Getty Images)
You MUST have a photo where the relationships are ambiguous.(21 of22)
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(credit:Getty)
Because who the hell IS that?(22 of22)
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Why would you put this photo on a dating profile if you're not single?

(credit:Getty Images/Flickr Open)