The world works in levels.

The important people have access to exclusive places.
All others must pay a lot of money to do so, or simply sit behind the barriers.
But for free admission to all events, there is a way.
You just have to pretend to an important person.
And people who wear reflective jackets are important because they usually adjust things that no one would bother to adjust.
If you see a person with a reflective vest that exceeds a hurdle, or past a bouncer, I assume it's going to fix something.
For this reflective jackets are the key to the whole world.
Or at least, this is what I and my friend Sean we always thought.
In the picture above, Sean is the guy who is going to be overthrow of alcohol in his throat, the night that we decided to test this theory.
The next day we went to a department store, we bought a pair of reflective jackets, fake walkie-talkie, and we prepared for our adventure.
We started with a fairly modest goal: the cinema.
Wearing our visibility vests, we have passed with gait decided the guy who was at the entrance, and we entered the room.
It was a breeze.
The only downside is that we had to make do with what they were projecting, or Office Christmas Party.
I must say, however, was not bad.
Although the thrill of being entered for free may have contributed to this judgment.
It was time to move on to more serious things.
The zoo has proved a more difficult challenge, even if only on a psychological level.
We were 15 minutes at the entrance, smoking one cigarette after another to mask the concern.
Neither of them believed that we could get.
I do not want to exaggerate, but beyond the ticket was a bit 'our Normandy landings.
Eventually we discovered that the danger was all in our heads.
We just had to walk past the entrance-Sean has even turned a casual "hello" to the guy at the ticket office.
We could not believe it was so easy.
Once inside we started to giggle and to greet the true employees of the zoo.
Even families believed our skit-occasionally asked us what time he closed the zoo, or where were the monkeys.
This is me sitting near the fence of the lemurs.
Lemurs are my favorite animals, but for some reason that day they did not get visa-I was very disappointed.
A family came up to me thinking that I worked on that fence, and asked when it would reopen.
I replied that I would have asked the management to fix everything as soon as possible, and I used my fake walkie talkie to "fix things."
There is something in the currencies that creates an immediate trust.
People trust the uniforms.
Most of us obey those who wear a uniform without even thinking.
With the passing of the day, me and Sean have gained confidence and felt more and more at ease.
I kept forget you are wearing it.
Getting in a zoo was beyond my wildest expectations for this experiment, but I'm not one who sleeps on his laurels.
It was time to see how far I could push.
We tried to get on a bus for tourists, but the driver is not whether the drink.
Apparently that bus was the place with the best security service of the entire city of Melbourne.
We took a Uber back to town, and Sean remembered that night there was a concert by Coldplay.
Perfect.
In the stadium we went to orange reflective jackets for amalgamating with other workers.
We can not say that we do not adapt.
To be honest, it was not easy to enter.
There were plenty of turnstiles and doors, but we were not at all nervous than we should have.
Sean said he felt that we could get.
And we also figured that if things got to the worst, at best we would have filed.
But things did not go badly.
We managed to get in.
Once inside, Sean wrote to his friend who was at the concert and told him to meet us.
Obviously according to this friend we were crazy to try to enter only with the reflective jackets, and said he would try to rimediarci the pass.
At this point, the story offers several plausible interpretations, and we may think that we were able to get through this friend.
But however it puts, were the reflective jackets to lead by Coldplay.
I was not a big fan of Coldplay before you see them with my reflective vest.
But then everything changed.
When I left the stadium, in the stomach I felt a warm glow-but I also had to do with the plastic vest that we carried him and the fact that we were doing something illegal.
In conclusion, experience has shown that I was right: you'll never know how it works until you try it.
Life offers opportunities that you do not expect.
With visibility vests are entered for free in three places.
If there is any advice I can give is this: buy yourself a reflective vest.
That's all you need in life.

From Vice