Finding Your Next Match on Coffee Meets Bagel With a Video
When three sisters were frustrated by dating options, they decided to do something about it. In 2012, Coffee Meets Bagel was born. It's a dating app that prioritizes women, and also gives you a limited number of swipes per day.
Dawoon Kang is a co-founder of the app, and she joins Cheddar to explain the dating site's new video feature. CMB now includes a daily video question that users can choose to give a response to. Those responses offer the opportunity to get a glimpse of the user's personality and authentic self.
In a world with dating app saturation, CMB is trying to be different. Kang is hoping users will enjoy the ability to connect via video.
From snow in April to heatwaves in December, it’s hard to plan a trip in a climate change world. Startup Sensible Weather thinks weather-based travel reimbursements are the solution.
Between corporate debt and the widening gap between ‘the haves and the have nots,’ there are reasons to be cautious about the economy, even with interest rate cuts on their way.
If the A.I. hype hasn’t given you enough of a reason to be excited (and a little terrified), the CEO of Zapata AI says the next frontier is designing bridges or creating pharmaceutical drugs.
Stocks are near record highs, inflation is moderating, and analyst Deiya Pernas is 'optimistic' the U.S. is heading for a soft landing without a recession – which is good news for your wallet.
Google co-founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin loved pulling pranks, so much so they began rolling outlandish ideas every April Fools' Day not long after starting their company more than a quarter century ago.
Sam Bankman-Fried co-founded the FTX crypto exchange in 2019 and quickly built it into the world’s second most popular place to trade digital currency. It collapsed almost as quickly — by the fall of 2022, it was bankrupt.
The economic effects of the Baltimore bridge collapse, Americans are living longer but not better, and Gen Z and millennials are struggling to afford rent, let alone a mortgage.