Usually it goes like this; The for the most part power brokers are invited to the tech event. Then the day of, an industrious PR chick, realizing that her own gender is way underrepresented, panics at the thought of “too many dicks on the conference floor” and calls up every woman she knows in the space, begging them to come.

For better or worse this is not the case at Techcrunch50, where women are vastly outnumbered (a big collective reader DUH). If you are a woman at these things you usually fall into one of two types: ballsy journalist or well-manicured PR rep. And you are probably a member of an organization called appropriately, “Girls In Tech.”
Which is why it came as no surprise to me, an L.A. native, when an industrious young start-up founder approached me last night with the hit-on line, “Didn’t I see you last week at “Girls In Tech” Palo Alto?”
You have to hand it to him for trying.
And speaking of trying, the big winner this morning from a news stand point (other than Techcrunch coetrie who broke the Mint news quel surprise) was Cnet’s Caroline McCarthy, who provided an insightful round-up of the morning presenters before the presentation was even over.
And on the analysis bent, The Huffington Post’s Maya Baratz provides a comparison and dissection of Jason Calacanis’ statement that Techcrunch50 is the “Sundance of tech conferences.”
So no you didn’t see us at “Girls In Tech,” You saw us on the Internet, breaking your news and writing these blog posts.
[...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by Alexia Tsotsis and lalawag. lalawag said: "Didn’t I see you at the Girls in Tech Event" is the new pickup line http://bit.ly/2QNlZT #tc50 [...]

I love this post
That girls in tech line is genius, mad at myself for not thinking of it first. ;P
Great piece! There are definitely some girls kicking ass in the Valley, but having been to several major tech conferences all over the world and women aren’t represented well at these events. Here’s to changing that trend.
Haha, agree, this post rocks
Personally I’m shy enough that I have a hard time getting myself to attend all-men events. The hefty TC50 price tag definitely pushes it way over the edge.
I want some women to send in resumes when we post a tech job once in a while! I know the Computer Science enrollment numbers have been in a downward trend, but I also know there are some damn sharp female minds out there. We’ve been actively seeking female tech leaders every time we’ve posted a tech job and can’t seem to get a qualified woman to submit a resume. And yet I take crap for employing nothing but men. WTF?