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Makeoutclub

MakeOutClub
Type of site
Social Networking
Created by Gibby Miller
Revenue Advertisement
Website http://www.makeoutclub.com
Registration Optional
Launched Beta: 08/01/1999 | Launch: 06/19/2000
Current status Defunct

Makeoutclub.com was an early social networking website that catered towards youth and indie music culture. Launched in 1999, Makeoutclub introduced features and concepts (such as customizable user profiles with photos and interests sections), which later became standard in the social networking sites that followed".

Makeoutclub (or MOC), was created by Gibby Miller and run from his Boston bedroom while attending Massachusetts College of Art in Boston, MA. The MVP/beta version of the site was launched in August, 1999. This version of the site was hosted privately, the URL given to friends to "leak" for testing purposes before launch. Users submitted a "profile" via email to the admins of the site, who then hand-coded the users information into a small profile box that appeared on numbered pages, 10 users per page, divided by "Girls" and "Boys. After word caught on, and the amount of profile submissions grew unmanageable, Miller launched an automated 1.0 version of the site at the Makeoutclub.com URL in June 2000.

Makeoutclub was intended as a platform to bridge the distance between like-minded individuals in the music and youth subculture scenes when the internet was populated with early adopters, stating on the website: "...for indierockers, hardcore kids, record collectors, artists, bloggers, and hopeless romantics."

Makeoutclub was among the first social networking sites whose members experienced first-hand the stigma associated with meeting others online.

Makeoutclub featured user profiles, image galleries, message boards, blogs, private mail, and (for several years) music and entertainment news. Despite the site's name, Makeoutclub's owner insisted in the years of the site's infancy that it was not a dating site, but a place to make friends. This assertion has been challenged many times over.

Makeoutclub was featured in Time Magazine, The Face UK, Spin Magazine, Rolling Stone, as well as several television spots across MTV2, G4 Tech TV, Much Music, and more. Makeoutclub was the focal point and inspiration of Andy Greenwald's book about youth and the "emo" movement: "Nothing Feels Good", as well as the book "This Song Will Save Your Life" by Leila Sales.

The site was named after the song "Make Out Club" by the band Unrest.

Since its inception, Makeoutclub has continuously been linked to the hipster, emo, and indie subcultures.


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