Lexington Herald Leader
 
 
 
 
Rent-an-everything web culture now offers  friends

By LEANNE ITALIE - Associated Press Writer 


 
 
In a not-so-secret double life, Jennifer Morrison is simply "Jennifer,"  
platonic friend for hire. 
The reservation-taker at a popular Las Vegas restaurant has accepted cash 
to  show an introverted, out-of-town computer programmer around the Pinball 
Hall of  Fame and the Bellagio's famous dancing fountains. 
A bored grandmother visiting family from the Midwest hired her for an  
afternoon movie. A stay-at-home mom who was new to the area paid her to come on 
 
over to do some scrapbooking. Morrison, 31, met a traveling businessman at 
the  airport with a folder of research he requested on things to do and 
helped him  rent a car. 



Read more: 
_http://www.kentucky.com/2010/06/17/1311546/rent-an-everything-web-culture.html#ixzz0r8fsRX6g_
 
(http://www.kentucky.com/2010/06/17/1311546/rent-an-everything-web-culture.html#ixzz0r8fsRX6g)
 


It's all because of a new arrival to the Web-fueled, rent-an-everything  
revolution - Rentafriend.com. 
"You look at a site like this and think, 'Oh, they must all be escorts or  
it's a dating site or something,'" said Morrison, a mother of a 2-year-old 
who  signed on with the blessing of her husband. "When I first saw it I had 
mixed  feelings about it. I thought it was kind of sad that people have to do 
 this." 
While Morrison is happy to meet new people and make a little extra money,  
charging $20 to $30 an hour, she's not the only one to think lonely thoughts 
 about the 7-month-old service modeled on similar, hugely successful sites 
in  Japan and elsewhere in Asia. 
In a world where friend is a verb and you may never meet some of yours from 
 Facebook in real life, where research indicates chronic loneliness can 
lead to  depression, suicide, high blood pressure and viral infections, where 
roughly 20  percent of all people - 60 million in the United States alone - 
say they feel  lonely at any given moment, is renting a friend a solution or 
stopgap? 
"The real question is, is it solving anyone's problems? My first reaction 
was  to roll my eyes, but it may in fact help people meet others and get back 
into  circulation. If it's used as a substitute for meaningful face-to-face 
 relationships, it's not going to work," said John T. Cacioppo, a social  
neuroscience researcher and co-author of "Loneliness: Human Nature and the 
Need  for Social Interaction." 
Rentafriend receives 100,000 unique views every month and has nearly 2,000  
members who pay $24.95 a month, or $69.95, a year for a login and password 
so  they can peruse the photos and profiles of 167,000-plus possible pals. 
Christopher Barton, 31, of Boulder City, Nev., first tried Rentafriend 
about  six months ago during a business trip training clients for an online 
university.  Living on the road, he hates to eat alone in restaurants and wants 
to make the  most of his downtime. 
"I'm in different cities all the time," he said. "You kind of get a tour  
guide to a certain extent." 
He chooses young, attractive women because "I'd just feel weird paying to 
go  out with a guy." A rent-a-pal in Chicago took him to a fun, 
hole-in-the-wall  restaurant that he never would have found himself. In New 
Orleans, he 
and  another rental hit Cafe du Monde in the French Market and Jackson 
Square. 
Started by Scott Rosenbaum in Stewartsville, N.J., a former marketer for  
dating websites, Rentafriend has some competition from offline services that  
will make platonic matches for a fee, like Rentalocalfriend.com for 
travelers.  The difference, he said, is Rentafriend allows the renter to make a 
pick,  negotiating the cost and making arrangements one-on-one through e-mail 
or phone  calls. 
"People e-mail me all the time about it. Is it legal? Is it really 
platonic?  There's no 100 percent way to be sure, but we have zero tolerance if 
a 
friend  says they were solicited. There's no second chance," Rosenbaum said. 
Rosenbaum's site, like those in Japan, has people renting for lots of  
different reasons. Two students rented parents to meet with college officials  
after they were caught drinking on campus. A woman once hired a college girl 
to  visit her mother in a nursing home three days a week after she moved 
away. 
"In Japan and China, they're more cultural because having a full family is 
so  important," he said. "It's common to rent a fill-in family member for a 
wedding,  like a father figure or someone to stand in as an important uncle 
to give a  toast." 
Rosenbaum's site is set up for search by ZIP code. His rentals skew young,  
with most ranging from 20 to 35, though there are plenty in their 40s and 
50s.  Hourly fees range from $10 to a rare $150, usually between $20 and $50. 
"When you look at the profiles, there's tons of things people want to do,"  
said Barton, who's an actor on the side. "You can kind of pick and choose 
and  find a profile of somebody who's into what you're into. It's a better 
kind of  experience than going around by yourself." 
Morrison mentions her husband and child in her Rentafriend profile and 
offers  that she dances Tahitian style and hip hop. "If you need someone to 
work 
out  with or just hang out I am your girl. I'm pretty peppy and bubbly if 
you just  need a smile and I have lived a life of someone twice my age if you 
need an ear  and some advice." 
She has a full-time job but Rentafriend has helped her earn a little extra. 
 "I'm trying to save more. We'd like to buy a house and just put money 
away. I  treat it like a business, but it isn't my profession." 
Ori Brafman, co-author with brother Rom of the new book "Click: The Magic 
of  Instant Connections," said the concept "seems really tragic, kind of 
surreally  tragic" in ways that sex services don't because it symbolizes the 
worst kind of  social isolation. 
"The danger isn't Rentafriend per se, but rather what it symbolizes," he  
said. "We purchase fleeting replacements because, as a society, we lack those 
 close, meaningful bonds that our so essential. " 
Does Barton consider himself lonely? Not really. He has buddies, doesn't 
have  a girlfriend and isn't using Rentafriend to find one. 
"If I did have a girlfriend, she'd probably want to know what was going 
on,"  he said. "I'd use it a little less probably, or maybe I'd start paying 
guys." 

Read more: 
_http://www.kentucky.com/2010/06/17/1311546/rent-an-everything-web-culture.html#ixzz0r8fmgBfU_
 (http://www.kentucky.c
om/2010/06/17/1311546/rent-an-everything-web-culture.html#ixzz0r8fmgBfU) 
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