At the Same Time, Bisexual Respondents Don't Believe 'The New York Times' Exists
The Times announced last week that bisexuality doesn't exist. Unsurprisingly, the horndogs at Nerve beg to differ. The literate smutsters today published "The Bisexuality Issue," which includes a bisexuality poll. And by midafternoon, the results were getting Nerve founder Rufus Griscom a little bit hot and bothered. He emailed us:
Based on nearly 893 responses so far, 50% of Nerve readers say that are at least a little bit bisexual, even though roughly 80% "identify as straight" and only 3% describe themselves as gay.
I think this is a pretty representative sampling of educated urban people today. Though our audience is unusually educated (38% have graduate degrees) and urban (75% live in the largest cities) and predominantly liberal, it is a pretty broad sampling of this sector (over a million readers with pretty broad interests).
Indeed, here's the breakdown by the time we got around to checking, at around 4:45 p.m., when 989 people had responded:

Which ultimately just goes to show that Karl Rove is right. Those blue-city, big-city, overeducated liberal elites he made the values voters afraid of? Yeah, we actually are a big bunch of pervs.