Correspondent Adam May, second from right, speaks with a group of experienced online daters in Los Angeles about the dos and don’ts of creating dating profiles. America Tonight

Kevin and April are experienced Internet daters. When they’re shown an online dating profile of a man with a car in his profile picture, they begin to pick apart the most glaring issues — and ask the obvious questions.

“It ain’t even his car!” Kevin said.

“Why do I care?” April asked. “I don’t care.”

A decade and a half after online dating hit the mainstream, veteran online daters such as Kevin and April have been there and done that. But in an era when the term “catfish” has become commonplace, all their experience means they have learned a thing or two.

“Don’t meet them quick, though. This is Dating 101,” Kevin said. And there’s more.

“And I’ve learned another thing — that women are professionals with angles,” he said. “They can get like this. They look all skinny and boobies sticking out, the booty’s sticking out, and when you see them, they look like Bubba Smith.”

“America Tonight” correspondent Adam May went to Los Angeles to talk to a round table of singles about their online dating stories. They are just a few of the estimated 30 million single Americans to have used an online dating site. All of them said they’re looking for love. But among traffic, work obligations and other demands, love gets lost somewhere in the Hollywood Hills. So they look for it online.