Nano jr ??is a hobbyist tiktoker. He has two jobs, he buys his “daddy” his nails and gives his mother “nails”, which are done at the mall. He wears tank tops and tattoos, “he looks like he steals – says his mother, a victim of abuse – but he is very hardworking”. In four days he has shaken up TikTok and X, leaked his story to Antena 3 news and removed many consciences and few wallets explaining how he helps his family.

@jordibaste puts words to feelings: “Empathy, work, values, suffering, family…”. Nano proudly answers the questions thrown at him on Tiktok. He works from 10 a.m. to 7:30 p.m. delivering for Amazon, at 9 p.m. he is in Vips until closing, past midnight. Now he goes “fairer” because his car has broken down and he walks from one side to the other. “I sleep my seven hours and feel good, and I get up refreshed. So every day. No excuses. We need to move forward.”

And the video goes viral. @perezreverte elects president of an unexpected fan club. “Admirable. Many parents should suggest that their children take a look at this”. Nano is “a hero without a cape”, says @MJLetrada. “Hopefully life will give him the opportunity he deserves. People who are really worth it.” A gathering in The World at RAC1? “We need people like speakers”. The speaker is at its peak… Six million views of his three videos on TikTok, more than 10,000 comments and half a million likes, 20,000 new followers in two days… And the TV… To his mother the it impresses that it appears on TV, and also explains it on TikTok.

Nano is the censorship of the ni-ni and the bet for yes-yes. But is it possible? “I’m trying to push the family forward because that’s what it’s about. Those who have the opportunity to do things well (…). Street is to get your family ahead”. And with praise, comes criticism. That if “he has done nothing in life”, that if his tattoos “are worth more than 500 euros”, that if “he is the personified example of the most aberrant capitalism. Nothing to applaud”, which does “personify the precariousness” of the labor market. And with the things of the government we have encountered.

Greece extends the working day to 13 hours and six days a week and vice-president Yolanda Díaz is standing up “against 19th century working days and free dismissal”. @institutostrom the rebuttal: “Does the Minister of Labor not know that the Greek 13 hours are for cases of multi-employment and that in Spain nothing prevents you from working 16 hours a day? Let them ask Nano. And so, every day.