Episode Transcript
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You're listening to Later with Mo Kellyon demand from KFI AM six forty.
Now we sup Viral Load with Tiffanylive on Camo Win mo O Kenny.
She'll talk about the tip is I'msocial media a little viralit Tiffany Hubbs k
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if I AM six forty live everywhereon the iHeartRadio app. It's Later with
Mo Kelly and this is the ViralLoad with me, Tiffany Hobbs. How
are you doing, Tiffany, I'mgreat, Thank you very much. Let's
get into the viral load tonight.The first story comes from TikTok and it
has to do with teachers using theirlunchtime to do something other than break and
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enjoy time to themselves. No,they have gotten on TikTok and their TikTok
has been becomes so successful that ithas garnered them sponsorships. What are they
doing? They formed a lunch bunchat this high school, Johnson Central High
School, and their club, theJCHS Lunch Bunch, has been eating together
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during the school's first lunch period fouryears. But one day one of the
teachers decided to grab her cell phoneand what she did was she interviewed other
teachers and said, what are youeating for lunch? That turned into numerous
teachers over the next nine months,so the entirety of the school year answering
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that very simple question, Hey,what are you eating for lunch? And
in the process that teacher would recordtheir answers upload it to TikTok and it
just blossomed. It just ballooned.They've become stars on their own right,
with nearly thirty thousand followers and thousandsof commenters each day on TikTok. It
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is a beloved TikTok, not onlyfrom the school obviously, but thousands upon
thousands of thousands of other people whohave taken to their account to just enjoy
this very mundane activity with these teachers. Due to the popularity of their TikTok,
they've gotten sponsorships, as I said, from weight Watchers. I don't
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know if I like that one verymuch. It feels kind of I don't
know. Oh, but hey,they got sponsorships, so they're getting something
free. They've gotten custom made sweatshirtsfrom another company, Burger King, Harty's,
Taylor Farms. All of these businesseshave reached out because of their regular
interaction on the tiktoks. They've giventhem all this free stuff and all this
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free publicity. They've even gotten recognizedat local restaurants, at airports, at
concerts, and even at University ofKentucky football games. So these educators in
this very small town have taken theirsmall town school and made it into a
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state wide phenomenon. All from thesimple question of hey, what are you
eating for lunch? And now theselunch bunchers will let you in on their
jokes. It's really cute. Sothey interact with people and ask others to
submit what they're eating for lunch aswell. It's taken on more legs than
just their school, so you canfind them by I'm sure googling them and
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the Johnson Central High School lunch bunchTikTok find out what they're eating. They
feel like they're on their own episodeof the Office. The next story,
the next story is about flying aswell. Woman's encounter with badly behaved child
is what the title of this nextstory is, and it has to do
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with a little kid on a flightin front of you. You're sitting behind
them, and what happens next?Can you please play the audio for this
because I can't. I can't doit justice. So today on my flight
from Atlanta to Denver, there wasabout an hour left in the flight and
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the kid in the seat in frontof me turned around and went like that
with spit flying all over my facein my husband's arm. So I get
it, like traveling with kids canbe heard. Right. This kid was
like three or four, four orfive, but whatever old enough to understand
that you don't do that. SoI was kind of shocked, and the
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parents reacted and told her not toand then it just became a thing and
she again fought against them, turnedaround on the seat and spit on us
again. This time I put myhand up just to block the spit from
me, and her parents kind oflike grabbed her and had her sit downble
she fought it was her mom ononce had and her dad on the other.
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She was the only child. Shewas in the middle seat. She
fought them trying to turn around andspit us some more, and she did.
She turned around in a third time. Now, when I say spit,
I mean she was pad but spitwas going everywhere. Right. How
was you reacted? I need toknow what you guys were done. Before
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I tell you what we did,I need to know what she would have
done. Okay, Another thing thatI probably could have mentioned, she goes
on, is that both of herparents were wearing a mask. She obviously
was not, and it clearly hadno control. Two adults could not control
a four year old child anyway.Now, go ahead and tell me what
you'd have done. She's funny tothink that you can control a four year
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old child. First of all,that's her first mistake in thinking that that's
something that can be mitigated, especiallyduring such a sensory overlaw like flying.
But as you heard TikToker, ShilaMonier, that's the woman's voice you heard,
uploaded this footage to TikTok because that'swhere you go to get some sort
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of galvanization. You want people tobe on your side, you want that
confirmation bias. Then you upload itto your platform and hopes that people will
agree with you. But what shefound out in asking what people would have
done, is that not everyone sawwhat Shila did as being the proper way
to address this issue. Yeah,there are some people who said you should
have the parents should have been controllingthe kid better. They like Sheila kind
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of was insinuating should have put amask on the child, since they too
were wearing masks, and others wentagainst it and said, hey, just
a kid, just a kid.Can't really control a kid. Kids are
gonna spit, kids are gonna dothis, they're just having fun. Hey,
maybe it was this kid's first fight. All of these kind of hey,
hey, hey, hypotheticals. ButShala doubled down. She's like,
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absolutely not. I am a grandmotherof six. She doesn't sound like it
there, she doesn't look like itin her TikTok, but she says,
hey, I have experience with children, and I know how to control kids.
You don't let that happen, especiallyin a public space, especially in
a tight space like on an airplane, Jackie Steph. Have you guys ever
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been on a plane where that there'sa child doing something obnoxiously and it's hard
maybe to get them to stop,or you're trying to make eyes with the
parent to get them to kind ofcontrol the kid. What happened quickly.
So I had a kid on Southwest. That's why I try to get off
first. But I had a kidon Southwest who was constantly there was a
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seat in between us, So therewas no reason why it should have happened.
But he just kept kicking me,just kicking me over and over,
not like kicking my seat, buthe was in the same row with me
and was literally kicking me. Ohno, how long was your flight?
It's two and a half hours.Oh so, and I'm not you know,
I'm still praying on my patience,you know what I mean. So
I kind of looked at her andI said, one of us is going
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to discipline this kid, and thenshe asked for a different seat. Oh
it worked out. That worked outfor you, what about you stuff?
For me, it was just akid that was kind of I don't remember
what he was crying about, butsomething got taken away and he just was
not stop screaming. And so I'mnot one for confrontation, but my ex
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at the time she was, andso she just completely told them off and
then that was the end of it, because then I think they same as
Jacket. I think they switched seatsor they She just made sure that he
didn't make any more noise. Younever saw the child again. Yeah,
the kid just kind of disappeared justbeneath the seat, right, Yeah,
well, that can happen, obviously, So Sheila is saying, when that
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happens, if you are the parentor guardian, control your kid, get
your kid under control, slap amask on and whatever you need to do.
Don't let him blow spit bubbles,don't let him kick Jackie's seed,
and definitely don't let him yell duringSteph's flight. How dare you? When
we come back, we're gonna getinto the second part of the Viral Load.
Why investing in Lego is actually morelucrative than investing in stocks. That's
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why all these Lego thefts are happeningaround the Southland. And also, does
your son or a young man inyour life want a chiseled jawline? What
are they doing to get it?That's up next on the Viral Load.
You're listening to Later with Moe Kellyon demand from KFI AM six forty.
It's Later with mo Kelly and backto the Viral Load with me Tiffany Hobbs
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of the Viral Load. This storyis about Lego, but not the thefting,
not the stealing of Lego. No, we're doing a different story because
it went viral. This man,Shane O'Farrell, thirty five year old from
t Neck, New Jersey, butoriginally from i Land, has collected Lego
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all of his life. He startedoff really in the nineties collecting Lego sets,
different kits, and there was apopular park in his hometown in Ireland
that he would visit often that hadto do with legos. It was called
Fort Lego Rado. He loved itwell. As he's been collecting lego all
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these years, he wasn't really payingattention to how the value was going up
and going down. He was akid, he was young, you know,
really care, Just buy me legos, doesn't matter. Twenty years into
his lego collecting is where Shane hasgone viral because he has shared a new
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type of hustle, a new typeof side gig, and that is the
buying, selling and trading of Legosets. Here's how he found out.
Shane started paying attention to how,again, the price of Lego sets were
increasing and decreasing, much like thestock market, and Shane actually equates his
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collecting of legos too, being morelucrative than investing in stocks, bond and
bonds in gold. He says hewas watching over the course of twenty years,
specific sets that he had go upin value triple, quadruple, quintuple,
whatever, five times as much aswhat they were before, and he
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decided he would sell these sets asan investment opportunity, invest in, sell
flip. Basically, this is hisreal estate, These are his avocados,
this is his drug trade, whateveryou want to call it. He is
using this to make the money thatmany of us could dream of. He
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is a savvy service engineer on oneside, but on the other side he
is a very lucrative Lego investor andin the past two years of his toy
trading has netted him five hundred thousanddollars five hundred thousand dollars, and he
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goes on to brag that the timeit takes for him to do this is
minimal. He's like, I havea full time job and this is just
supplementary income. That's what he said. He drove the knife in even deeper
into our collective conscience because he's makingfive hundred thousand dollars on top of his
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already lucrative salary as an engineer,all from buying and flipping lego. He
has hundreds of thousands of dollars ofLego resales and he calls it a part
time gig. I can't stand thisman. I am jealous of this man.
I want to know how this manwas able to do it. And
I'm upset that I played with myLego sets and didn't necessarily save them.
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Just like Barbie people keep their barbiesand their pristine packaging, and before you
know it, they're worse thousands ofdollars. Meanwhile, I was cutting the
hair off of my barbies and drawingmakeup on them. Now they're worth nothing.
If I would have known then whatI know now. That went viral.
The next and last story in thissequence is about wanting a chiseled jaw
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line. If you have a youngman in your life, maybe a son,
a nephew, a student, aneighbor, whatever the case, you
might notice that they're asking you forgum. They're asking you for gum more
often. Why not because their breathis in need of gum. Not because
of that, No, because there'sa new workout that has hit TikTok.
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It's not for your arms, notfor your legs, not for your abs.
It is for your jaw line.Your jawline. Kids are wanting to
create the illusion of a sharper jaw. But your regular gum, your two
dollars pack of gum from the supermarket, doesn't cut it. No, they
want the more expensive gum that isspecifically for something called mewingmy wi, which
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is a facial fitness technique that involvesplacing your tongue on the roof of your
mouth to create the illusion of asharper jaw. It comes from social media
and it's a trend that is knownas looks smaxing. I looked at this
word and I said, does itlook smaxing? Is it looks maxing?
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I don't know, but it meansthe illusion of a sharper jaw. And
these young boys, probably some girlsas well, are asking for gum so
that they can chew and chew andchew and work out their jaw muscles.
This trend proliferated on TikTok and Redditfirst with grown men, so we have
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adult men to thank for this,and of course this trend made it down
to teenagers and younger than that asa part of again of a facial fitness
routine. The specific gum is calledmastic gum and it's available from specific vendors,
including rock Jaw and Stronger Gum andJawliner, all of these really really
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interesting names, right, but theyall promise again, a chisel jawline,
and they're supposed to help build thesemuscles. There are lots of parents who
are weighing in saying that their kidsare doing this. They're just chewing in
a compulsory manner. They're asking forgum. There's a fourteen year old in
this story who talked about it andsaid, Hey, most kids my age
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want that sharp, defined jawline becauseof TikTok. They want to look like
models and potentially be more attractive.It's kind of it's kind of problematic,
I think, right that they wouldactually take to this sort of strategy and
work out their facial muscles. Idon't know it. It's kind of like
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sounds. This is like the firstexample of I guess, for lack of
a better word, body dysmorphia thatwe all see for girls. Young girls
see all these you know, womenwith all these surgeries, and guys never
really have that issue. That's kindof the first example I've ever heard when
it comes to men. Yeah,because if they're young, they're not like
you know, in their twenty tothirties, they're fourteen fifteen cents. Yeah,
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so that's it's interesting. But also, yeah, like you said,
a little bit concerning, it's alittle bit concerning, you know, especially
when they are comparing themselves to grownmen with different that intake in different structures,
and you know, as we grow, we obviously know our faces change,
and they're not even giving themselves,these young boys the time for their
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faces to fully develop before they're tryingto alter them in the name of being
accepted on TikTok. Right, they'reeven photoshopping themselves and trying different lighting all
to achieve this look. So,as you said, stuff, yeah,
it's it's concerning, and it doesdefinitely feel like a like a gateway into
body dysmorphia if it's not already presentin other ways. Right, Yeah,
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it could be. It could harmtheir mental health for sure. Absolutely.
I didn't think about that, butit could for sure lead into other things,
or someone else is going to thinkof another trend on TikTok and then
that'll take off and whatever it maybe. I used to work in a
dermatologist's office where they did plastic surgery, and one of the things that horrified
me was you would get moms whogot plastic surgery and then we're bringing in
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their their daughters that were like fifteen, sixteen years old, and then you
would just see this trend of becauseonce you start it, now you just
you're trying to live up to youknow what I mean. And so it's
it's it's interesting how social media hasmade something that I thought was bad before
exponentially worse. Yeah, absolutely,all in the name again of these likes
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and reshares and popularity that that's socialcapital. When we come back, we're
going to talk about why a lotof these social media influencers that these young
boys were following and that others mayfollow aren't actually doing as well financially as
they present themselves to be. Infact, they're barely even getting by.
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You're listening to Later with mo Kellyon demand from KFI AM six forty.
It's Later with mo Kelly. I'mTiffany Hobbes. We last talked about what's
going on in the social media influencerworld, and that specific story talked about
how young men and older men actuallyhave been influenced to alter their faces or
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at least try to alter their facesto achieve a more chiseled jawline through the
help of certain gum, kind ofreally tough gum that will work out your
face. And this this is allborn of the influence of social media and
wanting to achieve a certain standard.A lot of times when you're thinking about
the standard that's been set on socialmedia, it's due to the content creation
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of specific influencers, and those influencersare who many users on platforms like TikTok
and Facebook and Instagram, twitch,YouTube may look to as a guide or
a linchpin, so to speak,is to how to achieve certain economic success.
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You want to get what they have, so you're going to be influenced
by what they're doing. But there'sa little known secret that many of these
influencers suppress, they don't want youto know, and that secret is that
most of them are broke. Theyare broke, broke, broke, and
they are living beyond paycheck to paycheck. They're not even getting a paycheck because
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the work of an influencer is extremelyunstable. The story comes from the Wall
Street Journal specifically, and it saysthat social media influencers aren't getting rich.
In fact, they're barely getting by. Like I said, many people dream
of achieving the success of certain influencers. You may have heard of them.
There's mister Beast with his millions uponmillions you may even be into the billions
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mark now of followers who watch hisevery move and he gets paid a pretty
penny millions of dollars every year fromdifferent corporate sponsorships, speaking engagements just to
do what he does on TikTok andother platforms YouTube. Then there's Charlie Diamelio,
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another very popular influencer in these names. If you are following social media,
and I don't follow it very closely, but I've heard of these people.
These names are synonymous with social media. Six you don't have to know
what they do to know that they'resuccessful at what they do. That's kind
of where I am with it.There's a full time content creator, like
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there are many. His name isClint Brantley, and he was interviewed by
the Wall Street Journal. He's beena full time content creator for three years.
What that means is on TikTok andYouTube, he posts videos about Fortnite,
a very popular video game, andthose videos are about his reaction to
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different gaming strategies, different worlds,whatever it is, it's all about this
video game and through his interaction withthat game, through his success, he's
amassed four hundred thousand followers. He'sdoing pretty well by any stretch of the
imagination. Four hundred thousand followers.That's a small city, a large city
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in most places. He's doing reallywell. And these videos garner him on
average one hundred thousand views per video. When you get to a certain view
status, I think it's somewhere aroundmaybe ten thousand views or so, you
have YouTube and other platforms asking ifyou'd like to monetize your content, and
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they'll pay you to produce these videos. The pay is not that much.
It increases by the number of followersyou get. One one hundred thousand views
will not make you rich. Andthat's what Clint Brantley found out because he
earned last year just under just overfifty eight thousand dollars. Now that's not
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bad depending on where you live.But his goal was to be a content
creator who was making videos that wouldget him into the millions of dollars,
like his idols Mister Beast and CharlieDiamelio. So fifty eight thousand dollars,
which is less than the medium medianincome pay in the United States for a
full time worker, is not tohis liking. He feels like a failure
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with his fifty eight thousand dollars andbecause of that, he's hesitant, at
twenty nine years old to sign anapartment lease. He's currently living with his
mother. That's no problem, dothat. That's actually really economical and smart.
But his reason is because he hasa lot of anxiety around signing a
lease because he does not know ifhis checks from YouTube and Twitch and TikTok
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are going to continue, because sucha thing is very unstable. It fluctuates
with your exposure, with your popularity, with the engagement from your audience.
So when he has a great month, he gets paid more, and when
he has an off month, hegets paid significantly less. Social media platforms
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are also paying out less to theircontent creators. There are millions of content
creators out there. You can callyourself a content creator if you in fact
create content. You don't have tobe well known to be a content creator,
but you do have to be wellknown to become one of those who
are using this as a lucrative formof employment. And for those people,
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only about fifty million of the hundredsor millions of people are actually making any
sort of money from it. Onlyabout fifty million actually earns something from their
content creation, and of those fiftymillion, half of them earn fifteen thousand
dollars or less. It's a sidejob, but many of them are spending
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the hours required that would be relegatedfor a full time job. So it's
directly correlating to what they are doingto actually earn an income and what they're
doing on the side via social mediato try and eclipse that to earn an
income full time as a content creator, and they're finding that the two aren't
matching. It's not meshing. Again, there are only a certain number of
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people who are making anything sizeable.Actually it's thirteen percent who are making over
one hundred thousand dollars. And withthat, an even smaller number of people
have become famous, like your misterBeast and Charlie Dimelio. The numbers keep
in decreasing the higher you get.It's a pyramid. It's effectively a pyramid
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scheme, and we all invest intoit to make these people at the top
richer, but the consequence of thatis that the people at the bottom are
all clamoring to get to the top, so they're doing what they can to
become social media influencers, like chewinggum to chisel their jaws, or getting
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plastic surgery, or doing things thatcould put them in embarrassing situations just for
views and likes. And the anxietyrelated to it comes from the need to
be constantly creating, because if you'renot creating, you're not actually existing.
It sounds very much like Amazon.If you have an output requirement and you
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don't even know what that quota is, you'll never know if you need it.
The goalpost is constantly moving, andit's the same for social media.
When we come back, we're goingto talk about another consequence of the economy.
It has to do with baby boomers. With baby boomers, you're listening
too later with Moe Kelly on Demandfrom KFI AM six forty. Last we
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talked about the economic toll that socialmedia is taking on influencers and the anxiety
around feeling the need to produce content. You have to produce content to make
money. Well, another sector ofthe population that is feeling that economic crunch
happens to be the baby boomers,and the baby boomers are those born from
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nineteen forty six to nineteen sixty four. What's happening to them that is specific
unto them? Well, they arenow called not baby boomers, but boom
mates, boom mates. There's allthese cute, catchy phrases that are used
to essentially describe apocalyptic conditions. Andhere's why. What are boomates you might
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be asking, Well, boommates arewhat I expected to have when I was
thirteen or fourteen talking to my bestfriends and deciding that we wanted to maybe
have a commune when we were inour twenties and thirties, maybe raise our
kids together, all live on thesame property, share resources. But instead,
baby boomers are now being put intothis situation where they're finding that economically
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they're not doing as well as theywould have liked, and they are currently
empty nesters, and they may havea large empty property, and instead of
selling, they are filling up theirhomes with friends and other intergenerational people to
share the resources, spread the wealth, and make ends meet. And it's
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their solution to what is America's grindinghousing crisis. Again, these baby bloomers.
These people are usually empty nesters atthis point, and they have the
land, they have the houses.Many people in that generation were lucky enough
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to be able to afford what ittook to buy a home back then,
and they've held on to it,fortunately for them. But as prices have
increased, whether it's groceries, whetherit's property taxes, whether it's energy costs
and other utilities, they're finding thattheir money isn't going nearly as far as
they would like. And so againtheir solution is to pair up and to
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live together. And you have marriedpeople, you have single people, you
have people who are working, youhave people who are not working. It
is varied, but it is whatthey consider to be a viable solution again
to the housing crunch. And studiesshow that boommates have actually been doing this
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for years, for many, manyyears, and instead of renting, because
a lot of people don't want torent, they want to keep their homes.
This is considered to be the moreaffordable, the more economical, the
more responsible strategy. I'm going toask Steph and Jackie to weigh in on
this one. We're all around thesame age, Okay, we're all in
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our thirties and above thirties, andour four parties, and we're all feeling
I imagine in some instances the crunchof the housing crisis, or know someone
who is. Could you imagine yourselvesliving in a commune with your friends in
the very near future, sharing theresources, or would you rather continue to
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live by yourself or in your currentsituation and just figure out how to make
it happen. I love this questionbecause I actually lived on an island called
Saipan for two years. And Thipan, yeah, and if you look it
up, you have to zoom inlike a hundred times because it's a tiny,
tiny out But there was a familythere that they had land and they
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just they kind of made it acompound and so they all lived on the
same plot of land. It wasone family, but there was I think
six houses on that plot of land. They grew their own food. They
had a little mini farm, sothey shared all the expenses and you know,
cut down on their cost of foodand things like that because they became
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like little mini farmers. So Iwas so inspired by that family. That's
the first thing I want to do. But I just have to like people
enough to want to live around.Yeah, you really have to find people
you messed with, because if you'restuck with them, it's like, you
know, what are you going todo? What do you what do you
think, Steph? I was workingon something, but I kind of have
heard I think I've heard of thisbecause you said it's they've been doing it
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for years, right, Yeah,yeah, I think I heard of this
a while ago, and I thoughtI thought it was weird at the time
because I didn't know what bills were. But now I'm just like, you
know what, I could totally dosomething like that because I mean, it's
no different than if you're living withyou know, roommates, but the dynamic
would be different. So you know, you probably can't bring like dates over
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the house, you can't have partiesand stuff like that. But you know,
because ideally you want your own space, but with the way costs,
that's not really a choice. Soit's like, Okay, you know what,
I can sacrifice that too, becausemaybe you could actually save up my
money and start your own you know, eventually get your own place, eventually
get you know, if you don'thave a car, you get a car,
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like all that stuff. Unless you'rea content creator, and you're gonna
never do that, of course not. But I think as you get older,
don't you appreciate the companionship as well. I mean that's kind of the
what's implied, I say, that'swhat they get out of it, right
right right. Those of us onthe outside are questioning, how how could
you possibly how long? Exactly?What are kind of the what's the straw
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there that could break the proverbial camelsback? But it's actually funny too.
You said that thing about content creators, because some of them that are are
really big, like the mister Beasttypes, they started living it like it'd
be six it's usually guys TikTok houses. Yeah, TikTok house, it's like
five or six guys. But it'slike they'll start in a regular house and
then as they build, they startgetting bigger and nicer houses, so their
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stunts get crazier and wilder and allthat stuff. So that happens sometimes too.
Yeah, it can be a verylucrative way, like you said,
to combine those resources and do somethingbigger and better and hope that people could
then branch out and acquire their ownindependent living arrangement. In this case,
these boommates don't want to move out, and it's so successful, it's so
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wanted that there are actual services thathave been put in place, like matchmaking
services that will pair up people fromthat generation with others. One is called
home share online, so you canactually join the services and find a boommate
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to live with. And it isn'tessential or considered to be an essential service
for those who are seniors and orworkers unable to afford a place to live.
At this point, it's all abouthomeless prevention. Call it boommates,
give it a cute name, giveit a website, whatever the case.
It all speaks to the housing crisisand hoping to prevent that housing crisis from
(34:02):
continuing to expand in the future.And those who are most vulnerable amongst us
our seniors, those who might bementally disabled or whatnot. Those people are
who are being reached to so thatthey can be given some sort of support
in being able to stand on theirown or along with their friends. In
this case, they could just fixinflation. They could just fix inflation and
(34:27):
stop giving things cute, little catchynames. But no, that would be
that'd be too much like right,Jackie Ray, It's been fun. Thanks
for letting me hang out with you. I'll be here tomorrow and on Friday,
and it's time for us to go. KFI AM six forty live everywhere
on the iHeartRadio app. Not juststimulating talk. If you more. K
(34:52):
F and KOST HD two Los Angeles, Orange County live everywhere on the radio. Well