Well played, SugarSugar.com: In what is most surely a PR stunt (albeit a fine one), the sugar-daddy “dating” website offered 55-year-old Kelsey Grammer, who recently proposed to a 29-year-old flight attendant named Kayte, $1 million to be its “Sugar Daddy Spokesman.” The site’s tagline: “Merging generous sugar daddies with beautiful sugar babies.” If he accepts (which he won’t), Grammer will write monthly “Mentor” posts on the site’s blog and receive a lifetime club membership.
Grammer is certainly a worthy choice for the spokesman offer. Anyone who has seen his ex-wife Camille’s antics on The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills and pics of his new fiancé (see above) can tell you the man has a thing for svelte, youngish blondes.
I took the liberty of checking out the male merchandise on SugarSugar.com, and without succumbing to snark, all I will say is in New York City, a self-reported net worth of $200,000 does not a sugar daddy make. That aside, what do you think? Are websites that pair up wealthy men with poor young women disgusting and sad or simply cornering the market on a model that already exists?

i am lookin for a rich man
Iam a black lady from south africa looking for a sugar daddy to love spoil and for him to spoil me I know how to love and take care of a men I don’t mind travelling
I’m Mexican single mom looking for suggardaddy to pamper me
I need a sugar daddy that will absolutely take care of me and i will take care of him too.
i love sexs but i wont spoil people life
I am single and HOT looking for a great guy!