Once you’re in, the site will prompt you for some of the basics, such as your gender, your tinychat sign in status (if you’re a single looking for a good time, married, or attached), and the type of partner you’re looking for
- $ a month
- $ for a four-month package
- $8.98 for the 18-month package
You’ll receive a confirmation code and once you verify that it is your email account, you are ready to sign in.
Poking around on NSA is a piece of cake. Their landing page is clean and simple, and the navigation is easy to follow. Messaging is simple, there is a detailed matching system to find exactly what you want in a partner, and great privacy features to ensure that their members are having a completely discreet experience.
If you’ve got a great profile and some game, your chances are pretty good. Add in the fact that there are single women all over the site and your odds are even better. The website has almost 2,000 visitors a day, and they’re hanging around an average of 8 minutes per visit. When they view almost 25 pages each visit, your profile is going to get seen.
You can search by proximity to find local hotties or complete an advanced search to find exactly what you’re looking for in an NSA encounter.
No Strings Attached has an in-house staff that works to ensure the safety of its members, but they do not go any sort of criminal background checks on anyone signing up. They do share your information with their service providers (banking and credit card companies), and your information may be shared with the subsidiaries of No Strings Attached. Look, be smart and don’t ever give your Social Security number to anyone and don’t be handing out credit card numbers to other users. Use some common sense and protect yourself, and you’ll be fine.
If you’re looking for an NSA relationship, No Strings Attached offers its members the ability to find local ladies looking for an affair
Natalie Portman’s first comedy of the year, and a return to the big screen for director Ivan Reitman. But is No Strings Attached any good?
2011 looks like it may be the year that Natalie Portman follows up her award-worthy performance in Black Swan with the Ivan Reitman directed romantic comedy No Strings Attached, pairing a serious and more �worthy’ film with something fluffier, presumably to cleanse herself of all the psychological trauma and baggage that comes with playing a demented ballerina. This has come to be known (by me) as the �Coens gambit’. The alternating of tones, I mean. Not the ballerina thing.
Portman’s co-star is Ashton Kutcher, who is, of course, famous both for being Bruce Willis’s son (apologies to Ricky Gervais) and for irritating other celebrities in MTV prank show Punk’d.
(A quick digression: the print of No Strings Attached I saw was accompanied by the trailer for Justin Bieber’s upcoming 3D concert film Never Say Never, a surprise that was met with audibly pained gasps of horror from the audience. The Kutcher-helmed Punk’d finished in 2007, but it was recently announced that the concept was due to be revived and reimagined, Batman Begins-style, with a new presenter at the helm, Justin Bieber. Such is the intricate tapestry of asinine 21st century pop bullshit.)
Kutcher plays Adam, a wannabe TV writer who is struggling to get his scripts noticed, at least without employing some serious nepotism on behalf of his dad (Kevin Kline), who happens to be a famous sitcom actor. When Adam discovers Dad has been sleeping with his ex-girlfriend, he gets paralysingly drunk and calls everybody in his phone book in desperate need of a rebound hook-up.