Helping lonely elderly in rural areas, earning 6 million a year—would you do it?


Just drive to the countryside, stop at broken houses, and film whenever you see lonely seniors.
Today delivering a bag of rice, tomorrow bringing a bucket of oil, the day after sending a cotton-padded jacket—all recorded and posted online.
Comments flood the section: "Good person, peace for life," "Grandpa is so pitiful," "The blogger is so loving"... followers are skyrocketing.
Once followers reach hundreds of thousands, start live streaming to sell—elderly people’s “homegrown” farm products and local specialties.
Selection criteria: the older, the better; the more miserable, the better; the less they can speak, the better.
Ideal candidates are 80-year-olds living alone, children not visiting, houses leaking wind.
Can this kind of content sell? Think about it yourself:
In the video, an trembling old grandma selling apples in a dilapidated house, and the barrage comments are “Help grandma,” “Buy it now”...
A box of apples costs 79 yuan, a jar of honey 99 yuan, a pair of handmade insoles 39 yuan.
Fans aren’t buying just the products—they’re buying that heart of “help the elderly.” A live stream can easily generate hundreds of thousands in revenue.
You can’t rely on just one elderly person; you need 20 phones, bringing all the village’s lonely seniors to take turns.
Today Grandpa Wang, tomorrow Grandma Liu, the day after Uncle Zhang—there’s always one that can go viral.
How much does the elderly
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