
Photo: Peggy_Marco/Pixabay

Photo: Shoji Morimoto
Morimoto’s ingenious idea quickly went popular on social media, and before he knew it, he was flooded by requests from total strangers. His Twitter follower count grew from a few dozen to over 170,000 in a year, and now sits at over 270,000. As his popularity grew, he started getting requests from TV networks, magazines and that brought in even more business. Today, “Mr. Rental” is doing so well that on most days he leaves home at around 8:30 in the morning, and only returns at 10:00 at night. Interestingly, the 37-year-old’s service is basically free, as the client only has to pay the cost of his transportation to various parts of Tokyo, and any foods or drinks they consume. But he says that the vast majority of people insist on paying him extra for his time, and while he was ashamed to accept their money in the beginning, he has gotten used to it over time. So what does a man who does (technically) nothing actually do. Well, Shoji explains that his tasks vary much. In a recent tweet, he detailed an assignment in which he was invited to a five-star hotel by a man who visits five-star hotels about once a month, as a hobby. The person rented him because he wanted to tell someone about his hobby, so Shoji simply listened to him for three hours…Among his many experiences as a person who does nothing, Mr. Rental was asked to attend a wedding ceremony by a person who, for some reason, hadn’t invited his friends, he was asked by a woman to accompany her as she submitted a divorce report, because she was lonely and didn’t have anyone else to asks, and he was asked to ask behind a man who was on trial, during a civil trial, just so they could feel supported by someone. “You don’t have to do anything,” one person once wrote to him. “I just want someone who isn’t a family member, friend, or lover, who doesn’t know me at all, to be with me.” Shoji lets interested parties know that he doesn’t have any special skills, and doesn’t actually want to do anything. All he commits to really is just to be there, by their side. He can listen to them, give short replies, walk or sit by them, but other than that… He doesn’t do anything.
Renting people is actually quite common in Japan. From renting people to save your romantic relationship, to renting a comedian for 45 cents a day, the human renting business is booming. People even hire actors to pose as their children’s other parent, that’s how vibrant the industry is. But no one has had so much success as the man who doesn’t do anything for his clients. Shoji Morimoto’s unique story has inspired a TV series that borrowed the name of his service, “People Who Do Not Rent“, starring young Japanese actor Takashisa Masuda. The series focuses on Morimoto’s unique service and the way he touches the lives of others. It premiered in April 2020.