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April 11, 2000 | "Sometimes, the troops of men strolling around downtown makes it seems like a Boy Scout reunion is in town," writes Evelyn Nieves in the Times. "And since this is also the land of the best educated, highest paid workers in the world, minting 64 new millionaires a day, single women in search of smart, successful men should be having a ball." Her article then goes on to describe the head-scratching phenomenon of why the girls aren't getting any. "It's ridiculous," says Patty Beron, founder of SFgirl.com, a networking site that maintains dot-com party listings and was mentioned in the Times article. "Women make money and they date -- often people they meet at these parties," which the Times described as "all about networking, not dating." Beron thinks the premise of the article was mistaken: "No one I know complains about not meeting people." Besides being untrue, the article is insulting, says Sylvia Paull, founder of GraceNet, an entrepreneurs' networking group of more than 1,000 women who work in high tech. "Silicon Valley has spawned hundreds if not thousands of female high-tech professionals, ranging from CEOs to senior executives, programmers, venture capitalists, marketers, publicists, graphic artists, recruiters and, yes, reporters," Paull wrote in a letter to the editor she sent to the Times on Monday. "I have no idea how these women go about meeting their mates, but neither does your reporter -- women high-tech professionals are totally ignored in your article, as if the only women available in Silicon Valley are kindergarten and elementary school teachers." The Harper's Bazaar article, titled "Who Wants to Marry a Multimillionaire," limits its depiction of Silicon Valley working girls to "P.R. bunnies." In neither story is there any mention of female entrepreneurs. This irks Paull, who wrote in her letter to the Times, "It's unfair to have women portrayed as gold-diggers when many women today are responsible for creating the gold." So, how did the Times fall into telling such a tale? Perhaps a clue rests in a new acronym tucked into Nieves' story. "The valley is a weird world, unto itself," she writes. "In this sphere, techies take their dogs, birds and pajamas to work, and being too busy for anything but becoming the next MOP (millionaire on paper) is as crucial to fitting in as Palm organizers and T-shirts." MOP? We'd never heard of a MOP until we read it a few weeks ago -- in that Harper's Bazaar article. Describing one of the thousands of "wealthy" Silicon Valley bachelors who won't be wealthy until (and unless) his start-up goes public, Nancy Jo Sales wrote that he was "just a 'millionaire on paper' -- or, say, an M.O.P." Looks suspicious to us -- but it still doesn't explain why the Times went after the women of Silicon Valley. Beron, however, has a theory: "New York is jealous," she says. "The gold-digger thing is old and tired. Women are making such great strides, on their own, without men. It's so insulting to say otherwise."
- - - - - - - - - - - - Sound off Related Salon stories Harper's bizarre Where are the pizza boxes and polo shirts? A fashion mag shoots Silicon Valley and finds Prada in the cubes. Valley of the dolls Who are the tech industry's most eligible bachelors -- and do they really wear pocket protectors? No sex please, we're geeks They've got money, power and huge hard drives, so why aren't Silicon Valley's finest getting any?
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