Now would be a good time for the folks at Condé Nast to make a brave and convincing foray into the online world, right? And so they have — well, it’s brave at least — with the launch of a new dating site trulymadlydating.com.

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So far everybody on the web has pulled the same quote from a write-up of the new dating site in British Vogue:

Trulymadlydating.com is Conde Nast International’s first dating site, supported by Glamour.com and GQ.com, and created to unite glamorous girls with fashion-conscious GQ-reading boys to create matches made in style heaven.

Upon first glance, the new site seems like it’s mostly for British readers. The subscription fee (6 months for £59.94, 1 month for £19.99) is given in sterling, and most of the profiles are for people living in the UK. The site is powered by The Dating Lab, a British company that has experience powering dating sites for other media companies, like the Guardian and the Telegraph.

And, for the record, this is not Condé’

s first try at online dating. At the end of the ’90s, Condé floated Swoon, a personals website. But Swoon shriveled into a section of Glamour‘s site where you can make sure a potential boyfriend’s astrological sign is compatible with your own … and other date-y stuff, but no personals.

Trying to set up Glamour readers and GQ readers seems like a pretty clever idea. One Fashionista editor, Abby Gardner however, is worried that most of the people in said “style heaven” are gay, so setting them up with a site that seems geared towards heteros will be hard. She also wonders why Condé thinks that entering the online dating business is a good idea: “I simply don’t understand this use of resources or what on earth it has to do with your core business. If someone else can explain it to me, please do.”

Well, I think we’re kind of beyond the explanation phase. Something is terribly wrong with the core business and it’s time to try anything. And, hey, maybe a few people will get laid. Better than getting laid-off.