A Venice gondola ride is celebrity titsa pretty bold move for a first date. But on a virtual date? It might be just what the love doctor ordered.
At the Snap Partner Summit Thursday, Snap announced a new partnership with Bumble. The dating app is bringing the Snapchat camera to video calls and video messages, so users can access AR lenses directly in Bumble.
"Whether it's a picnic in Paris or a gondola ride in Venice, we're offering the ability to create this sort of 360-degree background to almost imitate what it's like to be together in real life," Charley Webb, Bumble's chief customer officer, said while speaking with Mashable ahead of Thursday's announcement. "So it sort of takes a video call to that next level."
The lenses in video calls will all be focused on creating some ~atmosphere~. Users can choose between six different virtual backgrounds for their dates, including a picnic in Paris, a gondola ride in Venice, a ferris wheel, a campfire under the stars, and what Bumble describes as a "dinosaur valley." There's also the option to just blur your background, to, as Webb said, "move away from the reality of where you're sat at home, and really sort of focus on each other."
Bumble is also adding video messages, which users can now send with lenses like hearts or effects like fox ears. Notably, it is not including any of the retouching filters that have the tendency to create an idealized (and whitewashed) version of ourselves on social media — and negatively impact self-esteem.
"We're not offering any sort of beautification or modification on the lenses, and that was intentional," Webb said. "We want our community to showcase their unfiltered and authentic selves when chatting on our platform."
The partnership is possible thanks to the "Snap Kit" partnerships program, in which Snap provides partners with access to Snap products. The lenses are part of Snap's "Camera Kit." Later this year, Bumble will also integrate Snap's new "Sticker Kit" into their app, which includes Bitmoji, stickers, and gifs.
Bumble's use of the Camera Kit seems like a way to bring the dynamic, AR features of social media platforms that users are used to directly into the Bumble ecosystem — without Bumble having to invest in building those tools themselves.
"People on Bumble really found video calling and video notes to be a great way to get to know your match in lieu of meeting them in person," Ben Schwerin, Snap's SVP of content and partnerships, said of online dating during the pandemic. "What we said is, hey, we can help add, via Camera Kit, our augmented reality ecosystem system to your camera to make sharing video notes with lenses feel more more personalized, more creative, and more fun to help you express yourself. And that's something that really resonated with Bumble."
It also seems like it will be genuinely fun for users in a medium they're already using — an almost cheeky way of "seeing the world" after a year when dating moved from in person to online.
"It really helps convey that sense of being together, as well as lightens the atmosphere of [a] video call, and definitely provides some talking points as well, given what background members choose," Webb said.
Bumble thinks its users' embrace of video dates isn't going anywhere, either. After introducing video calling two years ago, and seeing its use increase during the pandemic, Bumble said that a December 2020 survey of its users found that "50% of respondents in the U.S. said they prefer their first dates to happen over a video call, rather than in-person."
Neither Bumble nor Snap think that video dates — even those enhanced with dynamic AR lenses — will replace meeting in person. But in a time when we're all looking for some connection, a little atmosphere can't hurt.
Underwear Life: An Interview with Francesco Pacifico by Adam ThirlwellSurface Noise: What We’ve Lost in the Transition to DigitalThe Art of Deodorant DesignMay Swenson’s “Daffodildo,” a Lusty Poem for MaySurface Noise: What We’ve Lost in the Transition to DigitalRoadside MemorialsHaving Trouble Sleeping? Read This.The Lost Joys of the Screen SaverThe Lost Joys of the Screen SaverThat Time I Tried to Scatter the Ashes of Every Dog I’ve Ever OwnedA Nice Crowd: The Blessings of the Spectator SportHow Jean Stein Reinvented the Oral HistoryUnderground in the 1940s: Alex Katz’s Subway DrawingsBooze in the USSR: Soviet AntiMay Swenson’s “Daffodildo,” a Lusty Poem for MayWho Gets to Name Diseases—and Why Isn’t It You?The Novel Isn’t Dead: KFC Is Selling a Colonel Sanders Romance10 Tech Products That Are Next to Impossible to RepairElias Sime’s Art Repurposes Electronic Waste from Abbis AbabaPhotographs of Lost Gloves: A Thriving Subculture First look at 'Toy Story' and 'Monsters, Inc.' from Mondo's Pixar show This dude got a tattoo of Baby Yoda drinking a White Claw Google Maps brings 'Incognito' privacy mode to the iPhone A handy guide to 5G and what that actually means for you Emma Watson's book fairies are hiding feminist books all over the world Now anyone can order a Lyft for someone else without a Lyft account Facebook thinks hiding Instagram likes will get people to post more Donald Trump tweeted about International Women's Day and everyone's making the same joke Why 2019 was the year of Dark Mode Netflix's 'The Confession Killer' digs for the truth: Review Kid who created his own campaign posters sure knows how to troll an election Over 800,000 birth certificate copy applications left exposed online '1917' is half movie, half video game, all genius: Film review 'The Mandalorian' Chapter 5 explores familiar territory on Tatooine 'Jagged Little Pill' on Broadway has a lot to say: Review ‘Star Wars: Rise of the Resistance’ is a true adventure, not a ride Finally, a dating app for finding people as lazy as you are BBC's shortwave transmissions from Thailand go dark, after talks fail Away CEO resigns after her internal Slack messages were published Verizon and T
2.2078s , 10132.5 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【celebrity tits】,Pursuit Information Network