Woman Creates OkCupid Profile of 'Worst Woman on Earth' To See How Men Would Respond

One woman who wanted to find out how much men are willing to overlook personality flaws in women created what she calls "the worst online dating profile ever," ABC's Denver Channel 7 reported.

What Alli Reed, a comedy writer, did not expect was the hundreds of men who still messaged her despite the fact her profile said she liked to trick people into thinking she was pregnant and picking on homeless people. The reason? Reed posted a really attractive selfie to go along with the horrible profile.

Using the online dating site OkCupid, Reed wanted to see what men were really paying attention to when viewing the online profiles of women. So she created a profile with deplorable personality traits to get men to back off, ABC Denver reported.

Reed, who writes for Maxim magazine and Man Cave Daily, used pictures of her friend who is an Australian model, ABC Denver reported. The profile picture shows what is apparently her friend wearing a pink dress and fishnet stockings, looking over her shoulder with her back facing the camera.

With the username "aaroncarterfan," Reed then filled the profile with the worst traits she could think of.

"In making this profile, I made sure my creation touched on every major facet of being truly horrible: mean, spoiled, lazy, racist, manipulative, and willfully ignorant, and I threw in a little gold digging just for funzies," Reed wrote in a Jan. 4 essay on Cracked.com.

For the "What I'm doing with my life" section Reed wrote "Partyinggggggg lol my parents think I'm in law school so they pay for my bills."

On Friday nights, Reed wrote that she can be found "knockin the cups out of homeless ppls ands, its sooooo funny to watch them try to pick it up,"

But 24 hours after she created the profile, Reed received 150 messages from interested men.

"Your profile really caught my attention," one of the messages said. "You seem like a sweet girl worth getting to know and I'd love to have that chance."

Despite her best efforts to repel potential mates the men did not seem to care.

"I did not accomplish my goal," Reed, 26 wrote in her essay.

"I've gotten a lot of feedback from critics saying 'well, of course because she was pretty,' " Reed told ABC Denver. " 'Are you really that surprised?' How little faith would I have in men to not be surprised? I am surprised because I don't think humans are that bad."