Ep 423 |19 Years In: How a Dating Coach and His Wife Actually Do It w/Evan and Bridget
Marriage Therapy Radio
MTR
4.6 • 690 Ratings
🗓️ 5 May 2026
⏱️ 43 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
Zach sits down with Evan Marc Katz, a dating coach for smart, successful women, and his wife Bridget. The premise alone creates an interesting tension: what does it look like when the guy who coaches women on how to find a partner actually goes home to one? The answer, it turns out, is less glamorous and more grounded than anyone might expect.
What surfaces quickly is that Evan and Bridget do not have a fairytale origin story. They were on the same dating site at the same time and never matched. They met at a party, talked for six hours, and built something slowly. Evan, who dated more than 300 people online over a decade, had never stayed in a relationship longer than eight months before Bridget. She, a serial monogamist by nature, had come from a completely different kind of romantic history. The episode moves through how two genuinely different people with different worldviews, different sleep schedules, different appetites for depth, decided to stop scanning for flaws and start building something that actually works. Along the way, Evan makes a sharp case that the qualities dating culture rewards, height, income, shared hobbies, politics, are almost entirely irrelevant to long-term happiness.
Bridget holds her own throughout, and some of the episode's best moments come from her plainspoken honesty: she does not love deep conversations on demand, she sleeps until 11 on weekends without apology, and she has no interest in discussing politics with anyone. Far from being a liability, Zach and Evan both recognize this as a kind of relationship wisdom. Bridget is the high-EQ anchor of the marriage, the one who sees everyone's point of view without judgment and never keeps score. Her sign-off captures the whole thing: never keep track, but always be ahead in giving.
Key Takeaways
- The traits that attract you to someone (chemistry, common interests, credentials) are almost entirely unrelated to the traits that keep a marriage together
- What gets you into a relationship and what sustains it are two distinctly different skill sets
- Choosing a partner who is good enough without requiring them to change is not lowering the bar, it is setting the right one
- The couple is a unit; when you stop tending the relationship itself, the garden dies even if nothing dramatic happens
- One person cannot be everything; healthy relationships require each partner to have a life outside the marriage too
- Assuming positive intent when your partner does something frustrating is one of the most practical things you can do daily
- Common interests are probably the least important compatibility factor, and most people treat them like the most important
- The Five C's are what every failed relationship actually failed on: character, kindness, consistency, communication, and commitment
Guest Info
Evan Marc Katz Dating coach for smart, successful women, primarily working with clients in their late 30s through early 70s who are navigating first-time or second-time partnerships. Evan spent over a decade dating online himself before meeting Bridget, which informs a very personal and data-driven approach to his work. He is also the host of his own podcast.
Bridget Katz Evan's wife of 17 years, together for approximately 19. Bridget brings a grounded, high-EQ perspective to the conversation as someone who has lived alongside a relationship expert without becoming one herself. Her candor and warmth are notable throughout.
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Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | Hey, everybody, welcome. |
| 0:03.4 | And thank you for listening to this episode of Marriage Therapy Radio. |
| 0:05.6 | My name is Zach Brittle. |
| 0:07.1 | And I'm looking forward to leaning into this episode with you. |
| 0:10.4 | I've got Evan Mark Katz on with his wife, Bridget. |
| 0:13.7 | Evan is a dating coach for women, which isn't my audience necessarily, but it's cool to listen to how his own relationship |
| 0:24.3 | has formed his theory of how to help women find a good match. And Bridget is very cool. I love |
| 0:33.1 | hearing from her and always love hearing about what it's like for people to be in relationship |
| 0:38.0 | with, you know, an expert, put that in quotes, a relationship expert. So I think you'll dig it. |
| 0:44.0 | And I, you know, dating is a topic that I just don't actually know a lot about. I was on |
| 0:50.4 | Evans podcast, which you can find. It's called the Love You podcast, Love Letter You, |
| 0:57.5 | like Love University podcast with Evan Mark Katz. |
| 1:00.6 | So this is maybe part one of two |
| 1:02.9 | and maybe the conversation I had with him |
| 1:05.1 | was part one of two. |
| 1:07.0 | We give a shout out to our shared friend, Dolores, |
| 1:10.7 | who is one of my favorite people and also |
| 1:13.9 | one of Evans' favorite people. So we compare notes there. But yeah, talking, I mean, just thinking about |
| 1:18.1 | dating is weird. Rebecca and I are trying to figure out how to date now. I'll remind you that if you |
| 1:22.8 | are trying to wake up your dating life, date nights and whatnot, to check out Giddy Box. We have a partnership |
| 1:29.0 | with Giddy Box, which is basically a date night in a box where you get an in-home date delivered |
| 1:34.7 | to your door. And we're excited to be going through our box and what we're learning about one |
... |
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