The founder of groundbreaking dating site, Gaydar has died in his
native South Africa. 51-year-old Henry Badenhorst, died after falling
from a tower block on Saturday.
He died a decade after his co-founder and former partner Gary Frisch fell to his death in London.
The two created Gaydar, which became the world's largest dating
site for gay and bisexual men, in 1999 when a friend said he was too
busy to find a partner.
Mr Badenhorst told the Guardian in 2009: "We put him on Excite
[a search engine], which had a dating section where you could upload a
picture. But it took two weeks for him to get a response, so we said
that we were sure we could create something specifically for the gay
market."
How it changed life for gay men
At one time Gaydar boasted more than four million subscribers. The
founders would go on to launch an award-winning radio station.
As a result, Mr Badenhorst, who was born in Johannesburg, was named
in the top five of the Independent's Pink List of influential gay men
and women at least twice in the mid-2000s.
He stepped back from the company in 2010, three years after Mr
Frisch's death, which deeply affected him. But seven years later, Mr
Badenhorst's legacy, both on and offline, within the LGBT community and
outside it, can be felt as strongly as ever.
"He realised he changed the world in a way that surprised him," Rob Curtis, Gaydar's current managing director told the BBC.
It has, Mr Curtis said, made it safer for all LGBT people to meet. "It
was difficult for gay men to find each other, and they were really the
first gay social network - and the legacy of that has lived on," he added.
Patrick Strudwick, an LGBT editor for the news website Buzzfeed, said the entire idea was "revolutionary".
"The idea you can go to your computer and interact with them in
real life without having to go to gay bars or cruising or gay cafes or
whatever was a pivotal moment in the history of gay and bisexual men," he told the BBC.
A safer option
But it was more than just a way to meet men. "In countries where being gay is a crime, people were now able to find new contacts and organise," Mr Curtis said.
Even in counties where being gay or bisexual was accepted, the impact on mental wellbeing cannot be underestimated.
"Before the internet, gay people did think they were the only
gay person in the world. That feeling of isolation cannot happen any
more," Mr Strudwick said. "What Henry and Gary did was enormous."
Not only that, but the sheer number of connections the site has
made over the years - whether they be romantic, sexual or platonic -
could not help but shape the community.
Forerunner to Facebook
When Gaydar first launched, the idea we would one day be "swiping right" as we searched for love could not have been imagined.
Eighteen years later, millions of people are logging onto these apps each day - be they straight, gay or bisexual.
And none of it, arguably, would have come to be had it not been for Gaydar.
"Gaydar was revolutionary, really, in the ways that gay and bisexual men meet - and the ripples fanned out much further," said Mr Strudwick.
"The idea that you can both have your own profile page and also search
for people by where they are - these thing really changed the wider
culture.
"It was the forerunner to Facebook. The idea an individual
would have their own page, it was entirely novel. The GPS element was
later made an updated with things like Tinder and Grinder."
"Before that, it was the personal ads," said Mr Curtis. "Now we have GPS-based locations."
Source: BBC
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