Is height a deal breaker in a relationship? Having a tall partner is a fantasy for some women but going to extremes to find a tall partner around a bar is something weird. In a recent video that went viral on the internet, a woman was seen measuring the height of men before approaching them in a bar.

There has been a trend going viral for quite some time now in which girls say they won’t date men who are less than six feet tall. Another bizarre trend shows men saying they are six feet or taller because they want to impress women. There has been a debate going on between the two genders on whether the height of your partner matters in a relationship or not.

The identity of the woman is still unknown but girls all over the Internet are praising her for pulling the ultimate savage move at a bar. A video of the woman pulling out the measuring tape to measure a man’s height in a bar before chasing a potential relationship has gone viral. They both were seen standing on an elevated platform at a bar to measure the height. “Bringing measuring tape to a bar is wild 💀,” the video is captioned.

woman uses tape to measure height of men at bar

People are saying that the stunt had something to do with a trend going around where women claim they would not date men who are shorter than six feet. However, the real motive behind doing so is not yet disclosed.

Matchmaker Sofi Papamarko wrote in a piece for The Star, “One of my biggest pet peeves as a matchmaker is when women tell me that they would never date anyone shorter than six feet tall, thus preemptively the vast majority of men, sight unseen.”

“When I ask these women why they would discount all but a mere 10 to 15 per cent of the human male population, they usually answer they’re ‘not attracted to guys shorter than six feet’,” while disagreeing with the logic.

woman uses tape to measure height of men at bar

She added, “When pressed further, these women (of all heights, incidentally) reveal they ‘like to wear heels’ or want to ‘feel like a girl’ as if certain heights were more inherently masculine or feminine than others.”