• hrimfaxi_work
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    1515 months ago

    Every now and then, there’s an article about some dumb shit a person on The View says. My reaction is always surprise that The View is still even a thing.

    • Boozilla
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      235 months ago

      It’s a fossilized turd. My guess is, there’s so much fierce competition for eyeballs these days, if the advertisers think 200 people are actually watching it, they get pretty excited.

      • Kalkaline
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        125 months ago

        There’s a lot of people in comas that are in those 200 people and mostly because it comes on after Price is Right.

    • ArugulaZ
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      25 months ago

      “Get out now, Barbara! This show will sink you like a stone!” - SNL

  • TubeTalkerX
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    1215 months ago

    Just get a job? Why don’t I strap on my job helmet and squeeze down into a job cannon and fire off into Jobland, where jobs grow on jobbies!

  • @TheDoctorDonna@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    I am a fucking insurance professional- educated and licensed -and I still can’t make ends meet and pay off my student loans.

    Tax the rich and enhance social programs. It’s not about the job, it’s about luck and generational wealth hoarding.

  • Hyperreality
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    765 months ago

    Many people would be surprised how many homeless people have (hard science) degrees or used to be very succesful. Bad luck, medical debt, (mental-)health issues, company goes bankrupt due to circumstances beyond your control, etc.

    The world isn’t fair. You can work really hard, and end up in the oven of a concentration camp, despite what the slogan above the gate said.

    Of course, if you’re a relatively talentless hack who’s won the equivalent of the lottery despite not really deserving it that much, it’s nicer to think that you deserve it because of your inate talent. Vanity. It’s the Devil’s favourite sin.

    • BigFig
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      5 months ago

      I know a couple homeless men who were programmers and burned out, got depressed and gave up

    • @SoleInvictus@lemmy.world
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      235 months ago

      Master’s degree in microbiology with a serious disability here. If not for my wife, I’d have been on the streets since it took 23 doctors to get a diagnosis. This lady can get fucked.

    • Drusas
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      185 months ago

      Medical debt is so underappreciated and it is no joke. It can add up very, very high and very, very quickly.

      • @frunch@lemmy.world
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        105 months ago

        Also without any warning or planning – could be cancer, could be a freak accident. You never know if/when a medical emergency might happen, so you’re always in an odd state of financial limbo even though it may not appear that way. You could be doing just fine squirreling away a few hundred or thousand here and there and one trip to the ER will quickly take back most of that nest egg. Even with insurance, it’s absurd how much you can still be on the hook for. What’s the alternative though, forgo medical treatment?

    • @vaknin@lemmy.world
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      85 months ago

      The world isn’t fair. You can work really hard, and end up in the oven of a concentration camp, despite what the slogan above the gate said.

      oof.

  • @wrekone@lemmyf.uk
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    695 months ago

    “Wealthy asshole has no empathy.” I’m shocked. Fuck her. Fuck talking heads in general.

  • @CultHero@lemmy.world
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    625 months ago

    As an almost 50 year old gen x who is on disability I will never bad mouth the younger generations for having a hard time financially. I am right there with you. I’ll never own my own home, the only reason I can afford my rent is because I’ve been in the same apartment for 10 years. I’m paying less for a 2 bedroom apartment than it costs to rent a single room these days. I’m going to have to live here until I die because I’ll never be able to afford to move.

    Groceries have skyrocketed just since covid and they weren’t cheap to begin with either. Even before covid I was paying more for a week’s worth of groceries than I was for a months worth of groceries in the 90s.

    Times aren’t just tough, they’re fucking impossible.

  • southsamurai
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    585 months ago

    Fuck the view lol. Everyone that gets a job on that show turns into a jackass, braying their bullshit at top volume. It’s the worst side of television.

  • Wytch
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    545 months ago

    Nothing says “I’m old, rich, and out of touch” quite like “get a job, you lazy bums”

    • @mojofrododojo@lemmy.world
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      75 months ago

      Oh no man, she’s had a rough life - started at Good Morning America as a receptionist and basically turned that into a comedy career, she’s a working stiff lol. Behar was born Josephine Victoria Occhiuto in 1942. Something tells me she’s a bit out of touch here in the 21st century.

  • @lapommedeterre@lemmy.world
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    365 months ago

    I haven’t seen it in ages, and I can’t critique the approach, but the maker of SuperSize Me tried to spend 30 days doing a minimum wage job. Iirc, it wasn’t great and they had so much debt by the end of it.

    I wish these people could get a similar perspective.

      • @frunch@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        Love how the breakdown of monthly expenses that McDonald’s provided includes “Heating: $0”

        Warmth really is a luxury when you think about it though…right? ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

        They were basically saying it’s perfectly normal to work 70-hour weeks and still hardly be able to cover their made-up costs of living (actual costs are much higher in my area, and presumably in most others as well). Oh, and I’m using heat–so I’m pretty much gonna be in debt for life. Guess we should have gone to college/less avocado toast/whatever. But that’s just business! Don’t hate the player, hate the game! Blah blah blah (งツ)ว

        • @CultHero@lemmy.world
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          155 months ago

          $600 for rent? I haven’t paid less than $700 in over a decade. For an apartment.

          When I first moved out on my own in the mid 90s I was paying $525/month + utilities for a 3 bedroom semi detached house.

          • @hydrospanner@lemmy.world
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            115 months ago

            It could be done with roommates.

            While it’s a stretch, that’s not the most glaring thing here…health insurance at $20/mo is an absolute joke that should’ve never gotten past any of the eyes that had to look at this thing before it went out.

            The last time I had to pay for health insurance out of pocket, my premium was closer to $250/mo.

            Granted that was for good coverage, but even a “just the basics” plan was at least half that.

            One of the other things that “breakdowns” like this miss too is that these places typically don’t have sick days or paid vacation at all. You don’t come in, you don’t get paid.

            So getting seriously ill is a major issue. If you catch the flu or covid and you’re down for two weeks, that’s half your month’s budget, from both jobs, gone. Plus your expenses are likely spiking for one or more doctors appointments, covid tests, medicine, etc. that you wouldn’t normally be spending on.

            Add to that that a shitty manager might also just decide that missing two weeks makes you unreliable, so they just fire you, or just decide not to schedule you anymore, and now your future income is gone too.

            …all because you caught an illness.

          • TAG
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            15 months ago

            That is because McDonald’s offers employee health insurance for only $10/pay period… They do offer that insurance, right?

            If it is not clear, I very much doubt that they offer such cheap health insurance (and that is assuming that they don’t have a policy in place that forbids workers from being scheduled for more than 29 hours per week per franchise so they can be classified as “part time” at each location and not offered health benefits).

        • @vul@lemmy.world
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          15 months ago

          The heating thing is easily explainable by it being included in the electric bill in this scenario. I don’t know why people go after something like that when the actual egregious thing is them telling people to get a 2nd job instead of paying them more.

          • @frunch@lemmy.world
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            5 months ago

            My gas furnace would like to argue otherwise

            And why itemize it if it’s included in another bill?

    • @ZombieTheZombieCat@lemmy.world
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      225 months ago

      Barbara Ehrenreich wrote a great book about this called Nickel and Dimed. She was a full time journalist and set out to get a job at a diner and find a place to live on the salary. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nickel_and_Dimed

      Matthew Desmond’s books Evicted and Poverty, By America are amazing, well researched, easily readable books about poverty in the US. I can’t recommend them enough. https://www.npr.org/2023/03/17/1158230630/poverty-by-america-book-review-matthew-desmond-evicted

      • @hydrospanner@lemmy.world
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        155 months ago

        This is why it infuriates me so much when people argue that some jobs, “Aren’t meant to pay well and live on.”

        From the social standpoint: then if that’s your argument, anyone looking to support themselves had better be able to find a job that pays better for the skills they have. This not being the case, it suggests that these people are in fact trying to support themselves, they’ve just found themselves on the wrong side of the capitalist meat grinder, and the argument of the job being one that “isn’t supposed to support you” is nothing more than a distraction so you don’t have to say the real reason: because you’d rather have the person that serves your diner breakfast be trapped in an endless cycle of poverty than pay an extra dollar for your meal. You’re complicit in the process and you like it.

        From the individual standpoint: ignoring for a moment the questions of who gets to decide these sorts of things and where the cutoff lies…isn’t it really just creating a convenient circular excuse for greed? These jobs have low pay because they’re not meant to support oneself on…but the reason they’re not meant to support oneself on is because they have low pay? And that’s good enough of an explanation?! People, especially older boomers, like to paint with broad strokes and imply that service industry jobs are “for teenagers in the summer and college kids putting themselves through school”, as a way to somehow justify low pay. Now regardless of the demographics of the employee (and we won’t even touch the idea of working at any job, much less service industry, to pay for college as you attend in this day and age)… regardless of all that…doesn’t it make sense that whoever is doing the work, if the same work is being done the pay should be the same? Granted there’s room for seniority, experience, skill, dependability, etc. but the point I’m getting at here is: isn’t it ridiculous to say that a kid should be paid less for doing a given job just because they’re a kid?

        And regardless of where you stand on the exploitation of child labor, either answer leads you back to the same point: either it’s not okay to exploit kids, so kids should make the same as an adult for the same work, so we can pay these workers fairly…or you think it is okay to exploit child labor, in which case, that only makes it okay to short the kids’ pay…not the adults. Either way, the only explanation left for subsistence pay for adults is: the system is victimizing the working poor like an elephant sized parasite latched onto an ant, and justifying it by suggesting that if the ant doesn’t like it they should just try, you know, making more money.

    • @spirinolas@lemmy.world
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      65 months ago

      I remember a young journalist in my country that tried to do that a long time ago. He was a rich spoiled kid who got into the newspaper by nepotism and wanted to make a name for himself. He had no clue what it was like to live on minimum wage (which is earned by the majority here). On the first few days he was already way beyond the budget. He actually went to the restaurant “just once”. Readers were laughing how clueless he was and he’d be starving before the 3rd week. It didn’t happen because the column mysteriously vanished after week 2.