These awesome Tinder conversations are giving off the right signals.
Music producer Luke Holloway is taking weird and shocking exchanges on the popular dating app and turning them into tunes on Instagram and TikTok.
In his viral video, he’s demonstrating absurd and painful Tinder prose — mimicking both matches — as a screenshot of the actual convo flashes on the screen.
Holloway, 39, made her first post — where the person asked “Do you smoke crack?” Started with. – on his page @lewky___ at the end of August.
“I chose that conversation because the idea that ‘smokes crack’ was on that particular person’s list of things they were looking for in a romantic partner was so funny to me,” he told The Post.
The video received over 2 million views and fans urged him to make more with comments like “Never stop making these.”
“So I just kept making them, and then after about a month of posting on Instagram, suddenly, out of nowhere, I had 100,000 new followers. It was crazy,” he said.
One of the most raunchy conversations they set to music, which has received over 4 million views, is based on an exchange where a woman tells the man who sent her the messages that he has raped both her mother and friend. Have built relationships with.
“When she tells him their names, he replies, “F–k, that’s weird. So what are your plans tonight?”
Holloway’s ditties have even gained her celebrity followers Adrian GrenierChristina Milian, Melissa McCarthy and Matt Bomer – and they hope to include famous musicians playing Tinder users, like the dream collaboration with Ariana Grande and Harry Styles.
He finds Tinder conversations from places like Reddit and the entertainment website Bored Panda, while his followers simply flood his inbox with others.
“It is really flooded. It takes me hours to get through it,” said Holloway, who was on Tinder two years ago and is now in a relationship.
“Sometimes it’s frustrating, I won’t lie. You’re just reading horrible conversations. Some people can be very cruel, so I try to find people who aren’t going to be too damaging.”
Some messages are extremely X-rated.
“If it’s overly sexual, which I get sent a lot of, I want to stay away,” he said.
Holloway looks for conversations that are “really funny without being offensive” – such as her most popular song, which has been viewed 12 million times, which begins with the person asking, “If you’re real say potato. ”
The song that sparked the most debate was a song he composed out of a chat, which took a turn when the woman asked, “What do you do for work?”
The disappointed man replied, “Things like this are why I don’t do dating apps.” “We don’t know anything about each other and you already want the most personal details.”
“In the comments, people have expressed that they don’t like being asked this question, which has led to a debate about whether it’s a good or bad question to ask,” said Holloway, who grew up and now lives in Indiana. ” Washington DC. In
“I didn’t see anything like this coming. …For me, work is such a non-personal question.”