The illegal fisheries guy needs to see the human resources lady, there's huge potential in legal fisheries too I guess... You don't always have to go the niche way😉
Y’all don’t understand hard work… I started reciting 8 years ago and make half an M not including investment’s. Almost any industry if you are willing to grind you can make what you desire.
I mean.. she's alright but some of your guys's comments are making it seem like we watched two completely different videos. If this girl does it for you, what happens when you walk into just Target or Trader Joe's? Do you just start cumming everywhere?
Hey, that used to be my job title! ...and by that I mean pizza driver. X3 Now I'm making 55k as a Longterm Conveyance Logistics Engineer (truck driver) :3
The girl is proof that the degree just proves you are willing to do the work. Once someone knows you can get a degree, they know you can learn a new job. Sucks that some employers *only* rely on a degree or many years of experience tho
Yup. I spent 1.5 years in a community college learning a trade. I live within 2 hours of DC, work for a utility company, and make 97k salary and get overtime etc. They’re living in an expensive city on what amounts to peanuts there and have student debt. Waste of their time and money.
@@fallout459 same boat as me. I live within an hour of Tampa and Orlando. Didn't even go to community College. Got into telecommunications and currently making $100k/yr with OT and no student debt at 25 yrs old. College is a scam lol
@@alecmiley I wouldn't say college is a scam if pick the right vocational degree based on what is needed either in your country or prepared to move. I did a vocational degree and earn pretty good money with career progression and options for self employment, contracting etc.
Not really bro, she is just being casual about it. I mean look at her outfit it's kinda loose. It's just that them pillows are too much (of a blessing) and have a life of their own.
@@Will-ck7hi Pink-Collar usually refers to positions in service industries like caregivers, some teachers, social workers, etc. The general assumption is that those salaries are higher than blue-collar but less than white-collar, but the reality can vary quite a bit depending on which market you work in and how well your Union does or doesn’t negotiate your contracts.
I think many fail to understand that without a base bachelor's education they would never get the job in the first place. An employer does not necessarily pay attention to what exactly your major was but that you graduated from a university that taught you to use your problem-solving skills and certain mindset in order to perform at your current job. Many say that college is useless because they end up in a work completely not related to their major but that is not the point..
So true. I don’t have a college degree so I’m really struggling to find a job that pays a living wage. My only options are basically trades, IT certifications or a job in sales. I can’t even save up $300 for a tech certification because I live paycheck to paycheck. I’m so jealous of people who have college degrees.
College, in the US at least, is a total scam. Can't speak to other places because I don't really know the education and employment stuff as a firsthand experience, but in the US its an industry/product that has successfully marketed itself by spreading credentialism culture.
I think a college degree is the biggest sham in this country today. I attended college but did not complete my degree. I earn almost $100k in telecommunications today. You simply need to become really good at something and be good at selling yourself. That’s more valuable than a piece of paper from some institution.
I think the biggest scam about college is the idea of brand. I went to community College for my basics and then transferred to an online university (with regional and national accreditation) and got my B.S. in IT Management. With Pell grant and loans, my total bill at the end was under $10k. I'm glad to have it because it gets me in the door for some companies that require a degree for HR satisfaction and it didn't cost me an arm and a leg. Having said that, you're absolutely right in that a well versed skill is what pays. I'm in IT and one of my jobs pays 125k. I'm working two remote jobs for maximum cheddar.
I mean I imagine if you ask people why they’re at college they won’t say to get a degree. Most people in college view it as a means to an ends. “If I go to college I can get the job I want” type scenario.
I’d she presented herself more forwardly, she would have no prob with poly sci career lol. Men would be jelly in front of her. I appreciate that she’s not a seducer for profit, kudos to her.
I graduated from University...but walked onto an international auction company's yard and said I could start today 2 weeks before a 90 million dollar sale. They needed help regardless of having a job opening. Needless to say I flew by the high school kids and the "20 year guys" with highschool...and had 4 promotions in 4 years...by the end I sat in the back of the room in every interview and made the decision if someone would be hired. That is my talent.
I love the two outlooks, I think the thing in common is their first choice was not their best. Life lesson you don’t have to decide on the plan for your life right away because there is always time to change.
@@reiserkeiser I never said it would those are two different subjects. I’m saying she should make good choices so she’d have a better future for a family and also with a man that can provide and protect
I mean lots of people in her situation are usually pressured into it however her degree choice seems odd to have been pressured. Regardless ya who goes with polisci is they don’t have too lol
Honestly, people should only go to college if either 1. they are learning something they are passionate about (in which case they have to really consider whether the price they are spending is worth the "education" or if there are more cost-effective alternatives) or 2. the career path has a high likelihood of providing a reasonable ROI. With that said, I probably spent $250,000 on college and grad school, but I currently make nearly $300,000 with a career path that could put me over $400,000 in 5/6 years and perhaps seven figures in 10 years.
@@max00101 sure, I'm a very specialized transactional attorney in the NY burbs. If I was willing to work in Manhattan, I could probably immediately get a 50-100k pay raise. I'll stick with my easy commute and working from home most of the time.
For some reason I can't reply to Greg's comment. First, I have been an attorney for 10 years and have 6.5 years of very specialized experience. Second, the Google numbers are probably accurate as national averages, but it isn't true for the NYC metro area. There are people doing exactly what I do in Manhattan with my experience making between 50-$100,000+ more than me with "Big Law" firms. Part of my income is my book of business, so for example if I tripled my book of business this year (which I'm sure I can't) I would make an additional $140,000... but in 10 years my base pay will probably double (based on my colleagues' salaries), I expect my book of business to grow significantly, and by then I will likely have equity in the firm... when you combine everything my total compensation could approach 7 figures, give or take. I work with folks that make that much now
The fact that you have to pay 100,000 dollars just to be able to be considered for a job that a capable and intelligent person could learn how to properly do in a few weeks is massively flawed.
College varies for a lot of people, I think my total cost was around $30k for a bachelor's and while I could have just done related work, getting promoted higher or applying to new jobs without an education would have been difficult
The biggest difference in dc work and others is that the pay increments are very small but the benefits are massive. Close to free healthcare, childcare on site in a lot of places, they give you money for metro, parking, etc. A lot of places food is provided on site for cheap or free. I worked in dc before moving to nova for ten years. I didn’t pay a dime for public transportation during that whole time. When I lived in la it cost me 165 a month to park.
I work construction in Mississippi which is supposedly the poorest state in the nation. 33 yrs old with only a H.S diploma and my base salary is way more than these folks. I don't pay a dime for Healthcare, my employer matches dollar for dollar what I put into my 401k, I get a company truck with a gas card, bonuses, and also get company profit sharing. What buys you a 2 bedroom apartment in DC will buy you a 5 bedroom house in the suburbs on a 1 acre lot here in MS. Yea they can have that.
I’m really baffled cause all I did was get my forklift certification and I’m making between 60-70k a year as a warehouse selector and I always assumed college degree jobs payed more
Depends on degree in what subject. Law, engineering, data scientist, IT security etc. makes more. Not some useless humanities degree in how to do gossip & bitching.
Usually initially they kind of suck ass not gonna lie like depending on the area a resident doctor can be making under 45k pretty easily but then each year it increases pretty heavily up until you complete it at which point depending on what you specialize in you can be making upwards 170k even up to 330k in some states. So it really varies but generally post grad jobs suck
Don’t feel bad; I work in mental health/social services and always have, for 15 years, with a Bachelors degree. I’ve never made more than 57k, and I’ve been in administration.
I can’t imagine getting a masters degree and only making $65k and then fully believe your education was worth it. Lol damn, the things he must tell himself in his head.
@@txgrunt5969 absolutely- any union plumber, electrician, etc. are making nearly double those too. And I’ll bet you those two in the video stop at Starbucks every morning for a $6 coffee.
@@Delta2Oscar Absolutely! Meanwhile, Mr. Master Degree from that video will look down his nose at those kids from trade schools because he feels he's "much more intelligent" but he'll be paying off that 6-figure degree the rest of his life while your trade school friends are taking vacations!
Dang, I'm just a lowly construction worker in Mississippi (supposedly the poorest state in the us) and I make alot more than that in a place where cost of living is a fraction of d.c......no college edumactaion. Just a little hard work and dedication in the beginning.
@@Mrnoddingdonkey why not? I started out at $8 or $9/hr 16yrs ago. Kicked out of my parents house at 17 yrs old, didn't have money to go to school and was living paycheck to paycheck barely making it by in the beginning. I worked hard, stuck with it, have always made a conscious effort to learn as much as can about every aspect of my industry so that I can be as valuable as possible to whomever I'm employed with. Never taken a hand out when I easily could have.
You don’t think these young people aren’t grinding it out in their entry level jobs doing the same thing? The analyst and recruiter may top six figures in several years, they’re entry level in career fields with very long tails.
All I hear is: I have lots of student debt and make $50k-$65k. I’m a Registered Nurse, i have some student debt from getting my Associates degree, but paid out of pocket for my bachelors degree. It’s a stressful job, but an RN employed by a hospital in Ohio makes roughly the same kind of money as these people. If you do travel nursing, which seems to be the trend - you can make $100k easily. Some get free housing as well. You just have to go where the money is. A travel nurse I know recently told me he made over $100k last year and took 3 months off. I used to work a weekend position at my hospital: worked every Saturday & Sunday 24 hours total and was paid for 32 hours of work + full benefits, still got 4 weekends off a year (so 12 days off in a row each time)… how many jobs allow you to be off 5 days in a row every week and still make a good living?
That’s the college conundrum: getting into six figure debt for less than $80k (which take home is like $50k) a year. Barely treading water until you sink to the bottom. Rent and other bills easily surpassing $3-4k a month while you take home >$4k a month
Bro these days you need at least a bachelor's degree to even get most basic retail jobs. Saying you don't need a college education to be successful is like saying you don't need a high school education to be successful.
@@Ryan88881 I never said anything about a highschool degree. And you must be living under a rock to believe you can't make it in this country without a bachelor's. I didn't graduate college and make over 100k working for a bank. You only need a highschool degree to start working at banks. If you want to code and make over 100k a year you don't need a college degree either. You can work a trade and make over 100k a year. You have all these kids going to college because they are told they have to do it to be successful and then can't get a job because they have no work experience.
@@fabbz94 When did I say you can't make it without a bachelors? I'm saying that you can make it even without a high school degree. I just don't get why people assume or act like high school is necessary but college isn't. By your logic neither should be necessary. People only do college because a college degree is the bare minimum these days. It's what a high school degree used to be. High school is a joke though which is why I pursue college, not just because of job opportunity.
That is probably the nicest grey t-shirt I've ever seen
Aint' that the truth?
She’s a recruiter. Where do I sign?
@@mercharris5266 too late she already recruited me
You've all been hired as simps
😄
Whatever she's recruiting for, I want in
Between
Most of her clients are illegal fisheries
@@jimmyjam6197 (grabs giant fishing net)
Scientology
@@johns3491 worth it
“I love being an Illegal Fisheries Analyst” is one of the biggest lies I’ve ever heard.
It is a very cool and interesting subject, and very impactful too.
@@martfp88 Lots of things are interesting. That doesn't mean doing it 40-60 hours/week in a job context is, too.
Maybe it was his recruiter and she is helping him with benefits etc. :-)
I'm sure he gets instant respect from the big burly working class fishermen he has contact with.
The illegal fisheries guy needs to see the human resources lady, there's huge potential in legal fisheries too I guess... You don't always have to go the niche way😉
We know why we’re here men of culture.
A girl has bounteous bosoms. A man has thirst
😎👍men of culture unite
I'm here for the gay fisherman guy
Long time no see gentlemen!
Woman: "My eyes are up here!:
Homer Simpson: "I've made my choice..."
That recruiter will find lots of opportunities
OF will make her millions if she knows how to work those jugs
@@pitech4446 She could recruit an army of simps
Y’all don’t understand hard work… I started reciting 8 years ago and make half an M not including investment’s. Almost any industry if you are willing to grind you can make what you desire.
@@jakeh4273 you made a bunch of money and are still spending your time posting on UA-cam.... probably just left the p-hub tab on your device.
@@zadokprime4831 I mean…I think everyone uses UA-cam?
Here for the heavies in the thumbnail...
Warlocks!
Creepy
Lol same
@@jameshusentoff2953 get testosterone replacement therapy or shut up
😊
I’m recruited. Well done.
She recruited me too,
very talented recruiter!
🤣
Lol we’ll played
Men in the comments are gross. And you wonder why women stay away.
Is it me, or are ALL recruiters drop dead gorgeous?
It's gotta help their recruiting abilities
Yes sir!! 🔥🔥🔥
She recruits seamen
That’s true , same with admins , they’re all fine as hell in my department
I mean.. she's alright but some of your guys's comments are making it seem like we watched two completely different videos. If this girl does it for you, what happens when you walk into just Target or Trader Joe's? Do you just start cumming everywhere?
“I’m a carbon-based microbe-dependent metabolically-driven nutrition transport specialist” and by that they mean doordasher
😂
Oh man, that was funny!!! Thanks for the laugh!! Stay safe out there!
Hey, that used to be my job title! ...and by that I mean pizza driver. X3
Now I'm making 55k as a Longterm Conveyance Logistics Engineer (truck driver) :3
Them bags are recruiting double time 🥵
💀💀
No wonder why women stay away from you.
Her male recruiting success rate must be through the roof
These comments definitely did not disappoint. Thank you gentlemen
Yes, perverts who objectify a woman. Thank you for being creeps.
The girl is proof that the degree just proves you are willing to do the work. Once someone knows you can get a degree, they know you can learn a new job.
Sucks that some employers *only* rely on a degree or many years of experience tho
Many forward thinking employers recognise the value of vocational courses (like apprenticeships) instead of the academic route
Came for the comments and I'm not disappointed.
Came?
Coming?
Came for or came from?
👍👍👍 Score 3 more for the outstanding replies
@@ThisIsntTwitter maybe it's came off or came on??
To start the video = Put ‘em in the thumbnail
To finish the video = Put ‘em at the end
Ole bait and switch…classic lol
Ooooh, "bait and switch"?!!! That fishery guy might be on your ass, literally...
but you clicked anyway, kekek
That girl in grey has such a big personality.
She has multiple personalities.
ha. ha ha. ha. incredible.
Tell me you don’t know how to talk to women without telling me.
And this is why we have student debt, went to school for some fancy ass degree just to make 55k and 65k.
Yup. I spent 1.5 years in a community college learning a trade. I live within 2 hours of DC, work for a utility company, and make 97k salary and get overtime etc. They’re living in an expensive city on what amounts to peanuts there and have student debt. Waste of their time and money.
@@fallout459 same boat as me. I live within an hour of Tampa and Orlando. Didn't even go to community College. Got into telecommunications and currently making $100k/yr with OT and no student debt at 25 yrs old. College is a scam lol
@@alecmiley I wouldn't say college is a scam if pick the right vocational degree based on what is needed either in your country or prepared to move. I did a vocational degree and earn pretty good money with career progression and options for self employment, contracting etc.
@@fallout459 What did you go to trade school to learn?
how much does the student debt in us mostly cost ?
Damn that recruiter has some milk trucks
I wonder if she watched this video to find out 99% of the comments are about her yamms
She got them Niddies!
@@heilzelynsky9746 we’ll do her proud then.
@@heilzelynsky9746 I like yams at Thanksgiving ❗🦃😋🙃
anyone know her insta? I wanna propose to her!!
Everyone’s talking about them pillows but no one is mentioning her confidence selling those pillows
You realise that ultimately you too are talking about her pillows right?
@@Littletime839 yeah but come on ! He mentioned her confidence selling them
Define pillow
@@bspiderm something to rest your head on and have a nibble
Not really bro, she is just being casual about it. I mean look at her outfit it's kinda loose. It's just that them pillows are too much (of a blessing) and have a life of their own.
That recruiter has a great set of…eyes
Ah, a man of culture I see.
Yes.. they're big, and round.
With eyebrows.
I love them.
The big round ones.
With eyebrows.
@@CESmith Yes.. very big. Eyes..
And the illegal fisheries guy has some sexy fucking tits too
That recruiter though 😍
Smokeshow
I know, I'm gay but still feel attracted to her 🤪
Yea. Tons of them here in DC. How else do you think they get hired
She is average at most like most white girls
Anyone have her LinkedIn
I’m looking for a job
Came here for the comments: did not disappoint.
Addffry
That recruiter tho 👀
👀
👀
😋🍼
Milk
they hired her cuz of those jugs
Please interview blue and pink collar workers. This channel needs some variety
Pink collar?
@@Will-ck7hi Pink-Collar usually refers to positions in service industries like caregivers, some teachers, social workers, etc. The general assumption is that those salaries are higher than blue-collar but less than white-collar, but the reality can vary quite a bit depending on which market you work in and how well your Union does or doesn’t negotiate your contracts.
People would be surprised by blue collar salaries, too bad most are too lazy to do the job.
@@Deltron6060 That and the how society shakes people for not going to college. Hopefully we’re trending the other way…
@@Will-ck7hi I really hope so, 4 year university should be a dying trend.
That girl is extremely cute!
I think many fail to understand that without a base bachelor's education they would never get the job in the first place. An employer does not necessarily pay attention to what exactly your major was but that you graduated from a university that taught you to use your problem-solving skills and certain mindset in order to perform at your current job. Many say that college is useless because they end up in a work completely not related to their major but that is not the point..
Very very rarely does anyone care after the interview
So true. I don’t have a college degree so I’m really struggling to find a job that pays a living wage. My only options are basically trades, IT certifications or a job in sales. I can’t even save up $300 for a tech certification because I live paycheck to paycheck. I’m so jealous of people who have college degrees.
Depends on industry
But you’re right most don’t
@@user-ic1ii7ky8p jealous of someone who lives paycheck to paycheck AND has thousands of dollars in student loan debt?
Thousands of dollars to learn problem solving skills and a mindset ? Lol
My hiring rates are jacked to the tits.
them biggums though. wow!
Ah, I love videos about mountains
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂 fucking greeat
🤣🤣🤣
No wonder women stay away from you.
They are huge!
Lmao noticed that too
I'd be interested in learning more about whatever she's recruiting for!
Just above average….. I mean 65k and 55k…. 😂
Most of you guys couldn’t handle her.
@@AstroZombie1 Probably true mist guys couldn’t lol
That recruiter 🤌🏼
Don't act like I clicked on this for the topic
Not at all! 😅😅 I came for those bazookas.
The recruiter is absolutely beautiful
You should ask her out. She talks about you all the time.
@@kjjviii1735 🤣
Men of culture.. Liiiiine up!
I like how you showed both sides of the degree. First person was positive about getting it and the second person had a pretty sweet rack o lamb
U had me in the first half not gonna lie
What de Puck... Hahaha
The recruiter has some serious assets.
The sad part is this guy should be 85K+ union etc. actually important.
Master's degree for 65k before 10% to the big guy, no damn thanks.
Them some effective recruiting assets.
Recruiter: what position would like to apply for?
Me: missionary
The fishy guy must have a LOT of good boys to work with. He seems really happy to work there.
He's ghay.
Damn I got thirsty for some milk all of a sudden...
It’s interesting to me some folks that I’ve gone to college don’t seem to make all that much, yet I mean I hope it pays off in the future for them.
That’s so interesting, you’re so much better than them
College, in the US at least, is a total scam. Can't speak to other places because I don't really know the education and employment stuff as a firsthand experience, but in the US its an industry/product that has successfully marketed itself by spreading credentialism culture.
The second one was honest
That recruiter has some heavy artillery on her chest god DAMN
Recruiter’s @?
Look at that pair of great professionals
I think a college degree is the biggest sham in this country today. I attended college but did not complete my degree. I earn almost $100k in telecommunications today. You simply need to become really good at something and be good at selling yourself. That’s more valuable than a piece of paper from some institution.
I think the biggest scam about college is the idea of brand. I went to community College for my basics and then transferred to an online university (with regional and national accreditation) and got my B.S. in IT Management. With Pell grant and loans, my total bill at the end was under $10k. I'm glad to have it because it gets me in the door for some companies that require a degree for HR satisfaction and it didn't cost me an arm and a leg.
Having said that, you're absolutely right in that a well versed skill is what pays. I'm in IT and one of my jobs pays 125k. I'm working two remote jobs for maximum cheddar.
I mean I imagine if you ask people why they’re at college they won’t say to get a degree. Most people in college view it as a means to an ends. “If I go to college I can get the job I want” type scenario.
All these comments and no @? Tough
I'm surrounded by fellow men of culture
The recruiter 😂🍼
“What do you do?”
“Play football”
“How much do you make?”
“5mil”
“Was your education worth it?”
“Didn’t graduate, or go to class”
Men of culture, i sympathize with you if your ears also stopped working half way through the video
I’d she presented herself more forwardly, she would have no prob with poly sci career lol. Men would be jelly in front of her.
I appreciate that she’s not a seducer for profit, kudos to her.
I graduated from University...but walked onto an international auction company's yard and said I could start today 2 weeks before a 90 million dollar sale. They needed help regardless of having a job opening. Needless to say I flew by the high school kids and the "20 year guys" with highschool...and had 4 promotions in 4 years...by the end I sat in the back of the room in every interview and made the decision if someone would be hired. That is my talent.
All those words yet no one can decipher what you do
@@ZenityStudios I appreciate that. Next time I will be more concise.
What's the name of the company and how much do you make?
@@shahidnyker2900 I'm self employed now. But the company is listed as RBA and I went from $40k to $120k in 4 years.
I love the two outlooks, I think the thing in common is their first choice was not their best. Life lesson you don’t have to decide on the plan for your life right away because there is always time to change.
That grey shirt has 100% recruitment rate. 🧐
I need to watch the recruiter part several more times I keep missing details....
If she in recruiting, I’m in recruiting😤
That first guy was John Candy at age 25
2nd girl was dolly parton at 25!
@@brettk9316 It was Christina Hendricks at 25
She can put them cans on OF and make 55k a month lol
Hopefully she got morals and self respect which most people lack nowadays. She could marry a rich attractive guy if she hasn’t done an only fans yet
exactly bro, those jugs are worth millions
@@bryanrosales2630 Her marrying a rich attractive man wouldn't necessarily imply morals and self respect, either....
@@reiserkeiser I never said it would those are two different subjects. I’m saying she should make good choices so she’d have a better future for a family and also with a man that can provide and protect
all she needs is a cans do attitude
Don’t know about DC, but 55-65K in a cheaper state would be great. Get married and now you can really make moves. All the best to everyone.
55-65k in DC is not great
65k in DC is terrible.
I bet he has 200k in student loans to earn 65k a year.
@@raminbaghirov9998 Because they're stupid. Apparently going to an expensive private college for some useless degree makes you "smart".
It’s not really about financial success to the indoctrinated. It’s all about pushing the pro-college agenda at all costs
Warms my heart that the simp gang has flooded the comments.
I know exactly how she nailed that interview
Drain the swamp...except for the recruiter, she can stay.
She can drain me
Nah drain her too, she overfilled
I wanna be recruited.
Alot.
Got dayum!
I completed a degree in a field I knew I wouldn’t work in. I can’t slap my forehead any harder.
I mean lots of people in her situation are usually pressured into it however her degree choice seems odd to have been pressured. Regardless ya who goes with polisci is they don’t have too lol
I didn’t realize she had said anything.
Honestly, people should only go to college if either 1. they are learning something they are passionate about (in which case they have to really consider whether the price they are spending is worth the "education" or if there are more cost-effective alternatives) or 2. the career path has a high likelihood of providing a reasonable ROI. With that said, I probably spent $250,000 on college and grad school, but I currently make nearly $300,000 with a career path that could put me over $400,000 in 5/6 years and perhaps seven figures in 10 years.
NeverAccurate
@@ydcell9983 yeah, okay 👍 👌
@@max00101 sure, I'm a very specialized transactional attorney in the NY burbs. If I was willing to work in Manhattan, I could probably immediately get a 50-100k pay raise. I'll stick with my easy commute and working from home most of the time.
For some reason I can't reply to Greg's comment. First, I have been an attorney for 10 years and have 6.5 years of very specialized experience. Second, the Google numbers are probably accurate as national averages, but it isn't true for the NYC metro area. There are people doing exactly what I do in Manhattan with my experience making between 50-$100,000+ more than me with "Big Law" firms. Part of my income is my book of business, so for example if I tripled my book of business this year (which I'm sure I can't) I would make an additional $140,000... but in 10 years my base pay will probably double (based on my colleagues' salaries), I expect my book of business to grow significantly, and by then I will likely have equity in the firm... when you combine everything my total compensation could approach 7 figures, give or take. I work with folks that make that much now
@@9770G He can become a partner in his firm eventually. That's how
That recruiter is very pretty
The fact that you have to pay 100,000 dollars just to be able to be considered for a job that a capable and intelligent person could learn how to properly do in a few weeks is massively flawed.
College varies for a lot of people, I think my total cost was around $30k for a bachelor's and while I could have just done related work, getting promoted higher or applying to new jobs without an education would have been difficult
You think someone who studied for two years could have learned the subject matter in three weeks? Lot’s of wishing and projection in these comments
She recruited me. Very persuasive.
I see two things I’d like to study.
What kind of recruiter is she? Asking for a friend 😂
Based on the recent mass amounts of recruiter job cuts, my guess is an unemployed one
@@yeeyee5875 this chick will be fine, trust me on that
@@franzwagner387 I can see - she is a very talented recruiter. I don't have recruiters but if I would have recruiters - I wouldn't let her go.
@@franzwagner387 yeah, there is zero chance any male boss is letting her out his sights. Staring at those big ass tits every day is worth the 65k lmao
I think she's recruits for a strip joint.
The biggest difference in dc work and others is that the pay increments are very small but the benefits are massive. Close to free healthcare, childcare on site in a lot of places, they give you money for metro, parking, etc. A lot of places food is provided on site for cheap or free. I worked in dc before moving to nova for ten years. I didn’t pay a dime for public transportation during that whole time. When I lived in la it cost me 165 a month to park.
I work construction in Mississippi which is supposedly the poorest state in the nation. 33 yrs old with only a H.S diploma and my base salary is way more than these folks. I don't pay a dime for Healthcare, my employer matches dollar for dollar what I put into my 401k, I get a company truck with a gas card, bonuses, and also get company profit sharing. What buys you a 2 bedroom apartment in DC will buy you a 5 bedroom house in the suburbs on a 1 acre lot here in MS. Yea they can have that.
What’s crazy is, that recruiter probably wouldn’t have gotten hired without that degree
I’m really baffled cause all I did was get my forklift certification and I’m making between 60-70k a year as a warehouse selector and I always assumed college degree jobs payed more
Depends on degree in what subject.
Law, engineering, data scientist, IT security etc. makes more.
Not some useless humanities degree in how to do gossip & bitching.
Usually initially they kind of suck ass not gonna lie like depending on the area a resident doctor can be making under 45k pretty easily but then each year it increases pretty heavily up until you complete it at which point depending on what you specialize in you can be making upwards 170k even up to 330k in some states. So it really varies but generally post grad jobs suck
Don’t feel bad; I work in mental health/social services and always have, for 15 years, with a Bachelors degree. I’ve never made more than 57k, and I’ve been in administration.
I can’t imagine getting a masters degree and only making $65k and then fully believe your education was worth it. Lol damn, the things he must tell himself in his head.
Funny thing is that people without a college degree are making more than these two.
@@txgrunt5969 absolutely- any union plumber, electrician, etc. are making nearly double those too. And I’ll bet you those two in the video stop at Starbucks every morning for a $6 coffee.
I know kids out of a trade school making more starting out... and theyre 18!
@@Delta2Oscar Absolutely! Meanwhile, Mr. Master Degree from that video will look down his nose at those kids from trade schools because he feels he's "much more intelligent" but he'll be paying off that 6-figure degree the rest of his life while your trade school friends are taking vacations!
@@Cured_Ham 💯
Wow. She’s gorgeous.
She recruited our hearts. God bless you, ma'am.
These comments didn't disappoint 😂😂
Dang, I'm just a lowly construction worker in Mississippi (supposedly the poorest state in the us) and I make alot more than that in a place where cost of living is a fraction of d.c......no college edumactaion. Just a little hard work and dedication in the beginning.
Yes but that’s not possible for everyone, That’s how capitalism works.
@@Mrnoddingdonkey why not? I started out at $8 or $9/hr 16yrs ago. Kicked out of my parents house at 17 yrs old, didn't have money to go to school and was living paycheck to paycheck barely making it by in the beginning. I worked hard, stuck with it, have always made a conscious effort to learn as much as can about every aspect of my industry so that I can be as valuable as possible to whomever I'm employed with. Never taken a hand out when I easily could have.
You don’t think these young people aren’t grinding it out in their entry level jobs doing the same thing? The analyst and recruiter may top six figures in several years, they’re entry level in career fields with very long tails.
One of the most accurate assessments of college and how it applies to real world value.
Without a doubt she's great at recruiting
The second girl 🍈 🍈
Recruiter 🔥
God is good, fellas. God is good.
Love the second half of this
I love gray shirts
I'm an underwater ceramic specialist my education was worth it
I majored in interpretative dance and minored in gender studies. My education was completely worth it.
At least she was honest about her college choice 😂
All I hear is: I have lots of student debt and make $50k-$65k.
I’m a Registered Nurse, i have some student debt from getting my Associates degree, but paid out of pocket for my bachelors degree. It’s a stressful job, but an RN employed by a hospital in Ohio makes roughly the same kind of money as these people. If you do travel nursing, which seems to be the trend - you can make $100k easily. Some get free housing as well. You just have to go where the money is. A travel nurse I know recently told me he made over $100k last year and took 3 months off.
I used to work a weekend position at my hospital: worked every Saturday & Sunday 24 hours total and was paid for 32 hours of work + full benefits, still got 4 weekends off a year (so 12 days off in a row each time)… how many jobs allow you to be off 5 days in a row every week and still make a good living?
Got them big heavies
I'm a truck driver. I make $110,000 per year as a company driver. My education cost me $4000 and took 8 weeks. It was worth it.
Already paid for itself. Trade jobs also have similar numbers. Too bad the kids don’t want those.
Yeah but think about all the meth you have to buy and use being a truck driver.
@@Ryan88881 I didn't know meth was a truck driver thing. Thanks for playing. 🙄
@@ajprickett7272 Sarcasm?
@@Ryan88881 No sir. Facts
The recruiter was the most honest! She will likely recruit better people for her company because of it.
That’s the college conundrum: getting into six figure debt for less than $80k (which take home is like $50k) a year. Barely treading water until you sink to the bottom.
Rent and other bills easily surpassing $3-4k a month while you take home >$4k a month
That first guy? I'd rather do ANYTHING else with my life. But I'm glad you're happy.
It's the best. You literally spend all day wondering where in DC you will order lunch
Can you put up people that didn't go to college. So kids can realize you don't need a college degree to be successful.
Yeah, show the average non degree holder and how they struggle to make $35k as a manager at 7-11
Bro these days you need at least a bachelor's degree to even get most basic retail jobs. Saying you don't need a college education to be successful is like saying you don't need a high school education to be successful.
@@Ryan88881 I never said anything about a highschool degree. And you must be living under a rock to believe you can't make it in this country without a bachelor's. I didn't graduate college and make over 100k working for a bank. You only need a highschool degree to start working at banks. If you want to code and make over 100k a year you don't need a college degree either. You can work a trade and make over 100k a year. You have all these kids going to college because they are told they have to do it to be successful and then can't get a job because they have no work experience.
@@AstroZombie1 I can't argue with the average but it's not impossible to make over 50k with only a high school degree.
@@fabbz94 When did I say you can't make it without a bachelors? I'm saying that you can make it even without a high school degree.
I just don't get why people assume or act like high school is necessary but college isn't. By your logic neither should be necessary. People only do college because a college degree is the bare minimum these days. It's what a high school degree used to be. High school is a joke though which is why I pursue college, not just because of job opportunity.
Dude 65 grand after a masters? That would nauseate me. Especially with the cost of living in DC. I truly hope he's happy and gets advancement
I think the only reason I clicked on this was because I am a Man of culture.