He made $64,000 in ten months selling tables on craiglist? I’m wondering how many weekly hours of hard labor that took. Hopefully that’s net, not gross too.
How stupid though. Throwing it all away to prove to the rubes that millionaires are defined by mettle, and not largely happenstance (or decades in a chosen career)
How’s he moving tables? He has a truck? How’d he get a truck?
Ok I gotta look into this because I am just curious how dumb this is. I just clicked this because I was genuinely curious.
By week 9 he has an office? EDIT: No he has access to the office in week 1, renting the shared community space costs 40 bucks a month… 40 bucks a month for what you could get from a public library. Also can’t help but notice that he’s also working there with film crew and editor… which is also probably 40 bucks a head. So he’s a poor broke guy who is actually one broke guy and 3 to 6 non broke guys… Like, I’ve never rented a space like this but this sounds like bullshit.
How did he find the tables on Craigslist and post them on Facebook Marketplace before he had his own computer? A library? He mentioned he was handling logistics. I bet he got paid through Facebook which means be kept either a phone and a bank account or hooked it up on this fabled community computer he had found (his phone).
This experiment was specifically about rebuilding your life and not being homeless. Yet he still afforded himself some legs up.
You can’t use those for 8 hours a day. You are supposed to use those for like 1 hour per day. Its enforced by the computer which will log you out. You also can’t use them without a library card. In order to get a library card you need an ID. To get an ID you need around $80, ride to a government office, and your other paperwork.
If you don’t have your other paperwork and you are lucky enough to be a dude living in the state you were born you just need a ride to a bigger government office and an an entire day to wait in line.
If you were born in a different state you will need an internet connection, a credit card, and an address to get the documents shipped to. If you are a woman you will also need documents for every wedding and divorce in addition to your birth certificate. This could easily run you a few hundred bucks and 6 weeks. Remember you also can’t rent a mailbox without the ID or get a job to earn the money you need.
Basically even getting a library card may be a multistep process that takes months.
When my mother in law came to live with us she had no current ID so we had to send away to multiple states for her birth certificate, marriage, and divorce decrees to substantiate who she was. It ended up if I recall correctly costing about $300 to get all the documents and required an internet connection, address, and credit card, several weeks, and a car to get back and forth to government offices. During this time it would have been impossible had she been on her own to get any benefits of any kind, get an id, rent, use a library computer, work or really do anything. In the place where we lived at that time—a red state—if she didn’t have a place to stay she could have been harassed or arrested for vagrancy.
That would be weird to coordinate trying to buy and sell a ton of stuff online. I’m almost certain he had a phone. Which is fine if it was one of those free phones they give to the needy but I somehow doubt it was. Probably just his regular iPhone.
I get what you’re saying but that would extra defeat the purpose of this experiment. There’s plenty of phones out there for the program anyways, the issue is getting it to the hands of the people who need it, not necessarily there not being enough of them. Where I live you see tents all over the place with people helping you sign up for these phones.
He made $64,000 in ten months selling tables on craiglist? I’m wondering how many weekly hours of hard labor that took. Hopefully that’s net, not gross too.
How stupid though. Throwing it all away to prove to the rubes that millionaires are defined by mettle, and not largely happenstance (or decades in a chosen career)
Because they have a religious belief that they got to the top through hard work and intelligence, not luck.
Schrodinger’s millionaire: simultaneously special while just working hard to achieve success.
Born to a wealthy family, went to Ivy League schools, worked on Wall Street, and lives in a mansion.
“I’m just like you!”
that… really sounds fishy.
How’s he moving tables? He has a truck? How’d he get a truck?
Ok I gotta look into this because I am just curious how dumb this is. I just clicked this because I was genuinely curious.
By week 9 he has an office? EDIT: No he has access to the office in week 1, renting the shared community space costs 40 bucks a month… 40 bucks a month for what you could get from a public library. Also can’t help but notice that he’s also working there with film crew and editor… which is also probably 40 bucks a head. So he’s a poor broke guy who is actually one broke guy and 3 to 6 non broke guys… Like, I’ve never rented a space like this but this sounds like bullshit.
I’d bet his office is a small town, subsidized we work knock off. Probably very cheap, considering he is maybe living in it.
Truck? He probably just picked a parking lot to meet his suppliers and vendors. Hope they don’t notice he’s just flipping some cheap ass table
How did he find the tables on Craigslist and post them on Facebook Marketplace before he had his own computer? A library? He mentioned he was handling logistics. I bet he got paid through Facebook which means be kept either a phone and a bank account or hooked it up on this fabled community computer he had found (his phone).
This experiment was specifically about rebuilding your life and not being homeless. Yet he still afforded himself some legs up.
It sounds like he could theoretically have used the computers at the library… speculating. It does seem kinda sus
You can’t use those for 8 hours a day. You are supposed to use those for like 1 hour per day. Its enforced by the computer which will log you out. You also can’t use them without a library card. In order to get a library card you need an ID. To get an ID you need around $80, ride to a government office, and your other paperwork.
If you don’t have your other paperwork and you are lucky enough to be a dude living in the state you were born you just need a ride to a bigger government office and an an entire day to wait in line.
If you were born in a different state you will need an internet connection, a credit card, and an address to get the documents shipped to. If you are a woman you will also need documents for every wedding and divorce in addition to your birth certificate. This could easily run you a few hundred bucks and 6 weeks. Remember you also can’t rent a mailbox without the ID or get a job to earn the money you need.
Basically even getting a library card may be a multistep process that takes months.
Wow I had no idea
When my mother in law came to live with us she had no current ID so we had to send away to multiple states for her birth certificate, marriage, and divorce decrees to substantiate who she was. It ended up if I recall correctly costing about $300 to get all the documents and required an internet connection, address, and credit card, several weeks, and a car to get back and forth to government offices. During this time it would have been impossible had she been on her own to get any benefits of any kind, get an id, rent, use a library computer, work or really do anything. In the place where we lived at that time—a red state—if she didn’t have a place to stay she could have been harassed or arrested for vagrancy.
That would be weird to coordinate trying to buy and sell a ton of stuff online. I’m almost certain he had a phone. Which is fine if it was one of those free phones they give to the needy but I somehow doubt it was. Probably just his regular iPhone.
I’d rather him use his own phone than take one that could have gone to someone that actually needed it.
I get what you’re saying but that would extra defeat the purpose of this experiment. There’s plenty of phones out there for the program anyways, the issue is getting it to the hands of the people who need it, not necessarily there not being enough of them. Where I live you see tents all over the place with people helping you sign up for these phones.
The tables were the first step, the second was getting a computer, the third was becoming a social media manager.
Basically he leveraged his prior experiences to put himself in an advantageous position.