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Posted by elsewhen 2 days ago

LooksMapping(looksmapping.com)
115 points | 58 comments
donatj 2 days ago|
This is some old internet style shenanigans powered by modern technology.

I am here for it. I want more of this.

cyanydeez 1 day ago||
Until ot becomes a 4chan weaponized meme used by satirical fauxscists.
yapyap 2 days ago||
You can tell from the old google logo style as well haha
cobertos 2 days ago||
> But we judge places by the people who go there. We always have.

Does anyone do this for a restaurants? That's not something that ever really factored into my food habits

thinkingemote 2 days ago||
I think we use all our senses out in the real world when choosing some place to eat. Seeing the people who eat there is certainly one factor. Online maybe too if we look at the food pictures, read how the items are worded, look at a restaurant website and read the reviews we can get a sense of the types of people it appeals to. It's probably not the primary factor, but it is one attribute. There are anecdotal reports of establishments paying PR professionals (e.g. good looking models) to be there - and obviously they will use them for their promotional material.

It's good to listen and notice how one is being influenced. The real mistake is thinking we do not judge at all.

With that said, only looking at a rating of profile pictures of reviews to judge a restaurant is very funny and becomes art. Kudos to the creator.

eddythompson80 2 days ago||
The app is cool, but the argument there was either written by AI or there is a lost in translation moment because it doesn’t really make any sense.

In your argument you’re basically saying “it’s impossible to know what affects your choice of where to eat. Some think looks matter even pay for it; ergo, we must consider it too”

What about music type? Worker’s uniform color? Thinking “I wanna eat where the hot people are” is… I don’t know.. Odd?

thinkingemote 2 days ago||
> Thinking “I wanna eat where the hot people are” is… I don’t know.. Odd?

Well my response was to the question "Does anyone do this for restaurants?" and tried to answer it by saying "yes, many people may consider it along with other factors"

Yes, I agree it is superficial and odd to consciously and only think it. But we choose things with a range of subconscious influences, multiple reasons. Yes, uniforms and music could also be influences too. We could stop and spend time examining our thoughts and feelings to identify all the factors but generally people don't do that do they? :-)

And if you think about bars... it becomes commonplace for some people. "I want to drink where the hot people are" seems to be a very commonplace thought, or at least a thought which is encouraged by the marketing of bars.

Thinking wider now, we can ponder why do many places hire attractive people in their marketing photos? We humans are more superficial and less rational than we would like to admit to ourselves.

Personally I prefer real ale so will drink where the beer is better, but if I'm on a date where my friend doesn't appreciate beer as much, I will choose a nicer feeling and looking establishment over the beer quality. The people inside the place might or might not influence that choice to a greater or lesser extent. It is at the very least a factor. For a restaurant I think it's less of a factor.

01HNNWZ0MV43FF 2 days ago|||
OP might be The American Psycho
bryanrasmussen 2 days ago||
BusinessCardMapping.
dr_kiszonka 1 day ago|||
There are places frequented by certain broad-shouldered gentlemen that I tend to avoid even though they serve pretty good food.
Waterluvian 1 day ago|||
This feels like a “I do this dumb thing so everyone must do it” kind of bias that I frustratingly see expressed all the time.

It’s the average pilot thing. Nobody is the normal. Everyone’s life experience does not resemble a normal one.

defyonce 2 days ago||
Top 5 Restaurants (Female vs Male Preferences)

  Female Picks:
  ------------------------------------------------
  1. Big Apple Brunch          | Hell's Kitchen     | 9.2/10
  2. Pietro Nolita             | Nolita             | 8.6/10
  3. Kanü Bar|Grill            | Hamilton Heights   | 8.5/10
  4. STK Steakhouse Downtown   | West Village       | 8.2/10
  5. Lighthouse Fish Market    | East Harlem        | 8.2/10
  
  Male Picks:
  ------------------------------------------------
  1. Lahori Kabab              | Kips Bay           | 2.3/10
  2. Big Arc Chicken           | East Village       | 2.5/10
  3. Hop Won Express           | Midtown East       | 3.1/10
  4. Subway                    | Hell's Kitchen     | 3.1/10
  5. Nica Trattoria            | Upper East Side    | 3.1/10



it looks like female => attractive
Takennickname 2 days ago||
Your data is incorrect. That ranking is for male vs female (higher number = female).

The hot vs not score is a separate score. (e.g you have Big Arc chicken as a 2.5. That means mostly male. It's hotness score is 5.5)

IncreasePosts 2 days ago|||
It's probably more like "interested in social media" -> more likely to have a very good shot of you as your profile pic -> more likely to be considered attractive.

So perhaps this is really just searching for restaurants that people into social media review.

foresterre 2 days ago||
This was the first thing that stood out to me too.

I sampled quite some dark red markers, representing "attractive", and on the balance they're almost always overwhelmingly reviewed by females.

There were some exceptions though. Especially in the south west for Chinese cuisine.

getcrunk 2 days ago||
I respect the novelty. It’s a meme idea, but the problem solving and coding is still legit as a quick and fun challenge.

Any details on how you managed to scrape the all mighty goog?

londons_explore 2 days ago||
Just script a real browser with a chrome extension, and let it run kinda slowly overnight.

The rate limits are such that you can get tens of millions of data points just from a single browser.

ouked 2 days ago||
OP may have used their own method, but I believe you could use a provider like SerpAPI.
xg15 1 day ago||
I see a weird blue cluster north of Central Park, where according to the AI almost every restaurant has ugly patrons.

That cluster coincides with Harlem which has a majorly Black and Hispanic population and (I think) is generally lower-wealth.

Unintentional race and/or wealth/class bias in the model exposed here?

ChrisArchitect 2 days ago||
NYT feature on this a few days ago

The Map Rating Restaurants Based on How Hot the Customers Are

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/07/01/dining/looksmapping-hot-c... (https://archive.ph/3ItEb) (https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=44444973)

bemmu 2 days ago||
I think there's a category of these kinds of things where you apply AI to do something humans could do, but could not be bothered to do. Or could not profitably do. At least no human would categorize all these reviews just for lols.

Another recent example from HN would be that site which just lists hotel rooms that have a desk and a chair. It would be an incredibly dull task for a human to look at a million hotel room pictures and just select if they have a desk or not.

What else somewhat useful/fun could we do applying perhaps a little worse than human attention at something, but a lot of it?

pimlottc 2 days ago||
This is gross on multiple levels.
rybosome 2 days ago||
This appears to me to be intentional and ironic to make a point rather than in earnest.

I am interpreting this as a statement about snap judgements in an age where AI will increasingly play the role of a judge or assessor of humans.

Perhaps I’m wrong, but it seems too on-the-nose to be serious.

EDIT:

> This website just puts reductive numbers on the superficial calculations we make every day

From the website. If it is in earnest then I’d be embarrassed to have shilled for it, because I agree that the idea is stupid and gross.

bryanrasmussen 2 days ago|||
from their site https://walzr.com/

they made a fake steakhouse real for one night, got Twitter to verify a fake candidate for congress, etc. etc.

all signs point to art project.

hyperbolablabla 2 days ago|||
I really do think it's in earnest. I think the author is trying to justify its existence as "already a part of reality". I think it's quite despicable actually.
tra3 2 days ago|||
I had a quasi physical reaction when reading the description. Not a good one.

I don’t remember hotornot being amongst asimovs 3 laws of robotics..is this really the future we deserve?

The author is gonna be vilified, but next year someone’s gonna come up with a cute name and a material design for this and gonna make bank.

I’m kinda curious to see what 1/10 people look like but these are real people right.

xg15 1 day ago||
I agree. Just wrap this inside some opaque "AI recommendation algorithm" and tell no one what the AI is actually basing its recommendations on...
debesyla 2 days ago|||
I see this as an art project. (And technical exploration, because I wonder how did they manage to scrape Google.)

It's made by the dude that has a lot of similarly strange and technologically impressive projects: https://walzr.com/

Takennickname 2 days ago|||
Nice try, restaurant owner with ugly people.
ynab10 2 days ago||
I have a feeling that so are you.
d--b 2 days ago||
This was a fun website until I realized that restaurants in Harlem score overwhelmingly "not hot".

This sucks.

meindnoch 2 days ago|
What's the purpose of this?

  .pix {
      /* Simulate CRT pixelation and low resolution */
      text-rendering: optimizeSpeed;
      font-family: Arial, sans-serif;
      font-smooth: never;
      -webkit-font-smoothing: none;
      -moz-osx-font-smoothing: grayscale;
      
      
      
      /* Simulate slight pixelation */
      filter: blur(0.3px);
      
      color: black;
      font-size: 16px;
      
  }
tauntz 2 days ago||
Aesthetics
erikig 2 days ago|||
Yep, makes the site look like it was rendered on an old browser on a CRT.
rdlw 1 day ago||
It simulates CRT pixelization and low resolution
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