This is weird. I don't know what to make of it.
He doesn't pay for it, but he sells it, why would we pay for it? Is his just the better option of bottled waters, if I am forced to buy a bottle of water? (me and my nalgene...we don't like buying water.) It is obviously reducing the carbon footprint of someone who just insists on buying bottles of water, so that's a positive. But still, packaging is fundamentally not environmentally friendly- but I suppose people who regularly buy bottles of water probably don't concern themselves with their footprint as much as, say, Nalgene or Klean Kanteen users.
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That is definitely weird. How much is a bottle of actual water in NY these days that he's able to sell water that he admits comes straight from the tap for $1.50.
ReplyDeleteAlso, if he had a "love at first sight" moment with NYC tap water, I can only imagine if he came to St. Louis.
this guy is brilliant. finding a way to make people pay for something that's already free? that's a head for business.
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