The China Post
Date: February 26, 2017
By: Kuan-lin Liu
Vin sometimes eats dogfood for money — but that’s not the only way he differs from

Many grads take jobs involving errand-like tasks, leaving them unsatisfied and continually wanting to change jobs. (Vivi Wong (翁維薇), 104 Job Bank)
your average millennial.
Dogfood tester is one of three part-time gigs the 25-year-old does to get by, the others being mixologist and caretaker for poisonous pets.
Since graduating from college, he has never had a full-time job. Nor, he says, has he ever felt like he needed one.
“The money from part-time jobs has been enough. I will eventually get a full-time job that offers more stability,” he says. “When the timing is right.”
In the meantime, he’s using his smorgasbord of occupations “to make certain what I am passionate about.” [FULL STORY]