1970s to 1990s - The Birth of the Pick-Up Movement
The Birth of a Movement
The 1970s to 1990s mark the formation phase of the modern pick-up movement. What began in this era as a niche movement of a few self-taught individuals would revolutionize the way men understand dating and attraction. These decades laid the theoretical and practical foundation for everything that would become a mainstream phenomenon in the 2000s.
In this formative phase, pioneers developed systematic approaches to male attractiveness. They broke with the romantic notion that love and attraction are pure chance, replacing it with the thesis: Attraction is learnable, trainable, and reproducible.
The 1970s - Pioneering Work and First Systematization
Eric Weber: The First Commercial Approach
1970 marks a crucial turning point: Eric Weber publishes his book "How to Pick Up Girls!", considered the first commercial work to systematically address dating. Weber provided no deep psychology, but practical conversation starters and situation analyses.
His philosophy was radically simple:
- Quantity over quality - The more women you approach, the higher the success rate
- Directness pays off - Honest compliments instead of complicated strategies
- Rejection is normal - Systematic desensitization to rejection
"Dating is a numbers game. Not every woman will be interested - and that's completely normal. The key is to approach at all."
The Cultural Landscape of the 1970s
The 1970s were characterized by:
- Sexual Revolution - Social liberalization after the 1960s
- Feminist Movement - New gender roles and expectations
- Disco Era - Nightlife as central meeting place
- Lack of Dating Education - No systematic teaching of social skills
These cultural upheavals created uncertainty among men who could no longer rely on traditional gender roles. The demand for dating guides grew exponentially.
The 1980s - Psychologization and First Communities
The Influence of Psychology
In the 1980s, the psychologization of the dating realm began. Concepts from behavioral psychology, social psychology, and early communication theories were incorporated:
The Underground Community Emerges
While the 1980s didn't produce major names, a decentralized underground community of men exchanging dating experiences emerged:
- Private seminars in larger cities (New York, Los Angeles, Chicago)
- Informal meetups in bars and clubs
- Correspondence between like-minded individuals
- First written "Field Reports" about successes and failures
This informal networking created the social ecosystem that would explode in the 1990s.
The 1990s - NLP, Speed Seduction and Digital Revolution
Ross Jeffries: The Father of Modern Pick-Up
Ross Jeffries is the central figure of this decade. The former standup comedian revolutionized the scene through the systematic integration of Neuro-Linguistic Programming (NLP) into dating strategies.
Speed Seduction - The Birth of Systematic Seduction
1992 saw Jeffries officially introduce "Speed Seduction" - the first fully systematized method for female attraction. The core elements:
Theoretical Foundations:
- NLP Language Patterns - Use of hypnotic language structures
- Metaphorical Storytelling - Stories with erotic subtext
- Anchoring - Linking positive emotions with oneself
- Pattern Language - Prefabricated conversation sequences
- State Management - Control of one's own emotional states
Practical Techniques:
- Waking Hypnosis - Trance induction in everyday situations
- Quotations Pattern - Packaging statements in quotes ("A friend told me...")
- Embedded Commands - Hiding commands in normal sentences
- Time Distortion - Manipulation of time perception
Speed Seduction was heavily criticized, as many techniques are based on manipulation and deception. The line between persuasion and manipulation is fluid.
The Digital Revolution: From Newsgroups to Online Forums
The spread of the internet in the 1990s changed everything. Suddenly, men could exchange experiences worldwide:
Important Online Milestones:
- 1994: First dating discussions in misc. newsgroups
- 1996: rec.arts.bodyart develops pickup subgroups
- 1997: alt.seduction.fast (ASF) is founded - the first dedicated forum
- 1998: Mystery first appears in ASF
- 1999: Over 10,000 active members in seduction communities
Growth of the Online Community:
- 1994: ~50 active users
- 1997: ~2,000 active users (ASF founding)
- 1999: ~15,000 active users
Alt.Seduction.Fast - The Epicenter of the Movement
The ASF newsgroup became the intellectual center of the pick-up community:
Characteristics of ASF:
- Field Reports - Detailed experience reports from practice
- Technique Sharing - Public exchange of proven methods
- Theory Development - Development of comprehensive models (M3 model precursors)
- Peer Review - Community evaluates and refines approaches
- Pseudonyms - Anonymity promotes honest exchange
Important ASF Contributors (late 1990s):
- Ross Jeffries (Speed Seduction)
- Mystery (early versions of the Mystery Method)
- David DeAngelo (Cocky & Funny)
- Tyler Durden (later RSD)
- Juggler (Natural Game)
Theoretical Developments of the Era
From Intuition to System
The paradigm shift of the 1970s-1990s can be summarized as follows:
Early Theoretical Models
Several fundamental concepts were developed in the 1990s that remain relevant today:
1. The Approach Model
- Opening (Opener)
- Transition (Transition to conversation)
- Attraction (Creating interest)
- Connection (Deeper connection)
- Close (Number/Date/Kiss)
2. The ASD Concept (Anti-Slut Defense)
- Recognition that women fear social consequences
- Necessity of plausible deniability
- Discretion as success factor
3. Inner vs. Outer Game
- Inner Game: Self-confidence, mindset, beliefs
- Outer Game: Techniques, routines, strategies
- Both dimensions must be developed
Techniques and Practices of the Era
Dominant Approaches 1970-1999
Direct Game (1970s-1980s):
- Direct compliments
- Honest expression of interest
- Focus on authenticity
- Simple conversation starters
NLP Game (1990s):
- Speed Seduction Patterns
- Hypnotic language patterns
- Metaphorical storytelling
- Embedded commands
Natural Game (late 1990s):
- Authentic personality development
- Humor and spontaneity
- Social intelligence
- Long-term attractiveness
Practical Techniques Overview
Cultural and Social Embedding
Dating in the Pre-Digital Decades
The 1970s-1990s were the last era before the complete digitalization of dating:
Characteristics of the Era:
- Face-to-face dominant - All interactions in person
- No second chances - No online research possible
- Local communities - Dating in one's own social environment
- Slower scaling - Fewer potential partners reachable
- Higher social pressure - Reputation more important
Media Reception and Tabooization
The pick-up movement was largely invisible to mainstream media in this phase:
Reasons for Invisibility:
- Niche character - Too small community for media attention
- Taboo topic - Men shouldn't need to actively "learn" dating
- Lack of digitalization - No viral effects
- Underground status - Conscious secrecy in the community
This invisibility would change dramatically in the 2000s.
Limitations and Criticism of the Early Era
Methodological Problems
Lack of Scientific Foundation:
- Anecdotal evidence instead of studies
- No systematic evaluation of techniques
- Confirmation bias in field reports
- Over-generalization of individual successes
Ethical Gray Areas:
- Manipulation through NLP techniques
- Objectification of women
- Lack of consent discussion
- "Numbers game" mentality ignores human dimension
Practical Limitations:
- High entry barrier (complicated NLP patterns)
- Unnatural behavior
- Focus on short-term success
- Neglect of long-term relationships
The techniques of the 1970s-1990s are historically significant, but many are considered outdated today. Modern approaches emphasize authenticity and ethical behavior.
The Transition to the 2000s
Preparing for the Mainstream Breakthrough
The late 1990s laid the foundation for the explosion of the 2000s:
Critical Developments 1998-1999:
- Mystery's public appearance - First live workshops
- David DeAngelo's "Cocky & Funny" - Alternative to NLP
- Digitalization - Thousands of active community members
- Commercialization begins - First paid seminars
- Theoretical maturity - M3 model in development
These factors prepared the ground for what would become a worldwide phenomenon in 2005 with "The Game" by Neil Strauss.
Long-Term Significance of the Era
Why These Decades Were Decisive
The 1970s-1990s are the intellectual birth of the pick-up movement:
Lasting Achievements:
- Systematization - Dating established as learnable competence
- Community Formation - Global networking of like-minded individuals
- Theory Development - Fundamental models developed (later refined)
- Practice Orientation - Field testing as gold standard
- Psychological Integration - Scientific concepts applied
Problematic Legacies:
- Manipulative Techniques - NLP patterns ethically questionable
- Objectification - "HB ratings" and quantification of women
- Numbers Game Mentality - Rejection as pure statistics factor
- Gender Stereotypes - Outdated assumptions about "female nature"
Summary and Outlook
The 1970s to 1990s transformed dating from a luck-based hope into a systematic field of study. Pioneers like Eric Weber and especially Ross Jeffries created the methodological foundations that still shape the movement today.
The Three Core Phases:
- 1970-1979: First systematization (Weber), cultural opening
- 1980-1989: Psychologization, underground community
- 1990-1999: NLP revolution (Jeffries), digital networking
This era laid the foundation for everything to come - both the successes and the controversies of modern pick-up culture.