IT guy works part-time as a motorcycle courier delivering kisses at night

by maojin95700 on 2011-11-20 11:48:36

Liu Hao: I've delivered textbooks, an ashtray that was given as a birthday gift. Not long ago, a female Peking University student injured her leg; whenever she called me at night, I would pick her up and take her from the Second Teaching Building of Peking University to her dormitory outside the West Gate. I'm not just a courier, but also a motorcycle taxi driver. Haha, villa construction plans.

Courier business with four or five orders earned me 5 yuan.

FW: Can you earn 5 yuan each time?

Apart from admiration, many students expressed doubts. Netizen "Neurotic Little Demon" questioned, "Kisses can be delivered too, and payment is required?" Some students even joked, "Deliver a long-distance kiss to my second uncle's fierce wife!"

"Part-time motorcycle courier, working hours from 7 PM to 2 AM, services include people, flowers, notes, food items for the recipient, messages, and even kisses. Ten yuan for a half-hour ride."

At that time, one of my friends was at the main campus of Peking University while his girlfriend was at the Medical Campus, so they couldn't see each other often. Sometimes when we went to the Medical Campus, we would ask him if he needed us to bring anything to his girlfriend. He said, "Then help me give her a kiss." On the way back, his girlfriend also said, "Help me return a kiss to him." So we carried the 'kiss' back again.

Liu Hao: 5 yuan.

Liu Hao's current business is limited to universities, but he hopes more friends who like motorcycle sports will join in the future.

FW: How much money have you made?

In the daytime, Liu Hao works as a website project operator at Innovation Works led by Li Kaifu, but at night, he rides a motorcycle to deliver packages between various universities. Two completely different images intersect in the person of Liu Hao, a 2009 graduate of Peking University.

Plan

Yesterday afternoon, with the sound of a motorcycle braking, a cool yellow racing motorcycle stopped in front of the reporter, and finally, the legendary "kiss-delivering courier" appeared.

Dialogue

FW: As a top student from Peking University and an IT elite, how did you think of delivering packages?

Building a public welfare delivery alliance

As more and more classmates paid attention, the name "kiss-delivering courier" gradually spread.

"Too V5 (mighty)!" A student from Peking University replied.

"I am a graduate of the Class of 2009 from Peking University, majoring in Sociology. My current full-time job is in the IT industry, responsible for the operation of a network project at Mr. Li Kaifu's Innovation Works." It turns out that the legendary "kiss-delivering courier" is not only an old alumnus of Peking University but also an IT man.

FW: When did it start? Is business good?

Liu Hao: About two weeks ago. Many people called to ask, but there were only four or five real 'orders'.

Liu Hao: No, I only charged one Peking University classmate 5 yuan for a ride, taking him from Peking University to Haidian Huangzhuang. The rest were all free.

FW: What have you helped classmates deliver?

Peking University Courier Originally an IT Man from Innovation Works

Liu Hao: Born in 1986, originally from Xi'an, Shaanxi, currently a website project operator at Innovation Works

Liu Hao: This originates from my real experiences during university.

"The work is IT, sometimes also quite busy, but I try to meet the requests of classmates who call. It serves as a kind of调剂in my busy work," Liu Hao said today, since starting, he hopes to do this thing well.

Discovery

Liu Hao: Not really, I only charge 5 yuan for riding along with a Peking University classmate, taking him from Peking University to Haidian Huangzhuang. The rest are all free.

FW: Why add 'kiss' to the business? Share to: Welcome to comment, I want to comment

Written by reporter Zhang Lei

Legal Evening News (abbreviated as FW): Let's start with a question everyone cares about, how do you deliver a kiss?

"Delivering kisses" is simply relaying a message.

FW: Did you really kiss?

Liu Hao: How could we? He would kill us. We just express it verbally, "Someone asked me to bring you a kiss," and that's all.