This singles run club is the brainchild of Lunge founder Steve Cole and New York-based fitness coach Rachael Lansing. The two met through common connections in the industry and organized weekly meet-ups where singles could chat with each other in a casual, fitness-based environment. They put some twists on the traditional club. He encouraged people looking to find a date to wear black and announce their availability, and he led the group to a bar after a jog so everyone could mingle (and keep the sparks flying). I hope).
Cole, a former college athlete, was inspired to create this project after noticing how frustrated his generation was with the current state of online dating and realizing there needed to be an easier way to make connections in person. I came up with an idea for an app. For him, the Ranji Run Club is the best of both worlds. Relieve the pressure by not making dating the sole purpose of the event and creating an environment where it’s clear who’s looking for love (avoiding the weirdness of catching someone, he says).
“I think you need a comfortable space where it’s okay to put yourself out there and be a little more intentional,” he tells me.
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However, Cole and Lansing were shocked at how quickly their idea came to fruition. Since May, she has gained more than 25,000 followers on Instagram, and Howard said more than 1,000 people signed up for her run. Like Howard, Lansing attributes that growth to how bad modern dating is.
“It started much earlier than we expected, but we know this is a community that New York City desperately needs and is missing, and that ultimately that will be reflected in the numbers.” I think I always knew,” she says, adding that she also worked for him. Lansing met her current boyfriend while running.
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But while lunge run clubs are perhaps the most viral iteration of this trend, run clubs for love are a national phenomenon. Angioletti doesn’t like to go out, so after realizing that looking for hookups at bars and clubs didn’t make much sense for her, she naturally started attending free fitness events in search of meeting people. He said it became like that. It’s her own (and she hates apps too).
“I’ve decided to focus my energy on what I love and what I enjoy, and I hope that I’ll meet the right person in the process,” she told me. “I love fitness, so I thought going to a running club would be a unique way to meet people who share my passion for fitness.”
She agrees that single people these days are ready to think outside the box.
“I think a lot of people like me get burnt out trying to date in the ‘traditional’ way,” she says. “Running clubs have turned dating into something almost like a casual social event.”