Pearl - January 12, 2025


Pearl Responds To Candace Owens For Claiming Being A Podcaster Is A HARD Job | Pearl daily


Episode Stats

Length

1 hour and 7 minutes

Words per Minute

182.37947

Word Count

12,308

Sentence Count

1,069

Misogynist Sentences

48

Hate Speech Sentences

29


Summary

Summaries generated with gmurro/bart-large-finetuned-filtered-spotify-podcast-summ .

Candace Owens said that podcasting is a hard job. I'm here to tell you that it's not. I also talk about why I don't think this is true and why I think it's over exaggerated.

Transcript

Transcript generated with Whisper (turbo).
Misogyny classifications generated with MilaNLProc/bert-base-uncased-ear-misogyny .
Hate speech classifications generated with facebook/roberta-hate-speech-dynabench-r4-target .
00:00:00.000 So the other day I was hanging out and I got a bunch of texts. My cousin texted me,
00:00:07.140 my, you know, my friends texted me. They said, Candace Owens mentioned you on her show. And I
00:00:13.460 thought, huh, I'm just, you know, when I look at these people, they're big time. They're, you know,
00:00:18.060 the Brett Coopers, the Candace Owens, they're these big time celebrities. I'm just this random
00:00:23.440 woman named Pearl who streams sometimes, right? This is how I view it. So I thought that's crazy.
00:00:29.160 They mentioned me, huh? Okay. And there was a clip that I was, I saw her show and there was a clip
00:00:37.380 going viral or not a clip, sorry, part of her show where she said that podcasting is a hard job.
00:00:45.240 Now it was just an offhanded, you know, something she said, I'll show you the clip. And I put in the
00:00:51.200 chat, did she say podcasting is a hard job? And I guess this pissed her off, you know, asking this
00:00:57.240 question. Maybe it's because the answer makes us all look bad, but I just kind of say it how it is.
00:01:03.800 Let me pull up the clip. So this is the clip I responded to in the chat. Full screen. Okay.
00:01:11.600 Why this story was so big and why so many people covered it wasn't because of any particular feeling
00:01:15.620 about Daily Wire. It could have been The Blaze, it could have been anybody else. It truly is a
00:01:19.260 meaningful story for all of us content creators and also for the audiences that watch us and invest in
00:01:25.460 us. Because I have to tell you something, it is not easy to produce an interesting show
00:01:29.000 five days a week. Okay. There are days when you really don't want to do it. You're not feeling
00:01:32.620 that good, whatever it is that's going on. And you're like, there's nothing to talk about.
00:01:36.340 And so for any podcasters that is committing to that, they are working tremendously hard.
00:01:41.980 Understand they are working tremendously hard because they don't want to let their audiences
00:01:44.560 down. And whether that's Tucker Carlson on Fox news or Brett Cooper on YouTube, they're doing it
00:01:49.600 because they love it. And the reward is obviously the audience. The reward is that you guys come back,
00:01:55.460 the motivation is you guys. So if we cross over into a different season of our respective lives,
00:02:01.240 there's always this feeling like, okay, it's man versus corporation. It's David versus Goliath. It's
00:02:08.040 okay. Did people just invest in the corporation or do people actually appreciate the work that I did?
00:02:12.420 And in this circumstance, every independent creator is watching this going, my goodness,
00:02:17.640 the audience really love. Okay. So I listened to this clip and I think I've worked in media for the
00:02:26.500 last four years. And I'm going to go into what I did, my experience in media. You guys can decide
00:02:32.660 if it's credible or not credible. Okay. You got, you guys can be the judge, the jury, but I thought to
00:02:39.500 myself, you know, I see the men that are police officers that are firemen, you know, the number
00:02:46.760 one job in the country for men is truckers or it's like top three, you know, I, and compared to them,
00:02:54.680 we don't work hard at all. I think we are so lucky and privileged to be in this position that when I hear
00:03:03.360 any complaining, anything saying, this is hard, we have to work so incredibly hard. It just rubs me
00:03:09.900 the wrong way. I just think it's over exaggerated a bit. And I'm going to, I'm going to show you why
00:03:15.600 I think like this. Okay. Now I put this in the chat. I said, I I'm typing now, mind you, this woman has
00:03:22.000 like 40,000 people. I mean this, she's big time. I don't even think she's going to see my chat and I
00:03:29.280 guess it offended her. I put, did she's going to read my comment here at the end of the show.
00:03:33.620 I missed it because I left. I didn't even know until this morning. She has her own YouTube channel.
00:03:38.600 She said, did you say being a podcaster is hard? Please. Yeah. I said, no, actually Pearl, what I
00:03:43.920 said was if you want to be a good podcaster and actually create good content and not just be a
00:03:48.940 person that just full-time says awful things about women at all times and no matter what, can't say one
00:03:53.840 nice thing about a woman because that's your brand. Then it's probably really easy to be a podcaster on
00:03:58.560 YouTube. Alas, she has her own, you know, okay. So now she's going back and saying Pearl hates women.
00:04:05.660 Pearl is just, you're just a woman. You know, it's back to the, the shame, guilt, insult need to be
00:04:11.300 right. I don't like what you say. Therefore you're just a woman hater. Now we're going to get into those
00:04:17.340 claims. We're going to do it. But first let's hear from our show sponsor. Life doesn't slow down when
00:04:23.700 you're a parent between late night feedings, work stress, and just trying to find a moment for
00:04:29.820 yourself. Sleep is the first thing to go. And you know, I really have a lot of, um, empathy for the
00:04:38.320 parents out there. I really, you know, you guys, I know you work so hard and, but here's the thing.
00:04:44.300 Poor sleep doesn't just leave you tired. It affects everything. Your focus, your mood, even your health.
00:04:49.440 This is why I started taking pre-sleep, a melatonin free sleep supplement made to help
00:04:55.240 parents like you unwind, quiet your mind, and get the deep restorative sleep you need. With
00:05:00.600 ingredients like magnesium, glycine, and pre-sleep helps to naturally wake you up recharged and ready
00:05:08.540 to tackle the day. Use the code Pearl at checkout for 10% off on your first order. Okay. Thank you to
00:05:15.920 our sponsors pre-sleep. I want to tell you guys a little bit about how I started my show. So I
00:05:22.660 overnight basically became one of the biggest podcasters in the country during like, I don't
00:05:27.900 know, two years ago, one year ago now. And what happened was I was working in sales. I worked two
00:05:33.060 years in sales and I did door to door copier sales. Now, anybody that's done copier sales knows that in
00:05:39.760 sales, this is like the worst in the industry, like out of the sales jobs, this just isn't something
00:05:46.780 that you want, right? This is like bottom of the barrel in terms of sales. Now I go to England and
00:05:53.680 I'm going there to play volleyball. And on the side, I decide I'm going to start a YouTube channel. I
00:05:58.600 already had it, but it was nothing big. It was, you know, small channel, whatever. And after shows,
00:06:04.420 I decided to invite women over to do like a talk show. When I was in England, I would recruit people
00:06:11.600 from volleyball. So I played semi-professional volleyball. My goal was to go play professionally
00:06:17.320 in Germany, somewhere else, right? I'm doing this show on the side. I get into red pill content because
00:06:23.960 I randomly got into PUA when I was in the United States. So I had this small channel. I'm reacting to
00:06:31.800 seduction coaches, I would say is the best way to describe it. So, you know, I didn't know how
00:06:37.000 date, how hard dating was for men. I had no idea how difficult it was. I'd never really thought about
00:06:42.740 dating from the men's point of view. And randomly, I just find a couple of videos like Kevin Samuels and
00:06:49.060 all these different men teaching other men how to get laid, essentially. And I ended up going to a boot
00:06:56.560 camp where men would teach other men the best ways to seduce, pick up women, et cetera, et cetera.
00:07:06.040 Now, when I was at this boot camp, I started to see things from the men's point of view because there
00:07:12.640 would be average guys, good jobs. I would even say some of them were significantly above average
00:07:17.620 getting rejected by overweight women. You know, they would go and approach a woman, just say hi to her.
00:07:23.260 And she would just so rudely reject him. And it wasn't like the man was being creepy or
00:07:28.400 disrespectful. He was just a normal guy. But, you know, some of the stuff I didn't necessarily know
00:07:33.860 if it was true or not. You know, they said like women like the bad boys. Okay, well, you know,
00:07:39.180 let's go test it out. So when I was in England and I am playing volleyball, I recruit women from my show
00:07:47.080 or from my team or just at the gym wherever I would meet them to come on my show. So during this time,
00:07:54.880 I recruited the guests. I learned YouTube equipment. I did the thumbnails by myself. I didn't have any
00:08:00.300 major company behind me. I end up messaging one guy who worked at the Daily Wire at the time. I messaged
00:08:10.060 all these people trying to see, you know, if I could get the best advice, strategy, whatever. End up
00:08:16.280 getting in contact with a media manager at the Daily Wire. But, you know, he I would just get
00:08:21.460 meetings with him, get help. You know, he ends up like quitting. He's done his own thing for a while
00:08:27.440 now. Anyway, so I end up making 10,000 videos in this time. My channel takes off. And at this point,
00:08:35.780 you know, I had like 20 employees. I had a bunch of recruiters. This became an operation and it happened
00:08:41.720 within like a year, like 20 people working for me. The channel's huge. It got a billion views. Now,
00:08:47.900 mind you, there's no big media company behind me. This all just happened. This all just happened like
00:08:54.540 randomly. Now, I end up getting demonetized and getting demonetized came with a ton of challenges.
00:09:01.900 I was not prepared to be demonetized. In hindsight, that was so stupid. I was like the dumbest.
00:09:07.560 Yeah, that was so dumb. I didn't have any backups, nothing. So I end up having to make a website.
00:09:14.200 I end up having to move countries, couldn't afford London anymore. Main revenue source is gone.
00:09:19.100 And it's been over a year, still not remonetized. Now we're keeping the lights on with YouTube or with
00:09:25.960 subscribers on the website. Now, I want to talk about during this period when I did a show.
00:09:32.100 Now, my show became one of the biggest shows in the country at the time. I interviewed over a thousand
00:09:40.200 women, which the first half I recruited myself. And I ended up getting asked to go on all these big
00:09:47.480 shows like Pierce Morgan. I went on No Jumper. All these people that I watched for years. It was crazy.
00:09:53.160 I went to the Daily Wire last year. And on the side, I'm also doing a documentary interviewing men
00:10:00.120 that have been victims of divorce rape. So during this time, I got a really good idea of what was
00:10:06.840 going on. I interviewed people from hundreds of countries. I've done panels in England or street
00:10:12.980 interviews, Chicago, Miami, Vegas, Ireland. I've interviewed people straight from Africa,
00:10:20.300 straight from Italy, straight from literally all over the world. Do I know what I'm talking about
00:10:25.480 when I'm talking about media being a hard job? You, I mean, you guys can, you guys can decide for
00:10:31.720 yourself. And I would still say that job, even though I did the recruiting myself in the beginning,
00:10:37.400 we ended up getting people later, but in the beginning did the recruiting myself, the editing
00:10:41.880 myself, the production myself. I did all of it myself in the beginning. I learned how to do each
00:10:47.840 individual piece until, you know, we got to a certain point. Do I know what I'm talking about? I would
00:10:52.700 still say that is easier than when I worked in sales for two years. And I would still say sales
00:10:58.560 is a lot easier than other jobs. So the main thing that I look at is I like to point out pattern.
00:11:04.040 I like to look at, you know, I like to look at societal and cultural trends and look for patterns
00:11:09.820 of behavior. Now I've noticed with the ladies in media, there is a particular pattern. And this pattern
00:11:17.080 I've noticed because I cover a lot of stories of women in media. And I also would meet a lot of them
00:11:22.640 and see how they lived their lives. So one person that we talked about yesterday was Joy Taylor. Now
00:11:27.940 Joy Taylor was a media personality. She was in sports and nobody could figure out how she got a
00:11:34.600 job in sports knowing so much less than the men in her same position. Now it recently came out that
00:11:40.560 she was sleeping with everyone. And that does not surprise me in the least because again, I have
00:11:45.100 studied cultural trends and many men have told me their stories speaking to women in the workplace
00:11:50.740 or working with women and that that has happened before. Pearl interviewed people straight out of
00:11:56.600 Compton. Yeah, I actually, I did interview people in like the hood of Milwaukee early in my career
00:12:01.060 because I started, the sales job was in Milwaukee and I did do like a little bit of, you know,
00:12:07.260 interviews on the street. Now I've made a list of the steps women take to become a media
00:12:14.500 personality. Now in general, you know, there, there are exceptions to this rule, but in general,
00:12:20.800 this tends to be what they do. Get a job working for a man. So usually when I see ladies that come
00:12:27.340 up out of nowhere, there is a company that came up behind them in conservative media. We have
00:12:33.160 Candace Owens was with the Daily Wire. She was also with Turning Point. Amala was with PragerU.
00:12:39.740 Brett Cooper was with the Daily Wire. Usually when ladies are in media, they do not have,
00:12:44.960 they have a tendency, not all, to not start their own thing. They have a tendency to work for someone
00:12:50.800 else first. So oftentimes they will sleep with them for the job or be very hot and dress provocatively.
00:12:57.880 And that's how they get the job. Obviously conservative media, you're not going to do that.
00:13:01.480 Or B, you don't sleep with him, but you're a woman with an opinion that is unpopular for women
00:13:08.180 or a minority with an opinion that's unpopular for minorities. Now I can admit that a lot of the
00:13:14.200 reason I'm in this position is because I have a tendency to agree with men on dating and culture.
00:13:21.120 I tend to have a different opinion than most women. If I was a man with the same opinions,
00:13:25.540 I probably would not have had a million followers in a year. That just wouldn't have happened. And I
00:13:31.480 can admit that I could have the humility to admit that without, you know, it's not,
00:13:35.320 it's not like I did no work, but let's be honest, the man doing the same thing that a man has to
00:13:42.460 work 10 times harder. And I saw this with Myron. I mean, they interviewed double the amount of people
00:13:47.020 I did. They were live six days a week. At one point I was live four. I see why he lost his hair.
00:13:52.800 Shout out to fresh and fit. And, um, you know, that just tends to be how it goes. So the step two is
00:13:59.220 to get famous and be worshiped for all of your opinions. So being famous, you know, I think a lot
00:14:06.600 of times when you become famous, it's interesting. People will start in one sector and, you know,
00:14:13.740 because they're famous, we think they're credible on all these random topics. I try to, for the most
00:14:20.720 part, stay in my lane, which is dating and culture. I, I will dip into politics at times,
00:14:27.260 but that is, that is my lane, but it's interesting, right? You know, Brett Cooper, 22 year old
00:14:32.040 actress, 23 year old actress. Let's say she starts commenting on the war in the middle East. What
00:14:38.340 experience does she have or Candace Owens have that makes them credible to talk about the war
00:14:44.320 in the middle East? Now I'm, I'm not hating them for it, right? Because I benefit from the same thing,
00:14:50.420 but I'm not going to pretend this isn't what it is. It isn't much easier. You know, it's not like
00:14:57.600 you go on Pierce Morgan and they bring in, you know, a general from the middle East who's worked
00:15:01.980 in the military for 30 years and has the most credible opinion. It's who gets clicks, who gets
00:15:06.780 views and women just have a, um, advantage in media. Now I want to talk about how I learned
00:15:15.720 women have an advantage in media. I managed both men and women. So I managed, um, Christine Grace,
00:15:23.000 who's awesome, by the way, you guys should go check her out. She's still going in England.
00:15:27.580 And I managed Troy Francis. We started channels for both of them and they both tack tackled the issue
00:15:34.020 of dating culture. Um, and you know, Troy was twice her age and he worked as a dating coach for like a
00:15:40.260 decade. Her getting followers, views, likes was 10 times easier than Troy. And I'm not going to say
00:15:47.700 Christie, she was a super hard worker. Like she's great. She's awesome. I would like, she's, I have
00:15:52.380 nothing like only positive things, but one was 10 times easier than the other. Same, you know, and this,
00:16:01.460 this, this, this just is what it is. It's not bad or good. Women aren't bad for taking advantage of
00:16:06.520 this. I mean, if you guys get a job, you know, the male models that get jobs because they're very
00:16:12.300 good looking, they don't say, Hey, I am not doing this job out of principle because I'm ugly. No,
00:16:18.980 the men are like, you know what? I will be a personal trainer and make a ton of money. I don't care.
00:16:24.040 I'll do it. I'll be a model. The next step is the women have a tendency, a tendency, not all,
00:16:29.480 to leave the company. Now, oftentimes there's four ways they leave claiming unfair pay, claiming
00:16:37.180 harassment, start some sort of drama on the way out, or maybe a lawsuit or go peacefully. You know,
00:16:46.400 like Christine and Christine and I, we left, she's doing her own thing now because, you know,
00:16:51.620 after getting demonetized, I just couldn't do it anymore. Managing talent, but she left peacefully.
00:16:56.260 She's doing awesome. She didn't do any of these things. Some women do go peacefully, but a lot
00:17:01.260 don't. A lot don't. You saw this with Sydney Watson. She claimed a sexual harassment lawsuit when she
00:17:08.620 left the blaze. You saw this with Candace Owens. There was a bunch of drama. She said, see, there's
00:17:14.360 a guy doing the hard job. If you hear that, we have construction going on. So it just is what it is.
00:17:19.960 You know, Brett Cooper, it's this big, big deal. You know, she's unfollowing people, you know,
00:17:25.280 and I just look for the patterns. I look for the patterns of behavior. If a man got fired,
00:17:30.940 nobody would care. That's the double standard. If a guy, if Matt Walsh tomorrow got let go by the
00:17:35.880 Daily Wire, it would not be that dramatic. Nobody would really feel bad for him. But with Brett and
00:17:41.640 Candace, it's a big ordeal. It just is what it is. Now, four, tell everyone you're a hard worker and
00:17:48.300 that it was through your work ethic. You lecture the men on business and work ethic. You give your
00:17:53.380 course how to be successful, yada, yada, yada, even though the way that a woman does it is 10 times
00:18:00.220 easier than the men. Okay. Five, marry rich. I did. I followed 50 million or not. Sorry, 50
00:18:09.040 conservative commentators and found the average net worth of their husband was like five or six
00:18:14.420 million. So they got to marry rich. Definitely not in their twenties because that would stifle
00:18:20.680 their career. Get married in their thirties. And it's not bad or good, by the way, I just point out.
00:18:25.480 And if they do marry young, they have a tendency to wait till their late twenties for kids. Not bad
00:18:30.280 or good. Not bad or good. It's just more modern. It's not traditional. Then become a Karen and tell
00:18:35.120 men they're not good enough. And to stop watching corn, even though no one knows what the ladies did in
00:18:40.480 their twenties use the relationship for clout. Now, these are just the patterns that I see,
00:18:45.980 you know, like when they get married, it doesn't tend to be a private marriage. It tends to be a
00:18:51.340 marriage for brand, not bad or good, just not conservative. Okay. Now let's talk about hard
00:18:59.260 jobs. So I talk a lot of, on my show, I talk a lot on my show about how my dad is just like the
00:19:05.580 hardest worker I've ever met in my life. My dad worked 80, my dad owned a software company and
00:19:11.120 he worked 80 hours a week, pretty much my whole life. And he would drive to the office at three
00:19:16.400 in the morning to talk to people in India and like they would code software. My dad, if anything was
00:19:24.940 broken in the house, he would look up how to fix it himself. And, you know, on top of that, I have an
00:19:29.560 uncle and he's a farmer. And, you know, I would go there and I would see him taking care of the cows.
00:19:35.900 He learned how to fly himself. And you would just see how in an everyday, you know, how hard those men
00:19:43.680 work. You see the men that are construction workers, firemen, and you see how hard they work.
00:19:50.340 Now I decided to demonstrate this. I decided to do a hierarchy of hard jobs. So at the top,
00:19:59.440 so this is going to be the hardest. This is going to be the least hard. Because, you know,
00:20:03.660 the ladies always say they work so hard. Let's ask ourself, who's doing what? Who, who is doing
00:20:10.900 what in these industries? So at the top, these are the jobs that if you mess up, the result is your death,
00:20:19.660 somebody else's death. It's basically your death or somebody else's death. So we got logging,
00:20:26.980 which is the number one cause of workplace death in the United States. Number two, crab fishermen,
00:20:33.980 which we're going to talk about a little more later. Surgeons. If you're a heart surgeon, that's,
00:20:38.800 that's pretty intense, you know, because it's one thing to, to work hard, but it's another thing to
00:20:43.880 work hard with an intense amount of pressure where if you mess up, if you're human, you know,
00:20:49.220 if I say the wrong thing at work tomorrow, I can issue a retraction. If these guys do the wrong
00:20:54.160 thing at work, they're done. They're cooked. The surgeon could get sued. The surgeon could lose
00:20:59.540 his license. All for being human, for making a mistake. The crab fishermen, you know, there's boats
00:21:06.100 in Alaska where there are men that don't come back. They risk their lives to get us crabs. So again,
00:21:14.420 when I hear podcasters saying that their job is so hard, I think, how dare you, you know, you know,
00:21:22.660 how dare you take for granted the amazing job that we have? How dare you for a second say that this is
00:21:30.700 too difficult? Now, next we got the plumbers, the linemen and the doctors. Now, these are the jobs
00:21:40.960 that the result of these jobs means thousands of people could be affected. So if a plumber does the
00:21:47.900 wrong thing, like let's see he's the plumber on a city contracting job, the whole city could be mad
00:21:55.900 at him. Imagine, imagine being that guy where you mess up and the whole entire crew is mad at you.
00:22:03.620 That is a lot of pressure. You know that because of your actions, the city lost its water, its power,
00:22:09.780 whatever. So again, when I hear streamers and podcasters saying they have a hard job, again,
00:22:14.720 I think, how dare you? These guys have hard jobs. Next, we have the jobs where the result of your job
00:22:21.080 is to protect the public. It can be dangerous, but they're not necessarily fearing their life every day
00:22:28.500 by signing up. And you also could be legally liable for mistakes. So again, police officers,
00:22:35.580 it varies. Now, I've done none of these jobs, I'd like to say. So you guys, if you have a disagreement
00:22:40.960 on where it should go in the hierarchy, you're totally welcome to put it in the comments.
00:22:45.540 Maybe one goes higher than the other. This was what I came up with. But police officers,
00:22:50.680 if they make the wrong decision, they could be thrown in jail. Firemen, if they make the wrong choice,
00:22:57.880 they could die in a burning building. Next, we have a job that is not necessarily dangerous,
00:23:04.540 although it can be, but it's necessary to keep society going. This is garbage men, bricklayers,
00:23:13.780 construction, and mailmen. Now, I know some construction is very difficult, but if you're
00:23:18.840 pouring concrete or something like that. Next, we're going to be, the job is boring, and if you
00:23:24.020 make a mistake, it would ruin your day, but nobody's going to die, right? It's a pretty boring job,
00:23:29.220 you might be on your feet all day. So I put cashier, babysitter, assistant, sales, hairstylist.
00:23:36.900 And last is the job that's actually fun, you can be passionate about it, and it's low risk. Now,
00:23:44.040 these jobs are the most competitive because everybody wants them. You know, if you follow
00:23:49.000 the rules to be a plumber, most guys can do it. But there's very few successful musicians,
00:23:55.280 comedians, OnlyFans models that actually make money, but the barrier to entry is nothing for
00:24:02.100 these. I mean, anyone can really do it. So imagine when you're down here on the hierarchy of hard jobs,
00:24:10.180 like imagine a crab fisherman hearing you complain about how hard you are down here. It's like the
00:24:16.260 audacity. And you know, there is feedback saying that, okay, well, it takes a lot of mental energy,
00:24:22.960 and you have to be smart. Okay, sure. But even if we did white collar, we divided it between white
00:24:30.780 collar and blue collar. It's way more difficult to be a lawyer, a surgeon, you have to go through
00:24:36.220 school, managing a hedge fund on Wall Street. Like, let's not pretend journalists are, you know.
00:24:43.020 So when I hear streamers, podcasters complain, I just can't take it. I can't do it. That's why,
00:24:50.660 you know, I didn't think it needed. I thought she would say, oh, I agree. I agree, Pearl. You're
00:24:55.420 right. We shouldn't complain. I just said it off the cuff. No, I gotta, I gotta, you hate women.
00:25:01.220 Someone said the streaming is harder than a nine to five. Now you could argue it's,
00:25:05.620 it's competitive, right? It is. I mean, there's a million people wanting to be streamers. But
00:25:10.700 when I see the top streamers, I don't think any of them are crazy intelligent to the point
00:25:17.080 that they weren't, you know, some of them were just lucky. I was lucky. Candace was lucky. Right
00:25:22.600 niche, right time, right person, right place, right contacts. Everyone would rather be a streamer. So
00:25:29.100 90% of workplace deaths are men. Logging workers have the highest fatal injury worker in the United
00:25:37.260 States with a hundred deaths per 100,000 full-time workers. Other occupants with, with high fatal work
00:25:45.460 injury rates include fishing and hunting workers, 75 deaths per 100,000 roofers, 57 deaths per 100,000
00:25:55.320 workers. Reviews and recycle, recyclable material collectors, 41 deaths per 100,000 workers. However,
00:26:05.420 the average fatality for all workers in all occupations in the United States include
00:26:11.380 road transportation incidents. 42% of occupational fatalities in 2021 were caused by roadway incidents.
00:26:20.040 Falls, 16% of occupational fatalities in 2021 were caused by slips, trips, and falls. Homicides,
00:26:28.020 9% of occupational fatalities in 2021 were homicides. Truck drivers, truck drivers make up 20% of total
00:26:35.960 workplace deaths. And five and four or four and five of those deaths were attributed to transportation
00:26:42.740 incidents. Commercial pilots, about three quarters of people who died on the job were commercial pilots.
00:26:48.300 In 2022, women made up 4%, 4% of the logging workforce in the United States, while men make it made up 95.8%
00:26:59.420 of the industry. The salary for male workers in the logging industries was $50,000, which was 1.9 times
00:27:10.740 more than the average salary for female workers, which was $42,000. The forest sector has been historically
00:27:18.140 male-dominated. Even today, fewer than 20% of foresters in the United States are female. Women make up
00:27:25.600 only 17% of the forestry sector. Now, I want you to ask yourself, again, the logger making $50,000 a year, do you
00:27:35.540 think he has any sympathy for the podcasters saying it's really hard to chase down stories, research online,
00:27:43.840 follow the trends? The 4% were women bringing the men coffee. Now, I'm going to take a second to look at the
00:27:52.620 website chat. Give me a second, guys. Okay, so we're going to check out the chat on the website.
00:27:58.980 Dangerous jobs, air operations on a U.S. carrier. It's a floating airport where in a small space add
00:28:05.580 fuels, bombs, missiles, jets intakes, rotors, propellers, fires, weather, and oceans. Hard is
00:28:12.200 relative. DM says, hard is relative to the environment the person is raised in. I think you're
00:28:16.780 referring to physical labor. Podcasting is mental. Well, not even. Hard is, you know, going to law
00:28:23.800 school and finishing. I mean, that's harder, I would say, than being a podcaster. Hard is becoming
00:28:29.840 a surgeon and going to school for 15 years. If we're going to talk about mental hard. Now, again, it is
00:28:36.300 competitive. It requires creativity. But I just, I, you, I've lived it. Okay, I've put on a show.
00:28:45.140 I've done all of the jobs at some point that you need to do to put on a show. And you will not
00:28:51.760 convince me that it's harder than any of the jobs higher on the top half of that pyramid. You just
00:28:59.080 won't. I disagree. And we're in such a privileged position as women to be in these jobs. And yet,
00:29:06.200 we still find a way to complain. Now, I want to compare and contrast the men talking about their
00:29:13.840 jobs being hard. So I saw this video of a plumber talking about five reasons you shouldn't be a
00:29:20.000 plumber. There are some things that are very difficult about this career. And if you're not
00:29:23.900 cut out for it, you shouldn't go into it. And that brings us to number one. One of the reasons why you
00:29:28.800 shouldn't become a plumber is because people aren't going to help you on the job site. Now, you are going
00:29:33.600 to be given directions. You are going to be looked at over your shoulder. People are going to make sure
00:29:38.440 that you're safe. But for the most part, when you're struggling, they're going to expect you to
00:29:42.520 figure it out and get it done. Does that sound a little bit harsh to you? Like they expect you
00:29:47.120 to put in the grunt work. They expect you to sweat. They expect you to get the task done
00:29:51.900 because they themselves, the other people that are monitoring you and supervising you also have tasks.
00:29:58.920 It's not like they're sitting there twiddling their thumbs. No, you two are a team and they have a
00:30:03.620 very difficult job themselves. Your journey person is going to have to do the hardest parts of the job.
00:30:07.820 They're going to have to do the installation part of the job. They're going to have to do the
00:30:10.820 soldering. They're going to have to get the job done. They got to supervise that it's done. They
00:30:14.980 also have to make sure that they are up to code when it's done. They got to make sure everybody's
00:30:18.840 safe. Like they have a lot of tasks themselves. If they turn and see you and you're struggling and
00:30:23.760 you're working hard, a lot of times they're just going to sit back and let you struggle and let you
00:30:29.280 figure it. And if you can't handle that, if that doesn't sound like your cup of tea, then that's not
00:30:34.300 something you should probably get into because that's the way it is throughout the
00:30:37.680 entire career. And just so you know, it doesn't stop at the apprenticeship. There comes a point
00:30:42.380 where you're a journey person and you're going to struggle and you're going to sweat. And every
00:30:46.620 single person around you, including the customer, is just going to sit back and watch you struggle.
00:30:51.920 And the truth is, is that most of those people can't help you even if they wanted to help you.
00:30:56.200 Do you understand? This is a difficult career and you need to have a fortified mind to be able to
00:31:00.920 move forward in it. So when you're in your apprenticeship and your journey person turns to you
00:31:05.260 and sees you struggling and just lets it happen, that's not because they're evil.
00:31:09.660 It's not because they don't care. The reason why they're doing that is because they had to do that
00:31:14.760 themselves to get competent. And in order to make sure you become competent, they got to take their
00:31:19.620 hands off the tools and let you sweat, let you cuss, let you figure it out. Another reason why you
00:31:25.020 shouldn't become a plumber, reason number two, is because people expect you to be good. Listen,
00:31:30.200 they don't expect you to be all right. They don't expect you to be adequate. They expect you to be
00:31:37.180 good. You're going to be expected to be an authority on the subject. You're going to be expected to be
00:31:42.860 good enough to figure out the problem. That doesn't mean necessarily right then and there, but they are
00:31:48.240 expecting you to have the mental problem solving abilities to be able to get to the answer of this
00:31:54.860 problem. This means sometimes you're not going to know the answer and you're going to have to call up
00:31:59.060 the supplier, figure out if they have anything on the market that might suit the current situation.
00:32:04.040 You might have to call the manufacturer of whatever it is you're working on to ask them
00:32:09.000 why this certain event is taking place. You have to be wise enough. You got to be smart enough. You
00:32:14.040 got to have problem solving abilities enough. You got to have enough humility to be able to say,
00:32:19.140 I don't know what's going on and go figure it out. Without that, if you can't do it, the third reason
00:32:24.660 why you shouldn't become a plumber is because people are going to call you on the weekends.
00:32:29.640 Now, I know this might cut into your work-life balance. I totally appreciate that. And plumbers,
00:32:35.080 when we get very good, we get calls on the weekend specifically for help to help people out. That's
00:32:40.800 something you have to understand. Inherently, by getting called on a weekend, a lot of that sometimes
00:32:46.520 is one of the biggest compliments you can get because people know you're good and people know you have
00:32:51.400 the answers and people know... Okay. Now, the reason I brought this up is I want you to pay
00:32:55.940 attention to the way he talks about his job. Even in a video where he hypothetically could be
00:33:01.500 complaining, he's not complaining. He's saying, look, this is a difficult job. He's not saying,
00:33:06.160 oh, we work so hard. My life is so hard. He's saying, look, this is a hard job. You're going to be
00:33:12.480 called on the weekends. And I want to compare and contrast. Oh, I have one more video I'm going to show you
00:33:17.780 where Mike Rowe talks about the difficult jobs on... He talks about America's most dangerous jobs.
00:33:25.960 Let me pull this up.
00:33:26.960 ...sell dirty jobs in 2003 with no real success. And the network said, we do have something,
00:33:34.220 though, that we're kind of curious about, which is crab fishing in the Bering Sea.
00:33:38.500 Would you be interested in exploring that? And I said, yeah, sure.
00:33:42.480 And they showed me some footage. Little boats, big water. Cold.
00:33:46.620 All right. And so I flew from San Francisco to Seattle, Seattle to Anchorage, Anchorage,
00:33:53.340 one of those little planes that become a statistic down in job number seven or eight there
00:33:57.920 called Penn Air. And they fly you to the middle of the Aleutian chain and you land at Dutch Harbor,
00:34:02.980 Alaska. And you get off the plane and you check into what looks like it might have been a motel
00:34:08.480 once upon a time. And then you get on one of these boats and you start fishing. And then you realize
00:34:13.480 what actual fishing really and truly is. 20, 30 foot seas, temperatures that can swing 40 degrees
00:34:21.020 in five minutes. You want to talk about danger. I actually thought this was a misprint. You'll love
00:34:27.860 this. They gave me an actuarial chart before I went out on the boat. Three columns, injury rates,
00:34:36.920 catastrophic injury rates. Now, again, crab fishing, female conservative influencer and mortality rates.
00:34:46.420 Now, I'm on this little Penn Air flight from Anchorage to Dutch and it's sporty, right? I got a
00:34:52.800 bush pilot up there and he's like saying, all right, folks, hang on. We're going to give
00:34:56.520 whenever you're landing and the pilot comes on and says, ah, you know what? Let's give it a shot.
00:35:02.500 Right? You can hear the sound of your sphincter slam shut and you're just like, the pilot's going
00:35:08.340 to give it a shot because like 40% of the flights that come into Dutch, they abort. They just turn
00:35:13.080 back around and they land in Cold Bay or some other place because you're flying in between mountains
00:35:18.020 and the wind is crazy. So I'm on this plane being up and down and back and forth and I'm reading
00:35:24.420 these actuarial charts and I'm thinking somebody's just fucking with me and this can't be true.
00:35:28.200 What do you think the injury rate is for a man who works on a crab boat for a full season, which is
00:35:37.560 about at that time in 2003 is six weeks. The injury rate. 20% higher. 50. Higher. 100%. Yeah, you're
00:35:47.920 going to get injured on those type of jobs. You are correct, Adam. 100%. Yeah, that's why I don't do
00:35:54.080 those kind of things. I stay here on podcasts. And to be clear, even Adam says it. I don't
00:35:59.860 do those things because they are harder, easier, harder, easier, harder. A couple of stitches,
00:36:07.660 broken finger, right? A mild, you know, contusion. You're going to get knocked around for sure.
00:36:14.300 Guaranteed. Catastrophic injury rate. 8%. Wow. Six weeks. So yeah, an iron pot's going to slide
00:36:23.000 across an icy desk and shatter your pelvis. All right. You know, Jesus, Mike, you're going
00:36:28.160 to lose an eye. You're, you're, you're going to dislocate an elbow. A helicopter is going
00:36:34.000 to come again, flown by one of these poor bastards down in category number seven, who's probably
00:36:38.480 not going to make it back to drag your ass off the boat, right? To some hospital. They're
00:36:43.340 eight percent. Yeah. Okay. The mortality rate, column three, it's not even a percentage. They
00:36:52.260 don't even give it a percentage number. One a week. One a week. Right now. One a week. So again.
00:37:00.000 So all to get us crabs, just so Americans can eat crabs. One man dies a week. So again, you know,
00:37:07.440 I have family that served in the military. My boyfriend, he served in the military. He was
00:37:11.860 on a boat. And it's like, when you see men doing real jobs, doing the jobs that keep society running,
00:37:20.240 you feel some type of way when you have conservative female influencers saying that their job's hard,
00:37:27.820 complaining at all, saying that this is so difficult. I disagree. If you want to come at me
00:37:33.140 because I disagree with you, fine. But this is the thing. So Joy Taylor spent all of those years in
00:37:41.240 media and everyone around her told her that she was oppressed. Everyone around her said that her job
00:37:49.160 was really hard, that she had to work twice as hard as men. And the thing is, when I actually managed
00:37:55.380 men versus women in media, I saw a completely different perspective. We are absolutely at an
00:38:01.120 advantage. It is stupid. And I'm grateful for it, right? I'm very thankful to you guys for allowing
00:38:06.940 me to do what I do, you know, but we have to be, we have to have an honest conversation about this.
00:38:12.340 The men have to be 10 times better to be in the same position that we are. Do you think there was
00:38:17.540 a white guy that knew more than Candace Owens about conservative politics that maybe that was not
00:38:26.160 famous? But if you ask him about the history of anything, he knew more than her. Same with Brett
00:38:31.580 Cooper. Same with Amala. Now, I'm not saying it's right or wrong. We're in the business of entertainment.
00:38:36.720 So the audience gets to pick what's entertaining. But again, the men have to train 10 times as hard
00:38:44.980 as hard to get 10% of, or they have to work 10 times as hard to get 10% of the money, the credit,
00:38:53.940 or the recognition. And we're out here living life on easy mode and complaining about it. Again,
00:39:00.320 how dare you? How dare you complain at all? Never. And the thing is, when I, when I talk about this
00:39:05.880 stuff, I'm told I hate women. I'm told that I'm somehow evil for pointing this stuff out.
00:39:11.620 And when, and I get demonetized on YouTube for pointing out things that are true, they're true.
00:39:19.160 Megyn Kelly did not have to be as good as her male counterparts to get the positions she got.
00:39:25.380 She is a smart woman, but she did not have to be as good to interview the president. It just is what
00:39:31.060 it is. If she was not attractive, she would not be in the same position. It's not right or wrong. It's
00:39:35.900 not bad or good, but come like complain when there's one guy dying a week in Alaska on these
00:39:42.280 boats to get you crab makes you seem pretty spoiled to me. I don't know.
00:39:46.280 One person statistically is going to die every week during the six week period of crab fishing
00:39:53.900 on the Bering sea. Now, people who watch that show, which by the way, is now in its 20th season.
00:39:59.840 Is it Deadliest Catch? This is Deadliest. This is the show I've been narrating from the, from the
00:40:05.120 jump. Um, they know you can't script the Bering sea. We don't, we know something bad is going to
00:40:14.920 happen, but we don't know when. And in, in that first season, I spent six weeks up there.
00:40:20.100 When I left, everybody I met, including me had gotten injured. One of eight in 10 or eight out
00:40:28.980 of a hundred, 8% had gotten seriously hurt. And I went to six funerals. Wow. The, the actuarial chart
00:40:37.200 in 2003 for injury rates and mortality rates on the Bering sea was not in fact an actuarial chart.
00:40:45.700 It was a prophecy and it came true 100%. And when I got back to, uh, to the States and, and talked to
00:40:52.180 my friends at Discovery and we all looked at this footage, you know, we, we, we realized that the
00:40:58.740 question you're asking is, is not so different than what, what do people want to watch? Like what,
00:41:04.980 what is satisfying curiosity really mean? What does Discovery really mean? Is it, is it limited to,
00:41:12.660 you know, how the universe works and planet earth or, or can we look at what it means to leave the
00:41:19.140 cave and bring home the meat? Like, is that actually a thing you can do on, on television?
00:41:25.860 And when we saw that footage and we saw real men, most of whom, you know, the lower 48 doesn't know
00:41:32.420 exist. And the crazy thing is I was looking for men in this job that were complaining online.
00:41:38.180 Couldn't find them. Couldn't find them. The closest thing that I found was the one that I
00:41:44.420 showed before. And he wasn't even complaining. He was saying, this is what's difficult about doing
00:41:49.140 the job. How many complaints did I find about teachers? How many complaints did I find from
00:41:54.100 women in marketing, human resources? I'm going to go through them in a second, but we are such a
00:41:59.540 privileged class. Again, you're going to say, I hate women because I point out that we cannot and do
00:42:06.660 not have as hard of lives as men. That's true. That's true. And you can get mad at me for it.
00:42:12.180 You can say I'm a woman hater because of it, but it doesn't make it any less true.
00:42:17.220 I mean, nobody had ever gone up there with cameras before, much less put them on a boat,
00:42:21.780 much less get to know the deckhands and the greenhorns and the captains and live in the midst of
00:42:27.060 that shit storm. Nobody even knew it was happening. The Pribilov Islands. What are those? What do you
00:42:33.060 mean you're 50 miles off the coast of Russia with 800 pound crab pots going over the rail?
00:42:40.740 What do you mean you don't sleep for 48, 58, 70 hours at a time? Holy. Oh my gosh. I could not.
00:42:48.740 I did a 48 hour live stream once and I fell asleep. I did back in my, in my streaming days. Wow.
00:42:55.220 What do you mean? Six people are going to die in the next six weeks.
00:42:58.980 Like all that stuff was unknown. And then all of a sudden it was self-evident toward your future.
00:43:06.180 Looks bright. Now, how do women fare in construction? 11% of the construction industry is women
00:43:13.700 and women only stay in the job for an average of five to seven years. We have a tendency. So now it's
00:43:23.940 interesting because I didn't find articles talking about crab fishing, about the guys complaining
00:43:29.220 about crab fishing. But I did find an article talking about why nursing is super hard. 10 reasons
00:43:36.660 why being a nurse is not easy. One, you hold in your hands, the start of life. Number two, you have to
00:43:44.180 be familiar with so many medical terms. Three, you have to be accountable for your actions. Four, isn't
00:43:54.260 that? You have to see someone else suffer. You have to be altruistic. You have to be patient.
00:44:01.220 You have to smile always. I mean, do you guys, again, do you hear, I'm just, I want you to think
00:44:07.140 of the perspective of that guy on a fishing boat in Alaska reading this article. Oh, you have to smile
00:44:12.900 always. Okay. You don't have holidays. You get too attached and you hold in your hands the end of life.
00:44:19.940 Now we have the ladies on TikTok showing what a day in the life of a nurse looks like. Now I'm
00:44:26.980 going to compare and contrast this with the crab fisher. Earliest memory. I never wanted to be
00:44:32.020 anything but a nurse. I worked my whole life to have those two letters. This is so incredibly difficult
00:44:37.460 physically and emotionally. It is all consuming. It is complex in ways that I'll never be able to
00:44:43.220 describe and you'll never understand unless you are a nurse. From my earliest memory, I never wanted to
00:44:47.940 be anything but a nurse. I worked my whole life to have those two letters follow my name. The irony
00:44:53.220 that such a complicated profession is represented by just two letters will never be lost on me.
00:44:57.220 Nursing has taken from me in many ways that I will never get back. And some days are so exhausting that
00:45:02.180 I question why I became a nurse at all. And it's on those days that I remind myself of how bad I used
00:45:06.740 to want to stand in the confident, capable nursing shoes that I get to stand in today. I would be so proud
00:45:11.940 of how fiercely I care for my patients. And I have far surpassed many expectations that I have ever set for
00:45:17.300 myself as a nurse. And for that, I am so grateful. And unexpectedly, I am so proud of how hard I have
00:45:21.860 fought to say that I love being a nurse, even when it doesn't left me back. Now, why don't the guys in
00:45:26.980 the same position make TikToks like this? Because they're working! Because they're doing the job!
00:45:34.580 How hard can the job be if you can TikTok during it? Am I wrong for saying that? Now, let me go on
00:45:44.740 YouTube. Oh my gosh. Ugh, we had tech issues. How will I survive this hard job? Now, that's deadliest catch.
00:45:53.060 Let's just I feel like it would help us to get to get a real vision of what these guys are doing.
00:46:00.020 260. And we are going to check the first spot. And the thing about the first spot is whatever that
00:46:06.260 pot has, the rest of them are probably going to have that. So if it's blank, then the rest of them are
00:46:11.540 probably going to be blank. I don't know. Looks more difficult than the nurse.
00:46:24.900 What is more difficult? On the saga. Worse for us because all our equipment's wide open.
00:46:30.580 All our personnel are right next to the starboard rail. With winds increasing and seas building,
00:46:37.940 moving thousands of pounds of metal across a slick deck makes a dangerous job downright deadly.
00:46:44.180 Hang on, hang on. I'm going to come down. Okay.
00:46:46.660 Hopefully the crab's here. Light off deck. No, no, no. Coming in.
00:46:51.140 Yeah. Holy God. Okay. So, you know, run one stupid mistake, which we're all human,
00:46:58.580 we get tired. We make mistakes. We're human. You could end up dead. Versus the female dominated jobs
00:47:05.940 modeling. Cashiers are 70% women. Assistants, majority women. Hairstylists, majority women.
00:47:14.020 Babysitting, majority women. Daycare, majority women. And then nursing, also majority women.
00:47:20.980 After my shift yesterday, 14 and a half hours, I was nonstop. I had seven patients. The worst night
00:47:26.740 of my entire nursing career. I know some nurses, especially those who work med-surg,
00:47:30.980 work these types of shifts all the time. I don't understand how being the same floor is always
00:47:35.460 like this. It's one of those floors where I literally cannot understand how that's anyone's
00:47:39.540 staff job. But let me just rant off my seven patient assignment to you. I had an N.A. to myself.
00:47:44.500 I don't know. Sometimes I feel like that doesn't really make a difference much. Sometimes it does.
00:47:47.860 Number one, independent. Just request pain meds probably every four to six hours. Patient number two,
00:47:52.420 kind of feeling like he was going to have seizures. And he did have a couple seizures. He needed to be like
00:47:56.340 monitored, even at a van. Patient number three, work up for a stroke seizure. He's confused.
00:48:00.660 Doesn't want his IV left in. Stop the bed alarm. Q4 NIH neuroassessment. And then at one point,
00:48:06.260 doesn't want to do any of it or respond. I don't know if it's serious or not. It's just being difficult.
00:48:10.660 And then you have to call rapid. Number four, Q2 turn, nonverbal, Q4 NIH neuroassessment on heparin.
00:48:17.940 Number five was pretty easy. Thank God. Number six, Q4 neuroassessment, nonverbal,
00:48:23.940 two turn, continent needs to be changed every so often. Now, again, I'm not saying this is
00:48:30.820 completely easy. I mean, she's above, she's still above us. She's still above the streamers. Okay.
00:48:37.620 She's still above the YouTubers. Where would you, I'm going to put nurse. I'm going to put that with
00:48:43.140 construction, garbage, brick layers. Would you guys say that's fair? Maybe it's harder than a cashier,
00:48:49.300 I'd say. Yeah. I'm going to, I'm going to put them in the middle. So you're not even at the bottom,
00:48:53.460 but the guys at the top, they never complain ever. So I don't usually post this type of content, but
00:49:02.980 I want to tell you guys how I feel so that if you feel like this way too, then you don't feel like
00:49:09.460 you're alone because I feel kind of alone right now. I had a really, really hard shift last night and
00:49:16.740 that I was really scared and I felt super incompetent and I feel like I had no idea what
00:49:23.060 I was doing. And I was terrified for my patient and it was just really scary. And there was just so much
00:49:29.940 going on. And I was terrified for her and I didn't know if she was going to make it at one point. And
00:49:37.460 I just, I was, Oh, it just sucked. It just really sucked. And I felt so stupid in front of everybody,
00:49:46.100 but it's okay. My patient's okay. Like I'm so, so, so thankful for my team. I could have never done
00:49:54.660 it without them. They saved my life. Like I love my nursing team. Oh my gosh. They're amazing.
00:50:02.260 I still have not seen the crab fisherman complaining. He saw one guy die a week. There's
00:50:08.020 guys that do that every season. They do it. They do, they do every, they're the captains of the boat.
00:50:13.940 They keep signing up. I don't see them on TikTok crying. I just don't, I don't even see them offhandedly
00:50:20.260 saying how hard they work. I just don't. But I, I don't know. I almost like I was, it was hard not to
00:50:27.620 like cry during it. I feel pretty numb right now. I'm pretty, pretty, pretty stupid. Just stupid
00:50:34.420 and incompetent and embarrassed, but she's okay. Men one in the chat. If you've ever felt stupid,
00:50:42.820 incompetent or embarrassed at work, that's part of work. Even me look at, and by the way, I'd like to
00:50:50.340 say I'm at the bottom, the bottom. Do you know, I've been embarrassed before. Hell yeah. I mean,
00:50:58.020 even as someone that does a show, people make fun of my show all the time. Oh, every day of my life.
00:51:03.940 But you know what? I will never, I will never complain. I will never cry about it because I'm at
00:51:09.700 the bottom of the pyramid. Know your place. Top of the pyramid. That's when, that's when you should
00:51:18.260 complain. I know exactly the audacity, the audacity. But the thing is, this is the challenge.
00:51:25.940 We go through life being told like, okay, I'm going to take Candace Owens, Brett Cooper, Amala.
00:51:33.460 I could do this in other industries. I know my industry the best. Right leaning, conservative
00:51:38.580 women. None of them are as smart, including me as our male counterparts. You guys know I'm the biggest
00:51:45.380 fan of Rolo. He doesn't like me. I could see why. I could understand why. But I'm a huge fan. Huge.
00:51:52.180 I think he's so intelligent. And he's done this 20 years. I have more like subscribers than him. It's
00:51:58.980 okay. I'm not, I'm not bragging. But you get a leg up. Ben Shapiro was an actual lawyer. Managed a huge
00:52:07.220 media company. Cute conservative influencer who follows cultural trends. Totally fine. I do the
00:52:15.300 same thing. Not wrong. Not wrong. Not wrong. But she doesn't have to work as hard as Ben. Candace
00:52:22.740 doesn't have to work as hard as the men. Amala didn't have to work as hard as Dennis Prager. Totally
00:52:28.820 okay. Totally fine. Not right. Not wrong. But the men have to be 10 times as good to get 10% of the clout.
00:52:37.940 And that's why men don't respect women's money. Because it's so much easier for us to get it.
00:52:44.580 You know, that's why I'm really not against women working. I'm really not. Because, okay,
00:52:49.460 I'm thinking if you're a plumber and you can work 80 hours a week or work 40 and your wife could be one of
00:52:55.620 the, a babysitter, a cashier, an assistant, sales, hairstylist. You guys could retire 20 years early.
00:53:04.820 She gets the easy money. You get the hard money. I'm gonna continue. Pearl Shapiro and Prager are
00:53:12.100 terrible examples. Look, you might not like Ben. I get it. People don't like him. But you have to admit
00:53:18.020 being a lawyer is harder than being an actress. I understand there's nepotism. I'm just asking,
00:53:24.820 what is a more difficult job? Okay. You don't like PragerU. You don't like Ben. They're still,
00:53:31.220 they've still started a giant media company and managed a ton of people. I can tell you,
00:53:37.140 managing people is hard. I did it. I did it like overnight. I got to roughly 20 employees at one
00:53:43.620 point. That was the most stressed I've ever been. You guys saw me. I was pulling my hair out.
00:53:49.140 Starting a media company, not easy. It's not. That is 10 times harder than being a female
00:53:55.460 conservative influencer. And I can say it because I've done it. Because I've done it. Next off,
00:54:02.420 we have teachers. We have why teaching is hard. Teaching is one of the hardest jobs in the world.
00:54:09.700 As I am an English teacher, I am the one who experiences all the difficulties of it. Even
00:54:17.220 though it gives you pleasure to teach something and transfer your knowledge from people, it really
00:54:23.140 takes a lot of the things away from you. First of all, people must understand that we are also human
00:54:30.260 beings. Thus, there are moments where teachers are unhappy and dismotivated. I don't say demotivated.
00:54:36.820 Dismotivated. Okay. But we should do our best not to reflect this to our teachers.
00:54:43.220 They said, Pearl, we don't have to respect them. I didn't say you had to respect them. I said, okay,
00:54:48.260 what's more difficult? What was a more difficult path? Lawyer, high-end law firm, actor.
00:54:56.180 One could be more competitive. No, not a lawyer. There's so many people trying to be lawyers. But you
00:55:01.940 could argue one has more people trying to do it, but that doesn't make it more difficult. Sorry, I'm
00:55:07.220 going to continue. All right. Now, this teacher has the idea. Why would a teacher think that they have
00:55:12.260 one of the most difficult jobs in America, in the world? Again, it's the delusion. That lady worked her,
00:55:18.260 she slept her way up at Fox, Joy Taylor, and everyone had to pretend it was just as hard. The teachers have
00:55:25.380 to do the same thing where we all have to pretend that you work just as hard as everyone else, even
00:55:31.780 though you get three months off of the year. I'm not saying it's unimportant. I'm not saying there are
00:55:37.620 not challenges, but let's not pretend it is the same thing as the top of the hierarchy of hard jobs.
00:55:48.740 Teaching is really hard and many reasons for it, including the ones happening inside and outside
00:55:54.980 the classroom. If I need to mention about the ones happening inside, it is really hard to communicate
00:56:00.580 with people from different age groups and backgrounds. They may all have different problems.
00:56:05.860 When I look at my students, I can see them completely busy with homework from school. I can't
00:56:11.700 motivate them to study the English that I teach. When you work in private school, you have to make sure
00:56:16.740 all your students are happy with their presence at the school as they basically pay the money.
00:56:21.700 This is another problem that puts teachers under pressure. As I said, many of my teenage students
00:56:27.460 have a lot of homework and it's hard to keep them motivated at my lessons. The same problem occurs with
00:56:32.500 my adult students who are working in the same place as they are working really hard. This can't be
00:56:38.260 effective in the class. They can't be as effective in the class and feel down. When they come down with high
00:56:44.260 expectations and can't make them happen because of the reasons I listed above, or maybe you're not a
00:56:48.500 good teacher. Maybe isn't that possible too? They feel down as once again, we are the ones who have
00:56:53.860 to motivate them with our speeches and actions. You don't have to motivate them. You have to fail them
00:56:59.540 if they don't do the work and make sure you're teaching them the material. When you're doing
00:57:05.540 what you are doing in private school is more than teaching. You can't just write down the rules on the
00:57:09.860 board and leave the class. You have to be with them in all time. She then talks about how she has to be
00:57:16.500 prepared. When we are talking about teaching specifically, that requires more effort from you
00:57:23.700 as teaching a language needs more than explaining rules. You have to show a lot of diversity in class
00:57:29.460 to help your students have a good process in learning. Isn't that part of working? Being prepared for a job.
00:57:36.740 Okay. Now I'm going to switch over and show you the TikToks of women complaining about how hard
00:57:44.660 teaching is. So a while back, I posted a video about how being an elementary teacher is dead-ass hard.
00:57:49.540 There's no way I could do this for another 20 years. And so I'm reading the comments asking people
00:57:53.860 for advice like, what do I teach? Because the middle school teachers are telling me that it's the same,
00:57:56.980 nothing changes. And in fact, the high school teachers are telling me it gets worse and shock. And as I'm
00:58:01.380 reading these comments, I see a comment that centered with me, hit me in my soul.
00:58:06.340 He said, the reason being an elementary teacher is so hard is because they don't know how to be
00:58:10.100 humans yet. If that ain't the truth, I'm about to tell you the story. So about a week ago, we had a
00:58:14.740 new... Do you know how to be a human if you're significantly overweight? I mean, am I the only
00:58:19.780 one thinking that? Like, you obviously don't know how to feed yourself normal portion sizes.
00:58:24.180 Preschooler come in. Yeah, I know. It's April. Welcome to Teach Your Life. And I understand these
00:58:30.100 kids are like four and five and she's brand new. So this is probably the first time she's ever been
00:58:34.580 in school. So I go over and I say, let me help you write your name on the back of your artwork. What's your
00:58:38.980 name? She looks me in my eye and says, I don't know. I try again. I say, so what does your mommy
00:58:44.900 call you at home? Like, what's your name? She literally said, I don't know. The little girl
00:58:50.100 didn't know her own name. I expected a lot of things coming into elementary,
00:58:54.740 but I did not expect that. And again, you got one guy dying a week versus watching kids,
00:59:01.780 a kid not knowing their own name. This is how I know that that comment could not be more true.
00:59:07.460 They don't know how to be human. They don't know anything. They don't even know their name. And it's
00:59:11.540 given me the grace to be more generous with these kids because they really just don't know. They don't
00:59:17.460 know. And I get, it's super beautiful. This is a beautiful age. How wonderful, how big of a
00:59:21.540 blessing it is to be a part of this part of their development, core memories, understanding life.
00:59:26.500 I get it. It really is rewarding. It really is special, but man, it's so hard. It's so hard
00:59:31.460 sometimes because these kids don't know how to be human. My God. Anyways, I said, you can't make this
00:59:38.020 up. I know. I know. All right. We got one more. You know what? Here we go. Breaking down why teaching
00:59:46.180 is hard right now for the people who are confused. Okay. I feel like I have had a breakthrough and
00:59:50.980 like figured out why teaching is so hard right now. And hopefully this can clear it up for people
00:59:55.860 that are confused and why it's hard in general, but really why it's hard right now. So here it is.
01:00:00.260 So in other jobs, people like work together towards a common goal or like to create a product. Lots of
01:00:06.020 people working together to create something else. However, as a teacher, like the product that you are
01:00:11.300 creating is your students. Like you are literally morphing a person. That is the job. The job is
01:00:17.860 to like morph a human and like minimum 15 humans maximum. Like if you're like me, I teach middle
01:00:23.540 school many periods, like 180 humans. Okay. And like in other morphing human jobs, like nutritionists or
01:00:31.140 fitness coaches or nail techs or a hairstylist or a hairdresser, these are professions where paying adults
01:00:39.780 are coming to those professions to be morphed. They want to be morphed and they are paying adults
01:00:44.500 who are going to sit quietly because they are like committed to the service that you are providing.
01:00:47.940 They do not want you to mess it up and they like trust you a lot to do it. But with school, you are
01:00:52.980 morphing children. You are morphing children that most of the time don't want to be morphed. And like
01:00:59.380 developmentally, it just makes sense that they would fight being morphed. They're like trying to find
01:01:03.540 themselves and they don't want to be there and they want to do literally everything else. And they have to
01:01:07.620 be there and your job is to morph their minds and help them. So you're molding humans, lots of them.
01:01:12.500 The humans are children and the children that you're morphing and molding and helping don't really
01:01:17.140 want that help. Okay. So your job is hard because you have to do your job. I can't do this anymore. I just
01:01:25.300 can't. So that job as a teacher, that's just the job. And that makes sense. Like that's the job we signed up for.
01:01:30.260 But it takes a lot of time and focused work. You get three months off during the year. Who
01:01:36.500 here wants three months off? You know, it's like, who here wants three? You know, who wants to? They
01:01:41.620 get off at like three o'clock. My high school got off at 2.30. 2.30.
01:01:46.500 To do that. Because I mean, if you know anything about like changing a person, like that's like
01:01:51.060 really hard. Okay. So when do we have that focus time? When do we have the time to create these
01:01:55.220 engaging lessons that are going to mold their minds and to grade things and give feedback?
01:01:59.220 When we are being pulled during our planning periods, pulled during our lunch to cover things
01:02:04.580 and do things and be places because there's a teaching and a sub shortage. When are we going to do
01:02:08.340 that if there's so many standardized tests that while we're trying to mold their minds, we actually
01:02:11.780 they not only have teachers now, they have teachers assistants. They have two teachers.
01:02:17.060 We actually have to beginning, middle and end of the year give these standardized tests
01:02:19.940 for them to do well on them, but we can't morph them to do well on them because we're giving them.
01:02:23.380 How are we morphing the humans if we don't have unencumbered workdays to get better at our job?
01:02:27.220 And how do we morph them if we don't have the money to pay to live a life that gives us the energy to
01:02:31.780 morph them? I mean, you have three months out of the year to drive Uber. Okay. That was years ago. Now you
01:02:38.340 get off at four and the elementary kids get off at 3 30. Parents really don't want to watch their kids,
01:02:44.500 huh? They're like, keep them longer. Do not send them back. Okay. I have like three other industries,
01:02:52.100 but no, it's interesting because when men are asked the same question about their industry,
01:02:58.100 we have a tendency, they have a tendency to admit that this is not a difficult job. Now,
01:03:04.340 you know, Candace is saying, you know, Pearl, it's, it's just because you don't have an entertaining show.
01:03:11.780 You just hate on women. I'm sure the, the people that don't do what you do, they wouldn't agree with
01:03:17.380 you. No. Well, let's see. You know, Kai Sinet has jumped over. I was at speed. I get them confused.
01:03:24.740 He's one of the biggest streamers. One of these guys has jumped over a car on stream speed. Yeah.
01:03:30.740 Yeah. They, you know, they, it's crazy. They go to city to city. They are select. I don't get it.
01:03:35.780 No offense. Like shout out to you guys, but I don't, I don't understand why they're so famous,
01:03:40.660 but you can't say they don't do an entertaining show. What do they say? When is streaming harder?
01:03:45.860 Is YouTubing harder than a nine to five? Um, we asked speed this and I remember one time he's like,
01:03:52.180 streaming. Is it harder than a nine to five? Is streaming harder than a nine to five?
01:03:55.860 Yes. No. Hell no. Streaming harder than a nine to five? Okay. Let me, let me give you.
01:04:02.580 So me, I hate women, but he says the same thing. My, my, my results on it, right? So like.
01:04:09.380 Cause do you, have you ever had another job other than streaming?
01:04:11.940 No. Okay. Listen, let me tell you something Shannon.
01:04:14.020 Anybody who says that streaming is harder than nine to five is an idiot.
01:04:16.500 I, I, I, I work so hard on my streams. Right.
01:04:21.220 It takes a lot of hard work. It takes a lot of hard planning. It takes a lot of, um,
01:04:24.580 you got to be in front of a camera for dozens of hours. Okay. I understand that. You feel me?
01:04:29.700 It's, it's, it's, it's hard. You feel what I'm saying? In terms of like,
01:04:31.700 the skill that I at least do it on. Right.
01:04:33.940 And some people do it on. It's hard. Right.
01:04:35.860 But harder than a nine to five, you're talking about somebody that may not even want to even be there.
01:04:41.300 Right. I, I, I, I love streaming. Yeah.
01:04:46.660 It's like, I think about it all the time. And see, this is on the hierarchy of heart.
01:04:50.660 The people at the bottom get to be passionate. We get to be creative. We're so lucky.
01:04:55.780 The people at the top don't always have that luxury. They understand a job is a job.
01:04:59.780 The other thing that men understand is that somebody has to do it. There's somebody, you know,
01:05:05.700 there are jobs, men know, okay, that's not a high paying job, but somebody has to step up and
01:05:11.460 has to have to do it. And men are willing to sacrifice for the greater good of society.
01:05:17.060 Not all, not all, not all. Many women are not. I mean, there are the women that go into the trades,
01:05:22.260 like 7%, but it's not the majority.
01:05:24.180 I treat it as if it's like a, I got, there's a job, but you love it.
01:05:29.940 Yeah, but I love it. The average nine to five worker don't want to be there.
01:05:33.780 Yeah, they ain't loving it.
01:05:34.420 Don't want to be there.
01:05:34.900 Yeah.
01:05:35.380 I remember I had to, I had to do something in the grocery store. I had to pack things,
01:05:38.180 and I was like, damn, I don't want to be here. And like, man, and they had to find ways,
01:05:43.140 and they're not even really getting paid. They got, like, you gotta, you get paid,
01:05:46.260 and you gotta, that shit's going straight to bills and taking care of the kids.
01:05:48.900 Yeah. Next, we have iShowSpeed being asked the same thing.
01:05:53.940 Is streaming harder than having a nine to five?
01:05:56.020 It's streaming, it's streaming, streaming harder than having a nine to five.
01:06:00.260 Well, you never had one, so.
01:06:02.100 I mean, well, when I was 15, I did have a job, and I did.
01:06:05.540 What'd you do?
01:06:06.660 I worked, you know, uh, it was a caretaker home.
01:06:09.860 You know where, like, you send your grandma and grandpa?
01:06:11.780 Yeah.
01:06:12.340 I worked in a kitchen in a caretaker home.
01:06:14.340 Okay.
01:06:14.580 And I was a, like, a server.
01:06:16.260 I used to, you know, give them the food and deliver the food.
01:06:18.660 Yes, yes.
01:06:18.980 But, um, and let me tell you this, no, uh, no.
01:06:25.620 When I, when I worked there, it was, it was way harder.
01:06:28.820 It was, it's just draining, you know?
01:06:30.820 Is streaming harder than you?
01:06:32.340 Okay.
01:06:32.900 So then they agree.
01:06:34.420 Now, it was interesting because I just want to show the disparity in men versus women.
01:06:39.620 And by the way, showing this stuff does not help me.
01:06:43.780 It really doesn't because, you know, I mean, this benefits me too.
01:06:48.500 But I like to be honest about this stuff.
01:06:50.580 So Candace Owens interviews this guy on the USS Liberty.
01:06:54.580 This got 5.4 million views.
01:06:56.900 I'm going to show a male that did the same thing.
01:07:00.020 Longer interview.
01:07:01.300 Live streamed, which makes it more difficult.
01:07:03.460 Right?
01:07:03.940 18,000 views.
01:07:05.540 Unfair, unfair.
01:07:06.900 It's just life.
01:07:07.780 Just life.
01:07:09.060 You could say the same thing for me.
01:07:10.660 Same thing.
01:07:11.300 I had to delete most of my content.
01:07:12.900 So I can't really.
01:07:13.940 What a sad day.
01:07:14.980 Feel free to go to the audacity network.com.
01:07:17.460 If you want me to become YouTube free.
01:07:20.660 Say it with me, guys.
01:07:21.620 YouTube free.
01:07:22.900 But please let me in if you're watching YouTube.