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: Working behind the scenes on projects like The Orbit (2016) and ReSet (2022).
Forget the Soho House. The "Dane Jones Residences" are invite-only sanctuaries hidden in plain sight. There’s the one in Tokyo’s Golden Gai, a tiny ramen shop whose back door opens into a karaoke lounge lined with first-edition Murakami novels. There’s the "Reading Room" in London’s Bloomsbury, where members pay £5,000 a year for access to a fireplace, a typewriter, and a strict silence policy. Jones doesn't sell luxury; he sells permission —to be still, to be curious, to be offline.
This decision led him to a successful path in Caribbean media, where he:
Dane Jones' entry into the professional world was marked by a pivot that many would find daunting. Starting as a model, he was told by a major agency that he was "too muscular" for traditional casting. Rather than conforming to these narrow standards, Jones leaned into his unique physique and entrepreneurial spirit.
: Working behind the scenes on projects like The Orbit (2016) and ReSet (2022).
Forget the Soho House. The "Dane Jones Residences" are invite-only sanctuaries hidden in plain sight. There’s the one in Tokyo’s Golden Gai, a tiny ramen shop whose back door opens into a karaoke lounge lined with first-edition Murakami novels. There’s the "Reading Room" in London’s Bloomsbury, where members pay £5,000 a year for access to a fireplace, a typewriter, and a strict silence policy. Jones doesn't sell luxury; he sells permission —to be still, to be curious, to be offline.
This decision led him to a successful path in Caribbean media, where he:
Dane Jones' entry into the professional world was marked by a pivot that many would find daunting. Starting as a model, he was told by a major agency that he was "too muscular" for traditional casting. Rather than conforming to these narrow standards, Jones leaned into his unique physique and entrepreneurial spirit.