Ethan’s opponents laughed. “A QR code president? What’s next, voting by emoji?”
But Ethan never attacked them. Instead, he weaponized curiosity. Each day of the campaign week, a new code appeared in a student’s locker—randomly selected by an algorithm he’d coded himself. Inside was a personalized video: Ethan addressing that student by name, acknowledging their science fair project, their sports injury, their sick parent. qr code my school president
He had done his homework. He had talked to teachers, janitors, and bus drivers. He had built a dossier of kindness. Ethan’s opponents laughed
On voting day, the booths were empty by 2 p.m. Turnout: 98%. Instead, he weaponized curiosity
The QR codes didn’t just win an election. They started a movement.
My School President exists in a shared universe with other GMMTV BLs.
QR codes are widely used for quick access to digital content via smartphones. For school elections, they reduce paper waste, simplify distribution, and allow instant updates to linked content without reprinting.