this post was submitted on 22 Mar 2026
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No Stupid Questions

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For example, if a wealthy person only wants to socialize with and date other very wealthy people, how would they know? Like, for example, what if LeBron James or Tyler Perry only wanted to be friends with other wealthy people and wanted their kids to only date and marry people from other wealthy families? How would they know the people they meet also come from multi-millionaire families? I'm sure if a random billionaire met someone at a club or social event, they wouldn't introduce themselves by saying, "I'm X, Y, and Z, and I'm worth this much money." What if a son of a multi-millionaire wanted to date a woman who came from a wealthy family? Also, if he meets a woman, how would he know if she comes from money or not? Like I said, she wouldn't say, "I come from generation wealth" right off the bat.

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[–] exasperation@lemmy.dbzer0.com 18 points 1 day ago (2 children)

There are all sorts of filters:

  • Expensive clubs. Members only associations like country clubs can skew towards the ultra rich. Yacht clubs and polo clubs are kinda an extreme version of this, but there are all sorts of organizations where the membership can be assumed to be rich.
  • Expensive hobbies. Wine tasting, skiing, golfing, boating, horse stuff, biking, and traveling/vacations can range from the slightly expensive to prices that only the ultra rich can afford.
  • Related to both of the above, expensive places. If you're skiing in an expensive resort town, and hanging out in the lobby of a $2000/night hotel, you'll probably only see employees of these places or other very rich people. Some have even layers beyond that, like an exclusive members only club in an expensive area, or a separate lounge for only people lodging in the most expensive rooms in the hotel. Or if you're at a private jet airport, and weather causes delays and cancellations, standing around in the terminal might allow you to mingle with other private jet people. Or if you live in a crazy expensive neighborhood or building, your neighbors are pretty much guaranteed to be rich.
  • Third party verification. Networking, introduction by mutual friends/acquaintances, even social media or dating apps where you have to prove your status/wealth.

It's not all or nothing, either. Some places have a disproportionately high number of rich people but aren't necessarily exclusive to the rich (private schools, certain types of clubs, certain types of activities/hobbies, public parks/restaurants/libraries/museums in rich areas). So a lot of rich people do mingle with the middle class, but often will feel comfortable letting their guard down more or less in particular places or in particular groups.

[–] Samskara@sh.itjust.works 1 points 23 hours ago

Don’t forget expensive schools.

[–] corsicanguppy 3 points 1 day ago (1 children)

Or if you live in a crazy expensive neighborhood or building, your neighbors are pretty much guaranteed to be rich.

Careful. We're paying $4.10/sqft/mo rent and we are NOT rich; just in a very overpriced area.

I assume in your city, $4/month/sq ft isn't considered "crazy expensive," though. In a place like San Francisco or New York, a $2000/month apartment that is 500 square feet wouldn't register as anything notable.

If it's not considered "crazy expensive," people wouldn't assume you're crazy rich just by living there.