IKR! He aint broke he could have just get the metal ikea ones or something similar. It would be more sustainable. This one is already wonky and looks like its about to collapse any second. He wanted the aesthethic but all i feel is the cheap plastic smell.
Yeah, I can't see the sense of it in any way.
If you don't want to spend money on furniture and have to lug it between AirBNBs all year, then don't buy any furniture at all? Wasting money on flimsy crap that looks like
tit and isn't fit for purpose and that'll get tossed away in a week doesn't help in any way.
If you're going to buy temporary furniture and leave it behind when you leave, why not spend a couple of quid more and get a durable metal one that looks a lot nicer and won't collapse if someone sneezes a few streets away? Then if you don't want to take it with you, you can leave it for the next tenants to use and enjoy and it's not a huge waste of plastic.
If your "digital nomad lifestyle" prevents you from living the way you want to live and owning furniture and lots of possessions, that's probably a major sign that: A. This was a mistake, or B. You probably shouldn't be buying and keeping stacks and stacks of physical books that you don't read (or if you do read, will likely never read again) that require additional furniture and have to be lugged around the country all year with you.
This is stupid and wasteful any way it's painted.
Wait Jack's writing a novel?
Jesus why does every youtuber think they can write a novel
Because their management teams want more revenue streams, regardless of quality.
In true influencer novel style, this will be a ghostwritten vanity project about a young YouTuber named J. Ack E'Dwards who embarks on a coming-of-age adventure of self-discovery and empowerment after being rejected by Oxford University.
Jack will just chime in with occasional notes for the actual writer of this loosely biographical wish fulfilment fantasy story.
Notes like:
"Have you mentioned how I was rejected by Oxford Uni a hundred times this chapter? Well...mention it, but in a passive-aggressive, self-deprecating way that shows that I was rejected, but I'm not bothered by it, even though deep down I am bothered by it? That shows that the character - me - has layers."
"Can we have a scene at the end where Oxford University learns the error of their ways at the end and begs me to enrol? But then I reject
them? This will be a big character moment because it will show that I've moved on and don't need them to define me anymore. But still make sure my character keeps mentioning how he was rejected by Oxford Uni for the rest of the novel - that's his defining character trait."
"Can we have a final scene where Oxford University is struck by lightning at the end and completely burns to the ground? That will be a karmic payoff for me--I mean, the reader. Because
I'm completely over it and have moved on, obvs, but the
reader will probably want the villain of the story to get their comeuppance on
my behalf, y'know?"
"Can we call the book 'Oxford University? More Like, "Oxford, U-Need-
Me-Versity": The Jack Edwards Story'? That's the kind of wordplay that the English Lit scholars will really appreciate."