The women joining high-end gyms for a month – to find a rich husband
'It's kind of a running joke between me and my girlfriends,' says Amelia, 24, who works in media. 'If you're on the lookout for a rich husband then you 'could' get a month's membership at [the exclusive health club] Third Space, meet someone, and once you've bagged your man, stop the subscription, or, better yet, get him to pay for it.'
Welcome to 2025, where feminism has given young women unprecedented freedom – and yet, thanks to extortionate house prices, sluggish salaries and a cost of living crisis, some are being forced to revisit a centuries-old economic model: marry rich and live well.
'The truth is I can't afford not to meet someone who earns more than I do,' says Jemima, 31, who works in art and lives in a rented flat share in Archway, north London. 'My parents don't have enough money to give me a good deposit and my own salary will never breach the six-figure mark. I love my job but I also want a kitchen island and a garden and the occasional holiday. Is that really so much to ask?'
Apparently not, according to TikTok, anyway. Last year, a song went viral on the social media app with the lyrics, 'I'm looking for a man in finance: trust fund, 6'5', blue eyes,' went viral – not as satire but as something closer to a lifestyle manifesto.
The song's creator later said that it was meant to be a parody of the 'soft life' influencers: women who encourage their peers to find themselves a 'provider' to take care of them, and then spend their days procreating, shopping and travelling without any financial responsibilities. As one commenter under the original post rather bluntly put it, 'I'll marry for money so my kids can marry for love'.
Jemima, like Becky Sharpe, is attractive and intelligent, but with a freedom that Thackeray's most famous character could only dream of. She has a good degree from a Russell Group university, a high-status job and – after spending her early twenties living in Paris and Madrid – can switch to French or Spanish mid-sentence if she feels like it. With no children and healthy parents, she can reinvent herself or relocate at will. Her sights, however, are firmly set on becoming Mrs Hedge Fund Manager.
Stephanie Alice Baker, a sociology professor at City St George's, believes this is a logical – if somewhat depressing – response to the economic upheaval of our time. 'Despite the rise of feminism, many young women who have ticked all the boxes they were told to are still struggling financially,' she says, 'so there is something very tempting in this idea being promoted on social media about living a kept life. These accounts tell women to meet a rich man by going here or wearing this, but what they are really offering is a remedy to the difficulties an entire generation feels.'
As Baker notes: the advice isn't vague. It's practical and strategic. Influencers – mostly American for now – share curated guides on how to bag high net-worth boyfriends: join country clubs, frequent expensive supermarkets, gatecrash glossy parties and go to church in the most exclusive parts of the city (to prove their qualifications, these videos are usually followed by clips of the influencers at Louis Vuitton or Hermes with the rich husband in question, picking out an expensive trinket while he gazes on adoringly). TikTok's Mina Rich, who apparently married a 'seven-figure entrepreneur', recommends golf tournaments, philanthropic galas and 'accidental' encounters at high-end art galleries.
Britain, of course, is a little different – but that doesn't mean the same impulse doesn't exist. Anna Bey, who is based in London, advises her followers to profit from the summer and travel to islands like Mykonos or Ibiza, where rich young men tend to congregate. Her other banker-meeting spots include art openings, Chelsea pubs and the business class lounge at Heathrow Terminal Five.
A former personal trainer at Third Space agrees that the luxury health clubs popping up around London are the 2025 version of the Nineties singles bars. 'The men are mainly lawyers, finance bros, tech people and, depending on the branch, digital influencers,' she says. 'There's lots of cash going around. In my opinion, the best way to mingle with men is on the gym floor. It'll be rare for you to start conversation in the classes as the main goal is to sweat, but on the floor you can take your time and rest and potentially share the rack.'
Slightly more manageable for anyone earning £30,000 a year are the bars and pubs around Monument and Cannon Street, where City boys tend to congregate for drinks after work. 'We all know which private members' clubs in the City are worth joining,' says one anonymous user on Reddit (The Walbrook Club, The City of London Club, and Ned's Club, apparently). 'If you're looking to meet someone rich, there's no point joining Soho House, the Groucho or Quo Vadis – they're just filled with arty types paying off a mortgage on a small house in Zone Three.' Brutal.
As gendered as it feels, Baker says this isn't an issue confined to women. 'Young people of both sexes are struggling to make ends meet or buy a property or even a car. All the markers of adulthood their parents and grandparents attained relatively easily are no longer seen as feasible. As a result, they turn to people peddling fantasies on social media: men have Andrew Tate telling them how to get rich quick; women have influencers telling them to put on a dress and go to a City bar – but it is all part of the same phenomenon and it does make sense in late-stage capitalism.'
Hence Jemima being so determined to meet her marriage goals that, in order to control any dangerous impulses to go out with a scruffy DJ or a badly-behaved artist, she has even set herself some rules: from now on she'll only date men who went to Oxbridge or one of the Ivy League universities, who already make over £150,000 and who, ideally, own their own home.
'I realise it sounds a bit much, as I don't tick any of those boxes myself, but men have different criteria, and if I want the sort of life that was normal a generation ago then I have to stick to them,' she reasons.
Sadly the truth, as Becky Sharpe learnt all too quickly herself, is that money tends to end up with money.
'The number one way to marry rich is proximity,' says Vivian Tu, an author and TikTok influencer who teaches people how to make the big bucks. 'If you're born into a wealthy family, you are far more likely to marry someone rich; if you want to marry someone who went to an Ivy League college, good luck – unless you went to an Ivy League yourself, in which case it is pretty easy. If you want to meet someone in finance then work in finance yourself: it's much easier to find a rich and successful husband when you yourself are rich and successful – focus on the main plot-line and the rest of the story comes together.'
In Britain, of course, this is also wrapped up in class. One friend – who married one of the country's more eligible aristocrats – laughs when I text to ask exactly how she met her husband. 'LOL', she replies. And then a few minutes later adds, 'At a shoot. I was invited at the last minute and he was there and we were put next to each other on the Saturday night. We then saw each other around and about in London a few times and ended up snogging outside a pub.' The sad truth is that, however motivated they are, most women do not move in the sort of circles where they are casually invited to shooting weekends with 48 hours' notice.
And anyway, perhaps they should be careful of what they wish for. 'So much is lost in these broad brush strokes,' says Baker. 'It makes a lot of sense for people who are struggling to long for an easier life, but it is not necessarily a happier life if they are not fulfilled: they might have material wealth, but not the sense they have reached their own goals. Anyone who is aware of the history of marriage would know that we should pause before wishing to go back to a time when women were chattel and, yes, materially well off but with no freedom of their own.'
Additional reporting by Millie Smith
Broaden your horizons with award-winning British journalism. Try The Telegraph free for 1 month with unlimited access to our award-winning website, exclusive app, money-saving offers and more.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Buzz Feed
30 minutes ago
- Buzz Feed
People Are Teaching Dogs To Talk Using These Buttons
Unless you live off the grid, chances are, you've seen videos of pet owners 'talking' with their animals using speech buttons on Instagram or TikTok. (@hunger4words, anyone?) The videos are adorable and nothing short of impressive. Typically, a person asks their dog a question and the dog responds by pressing a button that vocalizes a pre-recorded word or phrase. It's not telepathy, and no, you don't need a degree in speech pathology to talk to Fido. In fact, teaching a pet to use speech buttons is easier than it looks. Several reviewers speak to actually having the experience Dr. Learn describes with their pets — using a doggone good speech button set deal on Amazon for under $30! Before you write off speech buttons as too time-consuming or complicated, here's how they work: While Bunny can string together complex sentences using multiple buttons, that level of communication comes from building a strong foundation over time. Here's how to get started using the speech buttons at home. But brace yourself: It'll take time! Just remember to set boundaries, gently. These buttons can be a net positive for deeper bonds. Speech buttons can deepen the bond between pets and people by creating a two-way channel for communication. 'This gives them a tool to participate more directly,' Dr. Learn notes. If you're interested in starting a conversation with your pet, check out this basic set we found on Amazon that many reviewers say actually does help them communicate with their pets. Try having a conversation with your dog and grab some of these speech buttons on Amazon. If you're hesitant about trying some for yourself, check out these promising reviews. Get the 8-piece set from Amazon for $29.98.


Business of Fashion
3 hours ago
- Business of Fashion
How to Build a Male Influencer Brand
When Ethan Glenn sold his first hat in the summer of 2021, he harboured no dreams of being an entrepreneur. At the time Glenn was a marketing manager at an advertising studio moonlighting as an influencer with his Instagram page Every Other Thursday, where he shared the images that inspired his style, such as old and Ralph Lauren ads. Though he had hit 10,000 followers, it was still a passion project above all else. But after posting himself wearing a hat with an 'Every Other Thursday' logo on it on Instagram and TikTok, he got an influx of interest and decided to make a batch of 20 to sell at $44 each. Those sold out, so he made another 80, then an additional 500 — all sold. Before Glenn knew it, he had a real business on his hands. 'At the beginning, it was just merch for the mood board, but when I realised how much was selling and how much product I could actually move, I realised that I could kind of make anything,' Glenn said. 'I took a look around my daily life and I said, 'Okay, what do I use every day that, if I branded it as my own, would be an easy sell.' By 2022, the company was selling leather cardholders and a hoodie and generating $250,000 in annual sales. Today, its product line includes wool cashmere knits, cotton chore shirts, four-pocket denim and of course, the original $44 hats. Its revenue is slated to reach $3 million this year, Glenn said. Ethan Glenn was a marketing manager at an advertising studio before founding his clothing label Every Other Thursday. (Every Other Thursday) For years, female fashion influencers have been parlaying their followings into legitimate brands, from Tina Chen Craig's U Beauty to Paige Lorenze's Dairy Boy. But historically, men, who typically have smaller audiences online, didn't want or weren't able to make the same jump — until now. Every Other Thursday is part of a vanguard of fashion labels founded by male influencers, including mega names like Noah Beck, who founded the underwear line Iphis and has nearly 8 million followers on Instagram, and Daniel Simmons, who runs his namesake menswear label and has 1.1 million followers, as well as more micro creators such as Jack Henderson, who co-founded the menswear label About Blank and has 117,000 Instagram followers. It's an expected progression of the category for its most entrepreneurial-minded men to create brands that sell everything from hoodies and intimates to wide leg trousers and relaxed dress shirts. Since the pandemic, the male influencer sector has exploded as more men look for lifestyle content from attractive, charismatic figures: In 2025, the total number of people who followed male influencers more than doubled to 2.9 billion from 2020, according to data from influencer advertising agency Fohr. 'It's pretty natural that similar things that had happened with female influencers were going to happen with males — that they would build followings, they would want to leverage that into maybe starting a brand and they'd be able to build those brands on the strength of their community,' said James Nord, Fohr's founder. But as the graveyard of influencer brands has shown, it takes more than a high follower count to build a business that lasts. To move beyond their relatively niche audiences and compete with established and emerging menswear giants like Todd Snyder and Aimé Leon Dore, this cohort of influencer-led menswear brands are expanding their product offerings, collaborating with giants in their categories and opening pop-up shops around the world. 'A lot of these brand owners and creators understand that in order to stand out, they have to do something that actually provides quality,' said Drew Joiner, who publishes video essays about the fashion industry to his 360,000 YouTube subscribers. 'There is an element of going that extra mile to learn how to become, not just an internet brand, but a brand that could be sold on Fifth Avenue.' Dancing Before You DJ From creators like Ashton Hall going viral last year for his exhaustive 4 am morning routine to 'Menswear Guy' Derek Guy, who breaks down men's tailoring on X, male influencers are seeing a jump in followers as men take greater interest in their appearance and look for guidance. Male fashion influencers like Glenn and Simmons offer honest reviews of brands from the grungy menswear line Our Legacy to the pattern-heavy luxury label Dries Van Noten, plus shopping tips and outfit inspiration. As they've started their own labels, they're increasingly mixing their own products into their content. It's a common tactic in modern brand building: where consumers organically discover goods through social media influencers they deem authentic — but it's particularly important when talking to men who may need more help in defining their style than their female counterparts. 'The average male video watcher is looking for quick answers … What is the one minute explanation of why this trend is happening,' said Jake Woolf, who posts styling and shopping videos to his 234,000 TikTok followers. 'From there it's a natural parlay into saying 'you trust my expertise and my taste when it comes to curating this lifestyle, now I'm going to parlay that into saying like I'm actually going to be the creator.' Male influencer founders are also connecting with consumers by documenting what it's like to build their brands from the ground up — many of them have chosen not to raise venture capital to fund inventory and marketing to avoid being forced to grow too quickly. Marcus Milione, who bootstrapped his activewear label Minted, often posts behind-the-scenes content about the brand on his YouTube page, including new product drops, and occasional delays, and the brand's weekly run clubs. Marcus Milione posts behind-the-scenes content content about his activewear label Minted on his YouTube page. (Minted) 'You have to participate in the communities that you are hoping to sell to,' Nord said. 'We call it dancing before you DJ. You've got to participate in these communities before you seek to be a leader in them.' Growing Up For these influencer-led menswear brands to become lasting names they have to attract consumers beyond their followers. 'Every creator that wants to have a breakout hit brand needs to make that brand bigger than themselves and bigger than their community,' Nord said. 'Even the biggest creator is going to have to figure out how to get people interested in their product agnostic of the person who is making it.' To do that, these labels are leaning into traditional brand strategies. Every Other Thursday and Minted's ad campaigns, for instance, rarely feature their founders, making the products the focal point. They're also investing in physical retail experiences where customers can discover them without knowing the recognisable face who started it all. In June, Every Other Thursday, for instance, hosted a 30-day pop-up in New York's SoHo next door to rising DTC labels like French womenswear brand Sézane, jewellery maker Gorjana and Americana-inspired basics label Buck Mason. In addition to doubling its overall monthly revenue, 50 percent of the people who purchased at the store were new customers, Glenn said. The brand is planning to open a six-month pop-up in 2026 as it seeks to surpass $5 million in annual sales next year, he added. Some startups are getting cosigns from established companies through brand collaborations. Last November, Minted teamed up with running brand Saucony on a pair of $180 deep-blue, thick-soled running sneakers that has since sold out on Minted's website. 'For them to give us a platform to collaborate on, not only introduces us to their entire ecosystem, but also cements the fact that we make performance stuff,' said Milione, who noted that the Saucony tie-up not only exposes them to new customers but also 'adds to legitimacy of the [Minted] brand' — crucial in athletic apparel. Minted's sales doubled in 2024, Milione said, aided in part by the collaboration's success. In a crowded but small menswear market, these influencer-led labels have to make consumers feel like their products are as worthy as any of the household names in the sector, Joiner said. 'In order for an audience who is mostly male-dominated to support someone from a business standpoint, they want to be able to competitively say that the products that they're buying from a Daniel Simmons or from an Ethan Glenn actually compare to what Ralph Lauren or what Todd Snider is making,' he added. 'I chose Daniel Simmons, not only because I like Daniel Simmons' content, but because the clothes are actually good.'


Black America Web
5 hours ago
- Black America Web
Still Beefin'! K. Michelle Performs Diss Track Aimed At Former LHHATL Castmate, Rasheeda Responds
Source: Udo Salters/Prince Williams K. Michelle is not one to let a beef subside, and her latest move directed at her former Love and Hip Hop Atlanta castmates, Kirk and Rasheeda Frost, is proving it. The 'Can't Raise A Man' singer performed her diss track, 'Rasheeda Got Bags,' aimed at the Atlanta rapper during her latest tour stop, and her fans had a kiki over the longstanding feud between the two. After a piano interlude, K. Michelle sang the track for her day ones, who remember where the initial rift in the pair's relationship first began. Fans of the long-running reality program may recall that Rasheeda drew criticism in the early aughts of the show when she accused K. Michelle of fabricating her tale of abuse at the hands of Atlanta producer Memphiz. Her story was later corroborated by his ex-wife Toya Johnson—who also revealed she'd experienced violence in their relationship. Memphiz himself confirmed the claims and publicly apologized to K via social media. Still, Rasheeda has never retracted her statement despite many fans calling upon her to own up to her mistake. Well, Rasheeda did take time to respond to K. Michelle's concert moment via The Shade Room's comments, saying, 'Yeap she still loves me. Forever living rent free in her mind btw…she opening up at my concert. Get yo tickets.' She then, with the help of her husband, Kirk, compared her Spotify streaming numbers to those of K. Michelle's, pointing out that her TikTok viral song, 'Marry Me,' has 2 billion streams. Mrs. Frost also noted that her monthly listeners were higher than the Memphis-born songstress. However, K. Michelle called cap on the stunt with her own post where she listed her accomplishments. 'You really sat there and let that man embarrass you AGAIN today,' she said. 'Talking about a spotify listener for a TikTok challenge song. Crazy. Im 4 #1 billboard albums, 2 platinum records, 5 gold records and JUST got off stage as I have been for years. You want me to keep going? This music discussion ended before it started just like your comical rap whisper.' She continued, 'Everyone knows you're not a talented lady. Don't deflect THIS is about mocking a woman's abuse for years and being the ringleader of the bashing me circus. You're MOST known for the longest running fool on TV. You got the karma you deserved. Now I am going to sleep I have another show tomorrow.' Rasheeda definitely lives by the belief that all press is good press as she seems to be relishing the fact that people are making fun of her on social media… again. In response to a recent TikTok trend where users found creative ways to ask one another to attend 'the Rasheeda concert' with them, the rapper dropped a freestyle with the line, 'y'all can pop y'all sh**, cause I ain't leaving Kirk,' much to the chagrin of everyone everywhere. Still, she seems to believe that people are laughing with her rather than at her, and honestly, the delulu determination must be peaceful. The post Still Beefin'! K. Michelle Performs Diss Track Aimed At Former LHHATL Castmate, Rasheeda Responds appeared first on Bossip. SEE ALSO Still Beefin'! K. Michelle Performs Diss Track Aimed At Former LHHATL Castmate, Rasheeda Responds was originally published on