People's views about .me are too extreme. .me is more brandable than people think but it doesn't work with that many keyword types. Whenever a new extension gets launched you get some clever speculation and some dumb speculation.
Porsche.me getting clawed back through the UDRP is a good example of dumb speculation, Only.me selling for $33,405 and Lawyers.me selling for $16,905 was dumb speculation. Only.me is an uncommercial phrase that few people will covet, Lawyers.me doesn't work with the extension as somebody pointed out.
Date.me at $70,000 is overpriced but it is a great name and will always be sought after, whoever said it is a hack is wrong. Awso.me is a hack, Date.me is a brilliant use of .me. I thought Play.me, Survey.me, Escort.me, Recruit.me, and Coach.me which all sold for $8k-$10k offered the best value in the .me auctions.
The problem with launch auctions is whoever has the most outlandish view on valuation and deepest pockets during a period of maximim hype wins, so it's not a smart way to go about acquiring speculative domains. I avoided .me completely on those grounds alone. Date.me, as nice as it is, won't be selling for significantly more than $70,000 for years even if the buyer is proved right so any return is a bad one if you factor in risk.
I agree with the poster who said the owner of Lawyers.info might have accepted a bid of $16,905. Lawyers.me is a terrible fit between keyword and extension. Lawyers is formal and businesslike, .me is light, fun, new, and on the downside, babyish. I'm always surprised when people who are otherwise excellent domainers, don't get the deal with fit and alternative extensions or value it correctly.
I think there are two reasons for this, firstly fit was never a big deal with .com, domain value derived solely from the keyword. Secondly, the amount of money people made from .com was so vast their perception of what alternatives should sell for got distorted. The best example of this is Flowers.mobi selling for $200,000.
Fit is mission critical for alternative extensions, the big ticket sales are alway going to be for commercial, popular, keywords that fit the extension. Fit is buyer compensation for a keyword not having .com on the end.
Chris is being unrealistic by saying he is offering Confectionery.me for $100 and nobody cares. Firstly, confectionery is an ugly 13 letter keyword with no bids in any extension on Sedo, secondly "Confectionery me" (in quotes) has 35 uniques on Google, compare that to 1.21m for "Date me". However, I agree with the underlying argument, just because somebody is willing to pay $70,000 for Date.me, it doesn't mean Confectionery.me is worth a dime.
To make money from alternative extensions, there has to be a cheap "in". The best example was the launch of .info. It was lottery based so the smart money ordered 500 premium .infos from 20-30 registrars and scored big. My advice is avoid launch auctions. Buyers who pay silly money for nice fits but shame about the keyword domains like Only.me or nice keyword shame about the fit domains like Lawyers.me are throwing money down the drain.
The cheapest "in" I have found to date is .pro. Until September, only accountants, lawyers, doctors and lawyers in Germany, Canada, the US and UK could register but now anybody with a professional license number of some kind can register.
.pro has some very unusual characteristics that no other alternative extension can come close to in combination.
1) Naturally Brandable. There are 15,000 US trademark registry mentions for pro versus 10,000 for .me. If you compare that to other gTLD's like .biz and .mobi, .pro wins by a landslide.
2) Fits Virtually Every Keyword. For example, all the commercial keyword-extension .me combinations questioned in this thread work great with .pro, e.g. Lawyers.pro, Loan.pro.
3) Business Oriented. .pro fits every business keyword and that's where the money is either from a domaining or development angle. Registrants have to agree to a terms of use policy which if policed correctly, keeps out porn and spam.
4) Lightly Regged. Although the numbers of .pros regged tripled in September, there were still only 21,000 regged. That's how many .coms were registered at the start of 1993. The upshot is you can still get great keywords.