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Minimum wage jobs

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    [DING] Hello.
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    Welcome to self-serve frozen yogurt.
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    Is this your first time?
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    Yeah, we got it.
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    Thanks.
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    Ooh, vanilla.
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    Oh.
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    Oh, no, no.
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    That's not...
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    [BUZZ] Oh, no.
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    Hey, why don't we try that with a spoon?
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    Thanks.
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    [DING] What the...
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    $7 for ice cream?
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    Yes, ma'am.
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    It's 50 cents per ounce, and it
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    seems like your son got quite a lot.
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    This place is ridiculous, such a scam.
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    I swear.
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    Eww, my ice cream is sour.
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    What?
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    Let me see that.
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    Oh.
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    The flavor he chose is tart,
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    but we have a sign for...
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    Come on, Billy.
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    Let's get some real ice cream.
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    But Mom, they have gumballs.
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    [DING] [SIGHS] Hello.
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    Welcome to self-serve frozen yogurt.
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    Is this your first time?
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    Yeah, we got it.
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    Thanks.
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    [WHISTLE SOUND]
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    I've worked a couple minimum wage jobs,
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    but my very first one was at a small
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    business self-serve frozen yogurt place.
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    For the sake of this video,
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    I'll just call it Sugar Spoons.
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    It was just like Menchies or Yogurtland.
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    It worked the same way.
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    Pick the flavor you want,
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    pick the toppings you want,
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    weigh it, pay it, and slay it.
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    And even though North Carolina state law
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    mandated employers must pay their workers
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    no less than $7.25 per hour,
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    I seriously loved my first job.
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    Ew, this isn't vanilla
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    because it taught me a lot
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    about how the world works.
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    Sugar Spoons was a small business
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    run by a group of hardworking women.
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    They didn't have commercials
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    and billboards like all the other
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    big business dessert places.
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    They just had good old-fashioned word
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    of mouth and yelp. So, they really
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    had to stand out, and they did.
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    Frozen yogurt was a very new thing to us
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    small town southerners back in the 2010s,
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    and froyo was marketed as this slightly
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    healthier alternative to ice cream.
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    We were also one of the only dessert
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    places I could remember that always had
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    non-dairy and sugar-free options
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    for people with dietary restrictions,
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    making it the perfect
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    place for the whole family.
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    When a friend from school referred me
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    to work there, I soon learned being
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    a froyo girl was quite
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    the scrumdiddlyumptious job.
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    A lot of my time consisted of gloving
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    up to refill the toppings bar.
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    I was snipping sour belts down to size,
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    cutting cookie dough into cubes,
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    slicing strawberries into slivers.
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    I loved prep work.
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    But sometimes I'd take a little too long
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    in the back, and I'd be lying if
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    I said that wasn't on purpose.
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    Back in high school,
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    I was terrified of talking to customers,
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    especially when I needed to be assertive.
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    Excuse me, ma'am.
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    Could you please get
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    a cup of yogurt first?
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    Why?
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    It's just a piece of candy.
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    Right, but that's the toppings bar.
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    You're supposed to add
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    those to your yogurt.
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    Well, I don't want yogurt.
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    But [SLAPPING SOUND]
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    Is there a problem?
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    Well, yeah.
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    You need to pay for that.
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    For thi- What is it, like 30 cents?
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    I'm just tasting it.
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    It's not like you give people sample cups,
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    so how am I supposed
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    to know if I like anything?
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    [WHISTLE SOUND] Gosh, Illy, if they're
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    such a problem, just kick them out.
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    Listen, I would if I could, but again,
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    this wasn't a corporation with a customer
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    service hotline to scream at.
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    And I was so scared of doing anything
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    to make Cheryl over there ruin
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    our five-star Yelp reputation.
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    But if I could respond with zero
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    consequences, I would say this.
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    What is your problem, Cheryl?
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    This place only needs three F
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    words: froyo, family, and fun.
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    And yet, when you come in,
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    I want to say a fourth F word.
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    But I would never.
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    I would never.
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    [NERVOUS LAUGHTER] Besides navigating treacherous
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    conversations without exploding, another
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    useful skill I learned was cleaning.
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    And I know, I know.
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    Hold on, you've never cleaned before?
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    Please understand, I'm not talking about
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    a bit of decluttering,
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    a little sweeping, or some tidying up.
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    I mean cleaning a bathroom floor
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    to ceiling because some lovely
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    customers get very creative in there.
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    I mean whipping out the gum scraper
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    because some amazing customers will put
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    their gum anywhere
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    except into a trash can.
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    And I sure as heck mean emptying those
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    trash cans that the most incredible
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    customers like to use to dispose of their
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    literal sh- Shifts normally lasted
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    from 4:00 or 6:00 till closing,
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    and closing time was 10:00 or 11:00,
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    depending on the season.
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    And again, I was in high school
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    when I worked at Sugar Spoons.
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    There'd be weeks I was so exhausted.
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    I had swim practice, homework,
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    a horrible boyfriend, college essays,
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    SATs, musical theater.
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    So, when I was alone in that store,
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    and I had the chance to recharge my social
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    battery, I'd soak up every second of it.
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    I'm gonna let you guys
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    in on a little secret.
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    Sometimes when it was slow,
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    my manager would run to the store across
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    the street for strawberries, peanut
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    butter cups, whatever we were low on.
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    It'd be the middle of winter,
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    not a single customer in hours.
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    It was just me, all alone
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    with the store's busted little iPod.
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    And for about 15 uninterrupted minutes,
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    I was a Disney princess
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    in my frozen yogurt castle.
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    You always make me blush so hard.
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    My parents always stay on guard.
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    I drop my cool when you're around.
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    You are the hottest boy in town.
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    I'm dreaming of a kiss from you.
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    And hoping it will all be true.
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    But this is my imagination.
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    And it's reality.
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    I'm a girl in love.
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    And that was the cherry
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    on top of this dream job.
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    I'm kidding.
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    That's not true.
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    What made this job great was that even if
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    10 Cheryls came through the door,
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    there would always be at least one amazing
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    customer that brightened
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    my day without even trying.
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    I loved decorating for kids' birthday
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    parties and seeing how excited
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    they got when they arrived.
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    I loved recommending yogurt flavors
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    and watching people's faces light
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    up when they tried something new.
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    And I loved all the regulars who would
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    come in and catch up at the counter
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    because at the end of the day,
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    whether you're on the clock or off,
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    we are all part of the same community.
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    And I think that's something we forget
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    when we go to a restaurant,
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    a store, a cafe, anywhere really.
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    Minimum wage workers make the world go
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    round, and yet they're treated like dirt.
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    Not just by some customers,
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    but also by lawmakers who think $7.25
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    an hour is fair pay
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    for this kind of hard work.
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    Well, if these people want respect,
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    maybe they should get a real job.
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    These jobs are real jobs.
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    McDonald's feeds 70 million
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    people worldwide every single day.
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    Call me crazy, but if those so-called
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    burger flippers are what makes
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    a multi-billion dollar company grow even
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    more filthy rich every year,
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    I think they should be able to afford a
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    car, a place to live, a vacation to go on.
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    And you know what?
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    [HONK] it, a Nintendo Switch, an iPhone,
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    and dare I say, the very burger they flip.
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    You know how I said when I was 16, I
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    made $7.25 an hour because
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    that was minimum wage back then?
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    Well, I'm sorry to inform you, I'm old.
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    I'll be turning 27 this year.
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    But more importantly,
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    at the time of writing this video,
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    the minimum wage has not yet increased
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    in North Carolina or many other
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    states in the US in over 10 years.
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    To be exact, it's been 16 years.
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    It was $6.55, but it went up to $7.25
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    in 2009 because of a new law.
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    Of course, that didn't stop companies
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    from breaking laws to underpay
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    workers because why would it?
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    A $26 million fine is nothing for a
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    company that makes $20 million every day.
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    And don't get me started on waitresses
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    and waiters or how it's perfectly legal
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    to pay disabled people less
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    than able-bodied people.
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    According to the American Federation
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    of Labor and Congress
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    of Industrial Organizations,
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    if the federal minimum wage had continued
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    to increase, it would
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    be at $24 an hour today.
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    And you may think, well,
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    why does someone who flips burgers or
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    brings a cup of water to my table or bags
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    my groceries need to make
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    more than $7.25 an hour?
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    They're just some high school or
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    college kid working a no-skills job.
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    Minimum wage work is not a mindless,
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    skill-less position.
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    This is cooking, cleaning, managing.
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    This is work that everyone
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    benefits from every single day.
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    And even if it wasn't,
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    no matter who is working the kind of job
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    where it's commonplace these days
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    for people to throw food at you,
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    I hope we can all agree that that person
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    does not deserve to live in poverty.
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    We all know that big companies can afford
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    to pay their workers a living wage,
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    but lawmakers, for whatever alleged
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    reason, don't wanna hold
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    these companies accountable.
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    Instead, they'd rather convince us
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    that this work and these people are
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    worthless, which couldn't
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    be further from the truth.
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    But I have a college degree and even
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    I don't get paid $24 an hour.
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    Then it sounds like your employer is
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    taking advantage of you, and you and your
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    coworkers should join or form a union.
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    Link in description for details.
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    Yes, some minimum wage workers are high
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    school and college kids, but they're also
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    moms, dads, your neighbors, your friends.
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    And this might sound crazy,
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    but there are people out there who do
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    enjoy cooking, cleaning,
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    designing birthday cakes,
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    answering phone calls,
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    taking out the trash,
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    helping you find the toothpaste aisle,
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    even handing you a sample
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    cup at a frozen yogurt store.
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    Whatever job it may be,
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    minimum wage workers are not
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    personal servants or punching bags.
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    They're part of your community.
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    So, with that, thank you
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    for watching my videos.
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    If you sprinkle when you tinkle,
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    please be neat and wipe the seat.
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    And as always, stay safe.
Title:
Minimum wage jobs
Description:

more » « less
Video Language:
English
Team:
BYU Continuing Education
Project:
BLAW-041(BYUO)
Duration:
10:03

English subtitles

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