Hi, Did anyone here see it, and what did you think? If you didn't see it yet, or if you did, the miniseries structures work around four levels of work, or types of work: service jobs, so-called middle class jobs, dream jobs and “the boss” or “c-suite” executive jobs in large corporations. I thought it was interesting in some ways. One thing I wondered, for myself, was about how the middle-class jobs were portrayed. The documentary shows one young man who I think is supposed to be from the millennial generation who is passionate about electronic music, and who is shown to use his middle-class job at a tech company where he lives to finance his passion for music. He has trouble affording his own home. I wondered about the tone in the movie and the portrayal of the subjects. I thought it suggested that young people should be more…
Author: Olivia
My sister works for a very large engineering company who she’s been working for around 3.5 years. Her starting rate was around 79K and after her promotions she’s making around 89K now. She’s the only woman on her team and she had just discovered that the relative new hires have a starting rate of around 95K. These guys just are out of school and have barely any experience even though my sister has a lot of experience at this company and two others prior to her employment. She brought this to the attention of HR and HR asked her “well, how much experience do you have?” As if her experience has anything to do with her capabilities. She is overqualified for her roll, she is smarter than the men on her team (trust me I’ve heard her speak and basically run everything) and yet, because she is the woman, they…
I miss my Co-Worker.
My Co-worker died in his sleep unexpectedly last week. He was 60 years old and literally got worked to death. No announcement, no meeting, no day off in his memory. Hell i didn’t even find out he died from my damn boss, another co-worker had to tell me and boss confirmed. Ahhh but they did hang up his obituary for us to read it. I talked to him every day Monday-Friday we always discussed how it was a race to get back because we do not get paid an hourly wage our field of work is stressful and will definitely take a toll on you if you let it. Anyway, moral of the story is that it’s true that these companies really do not care about you if you die they won’t even bat an eye and will find your next replacement within a week. I miss you buddy.
Why even get certified to be a lifeguard
I’m 16 and I just passed my lifeguarding certification which is a very physically demanding class to take just to get certified, I conveniently live right behind a pool that is also attached to a golf course. Was told I would probably get hired because there is such a shortage of lifeguards, turned in my application and certificate of completion and got ghosted. not to mention 3 years ago I did an extra class and got certified by the Red Cross for cpr before even taking lifeguarding classes and now the place I applied to has ghosted me. There were multiple kids in my class that were “re takes” who had been lifeguards already for 2 years and needed to be re certified, every.single.one of them failed the class. Why the hell did I even take a lifeguarding class and PASS to get ignored by a job who supposedly was…
needless to say i declined. these managers are on a power trip for $13/hr (min wage here in IL). also would like to mention that they advertised the job on indeed and other sites as starting pay being $15/hr—only after you fill out their application (which included three short answer questions and two proficiency tests) do they send you the rest of the info which clearly states it’s $13/hr for a probationary 3 months before they raise your wage, during which they can fire you at any time with no notice or reason. please
Best place to look for remote work?
Indeed.com is solid but its also scamsville, full of repeat/fake jobs that are just collecting your data. I wondered if there were better more specialized sites I could be using. Been working in an office for a week and a half and I'm already sick of it. There's an office boogeyman that treats people like children and takes their phones away. This is nonsense lmao
I feel burned out about everything, nothing in this world feels good or at least good enough to keep spinning on this proverbial wheel, always chasing a piece of cheese. I’ll be honest, I haven’t worked many jobs so maybe my view is skewed (pretty much all of them were retail) but after being without work for a year and knowing I will have to get work soon, I loathe the prospect of it. I’ve just gotten to the point where I’d rather starve than go back to work as pretty much every job I’ve been in I’ve felt isolated, tired and without control. I know these are very “zoomer” or “millennial” takes as my family would put it, but this is how I feel. I don’t want to commit myself to this for the rest of my life. The other reason why I don’t is the question of “for…