Conservative Talker Kietzman Considers 'Lazy Girl Jobs' Carefully

We can always count on KK to expand our horizons and offer a unique perspective. 

Accordingly . . . Credit to the KC talker legend for guiding us on a glorious search of the "lazy girl jobs" trend and latest aspiration of Gen Z. 

Note on that lead photo . . . That's a screencap of Siri and we're certain this (probably) isn't KK in the foreground checking on her productivity . . . 

In fact, we've enjoyed studied her oeuvre and Siri actually WORKS VERY HARD for her money. 

But I digress . . .

Here's KK's first takeaway on this latest podcast . . .

"Something called Lazy Girl Jobs are all the rage with young professionals."

A bit more explanation . . .

"Young women have taken to calling these sorts of jobs – as in, jobs that are undemanding but well enough paid, with little personal passion involved – “lazy girl jobs”. Mostly the term refers to menial office jobs as opposed to the service industry: people on computers, sending a few emails and taking home a comfortable salary. On TikTok, the #lazygirljob hashtag currently has about 14m views, and the mood is overwhelmingly aspirational. “I love my lazy girl job,” reads one post. “I don’t have to talk to people, only come to the office twice a week.” “Me at my lazy girl job that lets me do whatever the heck I want as long as I answer emails and keep everything clean,” reads another. The posters appear to be unanimously women – I’ve seen no evidence of a “lazy boy jobs” hashtag. Perhaps the concept of men being paid more to do less isn’t quite as novel or interesting."

Read more via www.TonysKansasCity.com links . . .

How the 'lazy girl job' took over work TikTok

A content creator says workers should clock fewer hours, work from home and make comfortable salaries. Thousands of people couldn't agree more.


TikTok's 'anti-work girlboss' is going viral advocating for people to get 'lazy girl jobs'

Gabrielle Judge coaches her followers on how to stop thinking of their job as their identity, and start seeing it as their "investor."


The 'Lazy-Girl Job' Is In Right Now. Here's Why.

Rather than lean in, young workers say they want jobs that can be done from home, come with a cool boss and end at 5 p.m. sharp.


Gen Z is embracing 'lazy girl jobs' in a rebuke of millennials' 'girlboss' and 'lean in' manias

Working a job with set hours, solid benefits, and fully remote flexibility is Gen Z's answer to millennial hustle culture.


Gen Z want to work 'lazy girl jobs'. Who can blame them? | Daisy Jones

Young women are eschewing hustle culture to focus on life outside of work. Perhaps they are beating capitalism at its own game, says author and editor Daisy Jones

Developing . . .

Comments