I went on my first date with a guy from a dating app

I went on my first date with a guy from a dating app. I ordered everything I wanted and ate way too much. When the bill came, he suggested splitting it. I said, โ€œNo. You invited me. You pay.โ€ He paid, but what I didnโ€™t know was that he secretlyโ€ฆ

added a note in his phone, right there at the table, while pretending to check a text. I notice the flicker of his screen, the way his eyes narrow ever so slightly, like heโ€™s making a mental bookmark of this exact moment. I brush it off. Maybe heโ€™s just weird. Or maybe Iโ€™m paranoid. Either way, I grab my to-go box, smile, and thank him for dinner like nothingโ€™s wrong.

The next day, I get a Venmo request from him. $74.19.

No context. Just a money request with a pizza emoji. I stare at it for a long time, not sure if itโ€™s a joke. I even message him:
โ€œUhhโ€ฆ is this supposed to be funny?โ€
He replies:
โ€œNope. You said you werenโ€™t paying, but I donโ€™t cover gluttony. You had THREE appetizers.โ€

Three? Maybe. But in my defense, they were small. And I was hungry. And he had invited me. So I respond:
โ€œThen maybe next time, donโ€™t invite someone to dinner if youโ€™re keeping a calculator in your head.โ€

He leaves me on read.

Fine. Blocked. Done. Or so I think.

Because two days later, I get a DM from a totally different account. The profile picture is a kitten wearing sunglasses. The name is something absurd like โ€œMrMeowster123,โ€ and the message simply says:
โ€œStill owe me $74.19. Donโ€™t ghost like a thief.โ€

I laugh. Out loud. Then I get mad. I screenshot it, post it to my Instagram story with a poll:
โ€œWho owes who? Girl invited to dinner vs. guy who canโ€™t count a date as a date.โ€

It blows up. Friends reply. Strangers message. Someone even recognizes the guy and says, โ€œOMG I went on a date with him too. He asked for gas money after dropping me off.โ€

Apparently, this is his thing. Invites girls out, then retroactively demands payment if he doesnโ€™t feel they were “grateful enough.” One girl said he PayPalโ€™d her a refund request for the tip she didnโ€™t leave.

I start getting messages from women all over the city, each one telling a new variation of the same nightmare. One girl claims he created a spreadsheet of his dating expenses and categorized her under โ€œhigh maintenance, low return.โ€ Another says he rated her dessert choices in a shared Google Doc titled โ€œDate ROI.โ€

I go from stunned to disgusted toโ€ฆ fired up.

So I make a TikTok. I tell the story, reenact the dinner moment, dramatically hold up a to-go box like itโ€™s Exhibit A, and read his Venmo request in a posh British accent.

It hits a nerve. The video gets over 600,000 views overnight.

By the next morning, I have a dozen more stories in my inbox and a new follower: @SplitTheBillBill. Itโ€™s him. He made a public account. And heโ€™s reposting my video with captions like:
โ€œProof that entitlement isnโ€™t just a male problem.โ€
โ€œModern dating: where free food is the love language.โ€

He even comments:
โ€œJust say you used me for dinner and go.โ€

The comment gets hundreds of replies. Some people take his side. A few say heโ€™s just trying to make dating fair. But most? Most are horrified.

I sit there scrolling, heart pounding. Itโ€™s no longer about dinner. This guy is trying to shame women publicly for accepting his own invitations. And worse, heโ€™s collecting data, receipts, names.

I call my best friend. โ€œShould I delete everything?โ€

She says, โ€œHell no. Double down.โ€

So I do.

I invite the other women who messaged me to do a live panel with me on TikTok. We call it โ€œDates We Regret: A Roundtable of Red Flags.โ€ Five of us go live. We tell our stories. We laugh. We cringe. One girl reads a poem she wrote titled โ€˜Receipt for My Dignity.โ€™

Itโ€™s cathartic. Itโ€™s hilarious. Itโ€™s horrifying. Itโ€™s real.

By the end of the week, the hashtag #SplitTheBillBill is trending. A journalist reaches out and asks if Iโ€™d be willing to talk for a feature on โ€œWeaponized Frugality in Modern Dating.โ€ I say yes.

The article goes live. The headline reads:
โ€œHe Wants to Split the Bill, but Not the Blame.โ€

He responds, of course. Posts his own video, shirtless, holding a calculator, saying:
โ€œDating is not charity. If you eat half the table, pay half the bill.โ€

I donโ€™t even reply. I donโ€™t have to. The comments speak for themselves.

Then, something unexpected happens.

A woman named Emily DMs me. She says she used to date him. Like, actually. For a few months. She says, โ€œHe used to keep a budget folder titled โ€˜Romantic Overhead.โ€™ He tracked every flower, every Uber ride, every coffee. One time I didnโ€™t finish my smoothie and he asked if he could get a refund for it emotionally.โ€

I almost choke laughing.

Emily adds, โ€œBut hereโ€™s the thing. He wasnโ€™t always like this. After his last breakup, he went full spreadsheet. I think he snapped. You should knowโ€ฆ he applied for a patent on a dating app that matches based on โ€˜expense alignment.โ€™โ€

I blink.

No. Way.

She sends me screenshots. He really did. The app is called Splatrโ€”short for โ€œSplit Later.โ€ Its tagline?
โ€œLove is priceless. Dates are not.โ€

At this point, I donโ€™t know whether to scream or launch a comedy special.

So I do the next best thing: I buy the domain SplitTheBillBill.com and post every receipt, every Venmo request, every spreadsheet sent to me anonymously. I keep names private. I make it about awareness.

It goes viral again.

But thenโ€ฆ I get an email from a lawyer.

Heโ€™s suing me. For defamation.

My stomach drops. I re-read the email ten times. He claims I โ€œknowingly incited targeted harassmentโ€ and โ€œdamaged his entrepreneurial reputation.โ€

I call my cousin, whoโ€™s a paralegal. She says, โ€œYou didnโ€™t name him directly, right?โ€
โ€œNope.โ€
โ€œAnd everything you posted was sent to you?โ€
โ€œYep.โ€
โ€œThen let him try. Heโ€™s going to embarrass himself in court.โ€

Still, itโ€™s scary. The idea of being dragged into legal drama over a dinner date feels surreal.

But then, two things happen.

First, a lawyer who saw my TikToks offers to represent me pro bono. Says heโ€™s tired of โ€œfinancial manipulation being disguised as modern masculinity.โ€

Second, someone sends me a link. Itโ€™s a Reddit thread.
โ€œMen like Bill are giving all of us a bad name. Stop it.โ€

Even guys are turning on him now.

The lawsuit goes nowhere. His lawyer drops him when the screenshots surface showing him bragging about his โ€œemotional reimbursement invoices.โ€ Apparently, the term violates several platformsโ€™ harassment guidelines.

He deletes all his accounts.

And me?

Well, I get invited to speak on a podcast. Then another. Then a YouTube channel.

The conversation expands. We start talking about financial boundaries in dating, about expectations, about consentโ€”not just physical, but emotional and fiscal. I even get a brand partnership with a budgeting app that promotes transparent communication.

But my favorite part?

A woman DMs me and says, โ€œI was nervous about asking my date to split the bill, but your story helped me realize itโ€™s about mutual respectโ€”not who owes who. We had the conversation. And it actually brought us closer.โ€

I smile.

Because thatโ€™s the point. It was never about free food. It was about freedomโ€”to say yes, to say no, to eat what you want without fear of being punished later.

And if that scares guys like Bill?

Good.

Because girls like me?

Weโ€™re not splitting our dignity. Not anymore.