new internet analysis!! let's discuss wealth & class in lifestyle content. ps English captions are live now! || check out Care/of for easy, convenient vitamins in cute lil compostable packs! bit.ly/34uo0D0
Logical analysis makes me so happy The internet is so full of people who don't use logic and it's just a mess Not enough people take time and question what they see Loved the video!
When I was about 18, I had a friend who refused to believe that I'd never been to the theatre and never been to a restaurant with my family. She insisted that everyone has done that, and I felt so embarrased to tell her that my family didn't have money to do that. Like, it's usually kids who are 'well off' who don't know about their family's status because they've never had to think about it. But poor kids are extremely aware. even at like 6 years old, our teachers asked us to describe what we did on our break, I lied and said we went to theme parks etc, cos in reality we stayed home because we had no money. I never had friends over at my house because my mum didn't have food to feed them. Kids pointed out that my shoes had holes in them, but I had to lie and say I liked them like that, because I only got one new pair of shoes per year. People don't believe that children could live like this in the UK, but we did.
I hope you can go to all the theme parks, theaters, and restaurants you want now. I’ve seen the affects of things like this on my dad who grew up in a trailer park with 2 brothers. Luckily for me he and my mom both worked very hard and I have never had to worry about money, but I know that sometimes hard work isn’t enough depending on the circumstances.
I just realised I am rich? I always thought I was kinda just middle classes cause everyone around me was more “well of” but after reading yours and others comments I know this is not true. They are just RICHER than me I guess? I have always thought it was normal to go to the theatre and restaurants but I guess it’s not. I’m only 14 though so I have time to be an aware adult some time in the future. I just want to say thanks for, idk(?) telling ur story. Bye
ngl my family is at least middle class since we moved to a country where the currency is higher but its true bc back before we moved i realized we were pretty well off. maybe bc i was a kid i didnt have to think about our status but now that im wondering... ngl i still dunno. i'm not familiar with these things and i dont like thinking about it but recently my mom was fired so 😬
@@augusta2638 it does not necessarily mean your are rich, my family can afford to go out eat at a restaurant a few times a year, or go to the theater once a year or on a vacation every 3 to 5 years.... But we don't have a car for example, we can't afford that, not being poor does not automatically mean being rich. Sometimes it's also about where you put 'excess' money, for example if i have 50€ extra a month, do i purchase some cheap thing from h&m every month to have a huge closet with cheap things or do i put it on the side, have only a really small capsule wardrobe, but buy a new mac book every 7 years from my 50€ a month.... Having A luxury doesn't mean you are rich, there is an in between, also i do understand that livig in America is much different, i don't have to spend money on my education oder doctors appointments, we have good infrastructure that is relatively cheap so we don't need a car...
This is so interesting - I'm so glad you've brought this up. Shamefully, I have definitely been that person in the past. When I went to university (in traditionally working class city) it was the first time I'd been exposed to people who had come from a different class to me (after being from the Home Counties, and going to boarding school) - I was taken aback by it. After many years of research, listening, understanding, I can't believe I ever behaved in that way, so on behalf of anyone who has ever made you feel like that, I'm so sorry.
Exactly. No one ever says it's impolite when we are talking about how much money they saved vs. how much they spent. And only rich people dislike discussing money because they know how ridiculous it sounds when they take the numbers off of paper
True, although I know around my rich friend, I also don't necessarily like the money talk, so I appreciate it not being talked about as well. She's only really ever had her lifestyle plateau or improve regarding how much disposable income she's had. It grates on the nerves to realize she doesn't understand what it's like to not have any money. She doesn't try to rub it in my face or anything, but she talks about investing and some related things, and how it's frustrating for her because it's not making her much money, and I have an out of body experience because I only recently started feeling financially secure enough to buy the brand name ketchup.
Also avoiding saying how exactly they make money. It is easier to say it's "improper" than explain "oh I don't pay taxes, have my money in an offshore account and I exploit my workers" fx
I HATE that Kylie Jenner can even be labeled "self-made." Yes, I'm sure she worked incredibly hard to create her brands and help build her wealth. However, she was raised by millionaires. I'm sure she always had Mommy Kris to write her a check if she ever had to cut her losses at something
i dont even think she worked incredibly hard. celebrities get approached all the time with ready-made concepts for apps, clothing lines, make-up lines to put their name on it. Paris Hilton has said it herself, she was on Hot Ones and they approached her to put her name on replica sex dolls, apps, etc. Her and Kim were INVITED by music industry insiders to record music and make tv and movie cameos. I'm pretty fucking sure Kylie Jenner's lip thing was about to blow up and someone approached her with a PR strategy to tell the truth about her lips then start selling lip kits which turned into her boring makeup empire. this is totally different from endorsements. while i know they endorse skinny teas and such on instagram posts. clothing lines etc that they "created" and heavily advertise are also someone else's ideas that they just have a vested interest in and the bigger it gets the more credit they get for it
I have a hard time believing that people above the age of 21 or with a minimum of critical can think that the last daughter of an already existing empire with all the connections, free publicity and oportunities that come with it can be defined as "self-made". All of these people are second, third generations of real safe-made people (and even then, we would have to look into history to know how the first fortune was generated). We are witnessing modern nepotism. The lack of self-awareness in a multidimensional matrix that builds each individuals is all I see. And even while writing this, I understand that it's quite unfair to expect from these kids to be or even want to be this aware of their own circumstances. As she said, what would motivate ourselves from wondering about these things, our own disconfort, feeling of unjustice...
@@monochromatic_melodramatic Kylie Cosmetics was her idea... that Kris used her position and power to approach the owner of Seed Beauty (a massive company, with a not-public owner) to create it. Because of her power, it wasn't hard to make it happen. However Seed Beauty ALREADY had the materials and existing manufacturing, so all she had to do was pick some colors, pour them into a lipstick tube, and slap her copyright-infringing logo on it. I hate how she is considered "self-made" when mommy Kris did (does???) all the real work.
@@TheLaurieJi Well said! Also, some people don't know that the Kardashians were already wealthy before they became famous. If you read Kris Jenner's memoir, she talked about how she was hanging out with all these rich & famous people in LA in the 80s and 90s. Even if Keeping Up With the Kardashians never happened, Kylie would still be extremely privileged.
it's interesting because i think rich kids are really thriving on tiktok. every time i see one of those haul videos or "a day in my life" vlogs, there's just a lot of comments saying "i wish this was me" "want this for myself." and i feel like it's because of tiktok's unique algorithm? maybe people who like/share hyper-consumerist content are genuinely interested in that stuff so the algorithm creates an echo chamber in the comments. whereas people who are anti-consumerist/anti-capitalist don't see any of these vids on their for you pages, and therefore can't interact with them. it just leads to a lack of class consciousness because no one is checking anyone.
Something that I really can't stand is when people my age (in their twenties) tell me: "oh you've never been a year abroad?" or "you only have visited these few places? You have to travel, it opens your mind, it's so important to see the world!" Like, ok I know that, I would love to travel but I don't have the money.
i honestly wanna punch a wall whenever i hear "You haven't traveled the country/world?" How am I supposed to travel the world when I'm broke with debt? tell me!
This also pisses me off when Europeans say this to Americans like sorry my country is fucking huge. I’ve only ever been to the west coast once and it’s still so expensive to travel never mind the process of exchanging money. It’s honestly easier and cheaper to travel around our own country and see what we have to offer. When I was in college I asked my dad if we could look into studying abroad for one semester but he said it was too expensive. He worked 2 jobs for a year to save enough to pay the last 2 years of my college in full. And that was hard enough. But there’s such a stupid stigma about not being “worldly and well traveled” most people don’t make enough money to travel abroad or even get jobs that allow enough time off to truly experience a new place. It’s so elitist and the ignorant when people don’t realize that travel is not accessible to everyone, it makes me so angry.
@@kerdunne3422 EXACTLY. I like I'd love to travel all around the world some day but I have to take it one place at a time. I live in England and travelling even just within the uk costs a ton so flying around the rest of Europe would be so costly especially due to our economic and political standing rn. We have really beautiful countryside and brilliant city landmarks that dont get boring.
“My parents worked really hard for what we have” is my personal nemesis. As if poor people don’t work hard? A single mother working 3 jobs is working hard but statistically, her kids probably don’t have this much money.
Erm, wealthy people often do work hard. They've +taken risks, +been innovative, +creative, +made sacrifices and +persisted with ideas when everyone was telling them they're crazy etc. Sure a single mother working 3 jobs works hard. But poor people don't have a monopoly on hard work and industriousness. Often the wealthy often work "smarter", too. Not all hard work is positive, sometimes there more efficient ways of doing a task. Why should the wealthy feel guilty? Single mother made her choice to continue with her pregnancy. She made her choice to not get educated to better. She made her choice not to find opportunities to make money. Why wasn't she buying cryptocurrencies @ just $2 in 2009 ? Plenty of rich kids knew about bitcoin over 10 years ago. Kids from rich backgrounds know about wealth management, investment, financial education. There's privileged 8 year olds who know about inflation and commodities. It's not the wealthy person's fault the poor don't teach their kids about financial education. Why isn't single mother coming up with ideas in her work sphere? She's a cleaner? Come up with a cleaning innovation etc. She chose to be a single mum. The wealthy person didn't force her to have kids.
@@michelleannor6944 the point is not that poor people have a monopoly on hard work, the point is that rich people don't because they will often fall back on that when people talk about how incredibly rare that someone attains that kind of wealth. You're not as rich as you are simply because you worked hard, if that were how it worked then a shit ton more poor people would be rich.
@@michelleannor6944 I hope the boot tastes good. In all seriousness. Risk is a lot easier to take when you have a safety net. Amazon didn’t make money for years because of their strategy of undercutting pricing. It’s a lot easier to stick with that if you can still eat and have a roof over your head and don’t risk the welfare of other people. It’s easy to invest in things that might not work out if you are happy to lose some money. I knew about crypto in 2012 as well and to be honest I thought it was dumb and a joke. Haha look who is laughing now. But the point is that investing needs a starting capital. Investments bring greater returns the more you invest. But if you have a choice between risking $500 on an investment (and often it should be more than that to make a difference) or using that money to feed your kids and put towards your rent? Feed your kids and pay your bills. It is extra money that you have after paying your costs that can and should be invested but a lot of people do not have that extra money. But also, coming up with ideas and building technology is easier with education and at least in the US, the entry barrier there is money as well. I come from a country where I didn’t pay money for university and it is still not feasible for a lot of people because they’d need to work while studying to pay for cost of living, which often means worse grades etc if your parents cannot support you. You can live comfortably working a normal job if you are smart with your money, too. However, you cannot be ultra-rich unless you exploit someone. No ones time is that valuable. They are not that smart. A lot of ultra-smart people do not make billions. A lot of CEOs say they work 80 hour weeks but count reading a book towards that because “they better themselves”. Ok well if we count reading I don’t even want to know how many hours I “work”. The point here is that these people had starting capital, a safety net, and access to an education that gave them the tools to have these ideas and then make them reality. Not everyone has those. Not everyone needs or wants to be ultra-rich but they become ultra-rich by paying that single mother a poverty wage. Every job is a skilled job. Labour is valuable, otherwise there wouldn’t be such a demand for it. That single mother might be working long shifts for Jeff Bezos but he will profit far more from it. Lastly, I know that single mother we are talking about is not a specific person but I find your lack of empathy for your fellow man disappointing.
@@michelleannor6944 I get the impression you think I am a single mother working 3 jobs. I assure you I am not. I was very fortunate with my parents who gave me a stable background to build my own career on but I know that it was a privilege not everyone has. 1) where did I say this was rich peoples fault? I did not. I purely stated that the argument of hard work isn’t great 2) if ultra-rich people paid their taxes and paid their employees living wages, it would make a huge difference, actually. They also lobby politicians for lower wages and fewer protections which is a whole other can of worms 3) in the US, birth control is made super expensive for no reason. In the UK, you get it free on the NHS which makes it easier for poor people to not have unplanned children 4) I am fine, actually, if my tax money is used to support people in financially precarious situations. There are people with disabilities that CANT work full time. I think they still deserve to live. 5) there is a world of difference between a dentist or someone working in tech, and ultra-rich people like Jeff Bezos. They are not at all the same 6) I don’t think I am guilt tripping anyone, but as is mentioned in the video, a lot of people don’t like to outright say that they are rich, so they default to saying their parents work hard. All I meant to say was that it really is a bad argument and it implies things that simply aren’t true 🤷🏼♀️ 7) lastly. Lots of people try to be innovative and create something but there can’t be 50 Facebooks. Some people work hard and just have bad luck.
Fun fact: In the US, disabled people who receive supplemental income from the government (usually not totaling more than $7,000 a year) can’t get married because they lose their supplemental income. You also can’t have more than $2,000 in the bank, if you make any money that reduces the amount of supplemental income you receive (so if you make 5k a year, you’ll only receive 2k), and living with family also means you’ll receive less income. Basically, don’t get married, don’t make any money and live on your own somehow, too, don’t save any money, and don’t work even if you can. The whole system in incredibly broken and keeps disabled people poor. 🙃
@@Bandito.Swiftie ugh, sorry you experienced that! It sucks that they do that and don’t warn you and punish you for everything. People seem to think you can live off disability (payments) alone, but you can’t live off 7k a year. And again, if you can work part-time, you’re often not eligible. I know it’s absurdly hard to get disability in the US. I’m 25, too, and am able to work part-time, but it’s such a struggle not feeling like my worth is tied to what I make/my job. It might not mean much from a random internet stranger, but please know you are inherently valuable and worthy. Sending good vibes and spoons your way!
@@emilydeaton1169 it actually means a lot. It might sound pathetic but I don't really hear that very often and I sort of have a hard time comforting myself. It's very overwhelming. We're currently hopping from sublet to sublet, roommates to roommates, because we can't pay for 1st and last, a deposit, and a non refundable administration fee at time of application which won't be returned if we get denied. We already go to the food bank so we can't exactly save each month to get an apartment. Trying. There's got to be some relief somewhere. Sometimes it just takes kind words like yours to keep going towards that future. All this to say thank you for caring about a random internet stranger :)
Yes this! My little brother has Down syndrome and currently supplemental income is charging my parents almost $5k because they made a mistake on their paper work in 2017 to 2018. So my mom is going to appeal it because it’s not their fault for their mistake. It’s ridiculous because my parents don’t even make more than 40k a year. They also had to lie about me living at the house when they use to visit so they wouldn’t reduce the pay. As well as my parents are thinking of getting a divorce just so they can receive more help for my brother 🤦🏻♀️
I remember back in those Bethany Mota days, she would share "OOTDs" and link where she bought clothes. So one time when I went to a new shopping mall, I saw J. Crew and Anthropology, ready to buy the cute tops that she had, and saw the tag, my heart sank. As a young girl that was hard for me. I thought my mom giving me $50 for the mall was so much money and it couldn't even get me one shirt that the youtuber I liked had.
I know somebody who got an allowance from her grandma to get clothes on top of the 900dlls her dad gave her monthly for her expenses, as a teenager, living at home, driving the car her parents bought for her. What expenses she could possibly have? But she wouldn't have said she was rich.
I watched a lot of her videos when I was a teenager. I really enjoyed her content and I thought that all American teenagers live like her; casually eating fruits mixed with greek yoghurt for breakfast, bring a can of whole almond only as a snack for flight, and I also remember one of the "Back to School" videos by Meredith Foster and was surprised when she said that her new bag costs around $90. I really thought that that was the standard price for a bag in the US, so it made me believe that American students must be really rich. It made me insecure that I can't obtain the same lifestyle like theirs considering that I'm from a third world country and live in a small village. I still watch some of their old videos for nostalgia tho. edit: I just realized Bethany deleted her old videos 😔
I’m 28 and make okay money. People push madewell to young people and even I, someone aging out of madewell products, cannot afford madewell. I can barely afford it 2nd hand. It’s very detached from their market.
Being on the internet young really warped my perception of money and how easy it is to make it. I used to think it’s normal to spend $200 on a haul and get a luxury vehicle for your birthday and don’t even get me started on the what I got for Christmas videos and I could never understand why I couldn’t have those things because when they described how wealthy they were they said “I’m comfortable”, because I would’ve described my middle class family as comfortable but we couldn’t afford half of those things.
YES this is exactly my experience as well! also, in retrospect, i realize now that when i was watching lifestyle/beauty vloggers heavily in my teens, i can absolutely say that i was also spending the most money on clothes/makeup etc that i’ve ever spent in my life (even though i was a broke highschooler with a part-time job). i really had to rewire my brain after highschool and realize that the people i was watching and trying to mimic weren’t actually MAKING all of their money - they came from it, which is fine, but unrealistic for most of us
@@gabrielar9611 THIS. I know a guy like this in real life who always has new stuff from "hype" brands (LV, gucci, off white, supreme, just to name a few) and he was actually buying it all on credit and having to borrow credit from his girlfriend so that he wouldn't accumulate interest. It was pretty unfortunate and unnecessary because he had like $20,000 worth of stuff lying around his house that he could resell. Almost felt like a shopping addiction tbh. I remember one time he skipped dinner with our friends to go shop at the luxury mall nearby to buy things with money he didn't have... I also knew another girl who's family went into debt while she was only in high school because they were always buying her the newest tech (iPhones, Apple Watch, new Mac, etc) that she didn't need
yeees I had a best friend in high-school who was constantly spending tons of money on clothing and expensive make up pallets and she HATED to be called rich but I grew up in poverty so to me she was... her family would even Uber us back and forth between our houses twice a day most days (and we lived an hour away from eachother) so to me she was very rich but her insistence that she wasn't rich and I was blowing it way out of proportion made me feel even poorer because even though my family has been in poverty all my life my parents were always good at budgeting and making sure we had food and everything else we needed so I never truly felt how poor I was until I saw people who were well off telling me they were poor
As someone who also grew up lower income In Orange County I completely get your frustration with wealth around you and people not seeing how wealth played a role in their upbringings
I vividly remember being 18 and living in England. I was talking to my housemates about another girl we all knew and they were saying “oh, but she is super wealthy” and my reaction was “nah. She’s normal” (we went to the same school. her sister was in my class) Their reply was “yeah, because you are rich too”. I honestly never considered it. Ever. Not once. Even as a Colombian getting a gap year in the UK. Payed for by mum & dad. It really does come down to being sheltered and living in a bubble. I’ve grown out of that and take my privilege into account every day and I am thankful for it. I also use it well to help others. Btw. Love your content.
I grew up/currently live in OC. When we first moved here we were pretty money tight for a long time. It was crazy to see how I became more popular once my parents started to make more money. Money definitely plays a huge role in everyone's development here, and I feel like no parent has taught their kid the value of the dollar. I'm wrapping up college now, and I can't tell you how many of the kids I grew up with have still never had a job. It's honestly depressing
It was such a trip to realize that wealth = popularity as a kid. I would always wonder why the other girls had such nice hair and trendy clothing, cute school supplies, etc. They would go on fun international trips. I would go to birthday parties or other kids houses and they had huge backyards with pools. And of course, they were wildly popular at school. Then one day, it just clicked.
Lmao ikr. When I was in High School, most of the popular kids in my school were wealthy. Most of the non popular ones were, you guessed it, poor. Hint: I wasn’t very popular. That’s when I started to grasp the concept of wealth, money, class, and how it affected the way how people see and treat you, sadly.
I don’t know how much of this is true. Like a lot of the popular kids in my school are middle class and like i grew up a more priviledged lifestyle than them(i won’t say rich bcuz it wasn’t rich but like upper middle class) and i certainly wasn’t popular bcuz i was so shy and awkward and didn’t know how to interact with other ppl. But like in my school the material stuff actually didn’t matter much like it mattered to know how to socialize and be nice(even tho some of the popular kids were complete assholes but most of them were actually sweet) but like there was this rich girl in our school who was constantly bragging about Versace and Gucci and like nobody actually liked her bcuz she was so shallow and always criticizing “how broke others were”(wanna mention that the whole Versace thing was bcuz her mom is a seamstress and she’d make her her clothes look like Versace and Gucci)
funny, in my school the "comfortable" could go either ways. 1 local family used to make big birthday/halloween bashes that anyone she personally invites could go to, but it was the stuff in the house and not externally that showed their affluence. another classmate was considered ok, but just kept bragging to me about her wealthy grandma that bought her stuff from nordstom. rich people houses were only talked about if they worked there somehow, or brownnosed a kid of theirs.
@@Moana_moo hey i totally hear where you’re coming from, not all the affluent kids will necessarily be more popular! But coming from that background of wealth gives them an undeniable edge that those from middle and especially lower income backgrounds have to work harder to overcome.
it’s like all these tiktokers being like “yeah i just got up and decided to move to nyc after high school!!!” and they have these ‘aesthetic’ videos of going out w their friends, in their giant apartments and walking along the streets of manhattan and cute outfits- and there are so many people seeing that and not realizing these aren’t smart teenagers “living their lives” they are incredibly wealthy individuals who have the privilege to be able to live rhat life. it’s so frustrating.
There's a tiktoker who brags about being unemployed (idk if before or during the pandemic) doing day in the life vids in NYC that just shits on the ppl who live here being "unconventional," while having their own apartment with a partner closer to Manhattan 🙄
@@jaym18082they are @furbylesbian I absolutely can't stand their videos!!!! (And can't be bothered to check pronouns so staying gender neutral) Like I'm not a native nyer, I don't live there anymore, but it just feels like she's mocking poor ppl and saying they and their parts of town are stinky, gross, and weird :(
They avoid saying they're rich to have their cake and eat it, too. Want to benefit from wealth without alienating their audience, or seeming out of touch because of that wealth and privilege. They want to stay rElAtaBle and the rich are not relatable.
Rich means they didn't earn anything they show off. You can't have their life if your family isn't already rich. A much less compelling story than I'm a lucky girl who receives lots of love and buys things with my hard earned money, you and I are the same, you can be me. Gag
I've just kinda learned to decode phrases like "were comfortable", "well off" and "we get by" well off means rich as hell, comfortable means slightly rich, getting by means paycheck to paycheck
I am 24 now and recently started to make a really decent living. I asked my 12 year old godniece what she wanted for Christmas and she said “I’m really into pens lately”. I immediately knew what that meant. Her family is poor and she goes to school with wealthier kids. She really just wanted to be able to blend in or shine in her own way with her school supplies. I went and bought her some cute, fluffy notebooks and really cute pens with the fuzzy poof balls on top. I know how much it would’ve meant to me as a kid to go to school and be able to flex. That’s really what she was asking me for, so I’m doing my best to make it happen for her. It’ll do wonders for her self esteem.
I remember my mom would have this one nice pen (a pilot pen I think?) and it was like so cool to me. We never significantly struggled (at least not in a way that I had to be violently aware of) but I was definitely not of the same class as most of my school. I think I was able to get one book once from the infamously expensive scholastic book fair one year and it was so magical for me. I knew we weren’t the same as others at my school, but I knew we were safe ❤
Something I’ve always found interesting is how my dad refuses to accept that we’re rich. He’s an immigrant and had a really rough childhood and young adulthood and struggled financially to the point where he basically had to join the army. But by the time I came around, my parents were very well off. They have no debt and because of their money management and income, neither do I. I’m starting off life on my own with a tremendous amount of advantages. Yet when I try to explain to my parents that “reasons x, y, and z make us upper middle class” my dad doesn’t want to accept that. It’s interesting how he’s simultaneously grateful he’s not in the financial situation he was in 30 years ago but he’s still attached to his identity from then.
I think that’s common! (And probably even more so coming from a poor immigrant background) - we internalize our upbringing and it can be difficult to reassess and process where we currently stand
While wealth and classes certainly do help and give us advantages, being upper middle class and being truly “rich” are world’s apart. And provide different opportunities, I think acknowledging privilege is extremely important but it can also include realizing that most of the population is still a “working class” and do not own the means of production (I do realize this isn’t the main point of your comment, I just see people commonly conflate upper middle class and rich)
I can relate to this feeling. I grew up quite poor - a lot more poor than I realized when I was actually living in it. But many of the things we had to do to save money growing up are so internalized in my lifestyle that I feel like I will always identify with it. I made it through college on need-based scholarships and I am now working as a behavior therapist, and even though I make more money than my mom ever did growing up, I haven't quite figured out the line where I don't feel "poor" anymore. On paper, I am middle class, but I still find myself engaging in the same kinds of behaviors that many lower income families engage in, like hoarding supplies in case I can't afford them later and refusing to buy expensive brands, even if they are better quality and I could realistically afford them now. I've had to push myself past the feelings of guilt and anxiety when spending my money on more expensive things, even if the increase in quality justifies it. And I don't know if I'll ever lose that feeling.
Rich kid here! I think you were pretty spot on in guessing that rich kids assume they're middle class as a result of having little understanding of the spectrum of wealth in the world. Most rich people exist in communities that poorer people can't enter, and so the boundary for being middle class in rich kids' perspectives switches from "not being able to afford healthcare or house repairs" to "only owning a couple houses". I remember one day at the private school I was going to, in my social studies class, the teacher put up a graphic showing the five quintiles of wealth in the world. Without telling us the boundaries for each quintile, she asked us to guess whether we fell into the poorest, second poorest, middle, second richest, or richest quintile. No one in the class guessed the richest. Once we had all answered and placed ourselves in the third or fourth quintile, the teacher described the daily lives of each quintile. The example family for the third quintile all shared the same toothbrush, and the example for the fourth quintile couldn't afford to heat or cool their house. It turned out every single person in my class fit into the upper part of the fifth quintile, where the first example of families having matching silverware sets and their own individual rooms started popping up. When rich communities make up your entire world, you're more likely to fit yourself on a spectrum of "wearing hand-me-down clothes" to "having a pop star perform at your birthday party" than on the actual spectrum of class that the majority of the world lives in.
Yes this! I went to public school and had a friend who’s dad couldn’t afford to put fuel in his car to drive her to my house, and even then the ball didn’t drop about what wealth I had. It’s only now as a 22 year old am I beginning to understand the privilege I have. For instance, I’m a musician, and the only reason I can be is because my parents could afford to give me piano lessons, could afford to buy me a piano, could afford to let me enter piano exams, could afford to send me to a music university, and can afford to let me live at home rent-free to pursue my career. It makes me angry that only the children of the wealthy can afford to be artists. It makes me feel guilty and underserving. And even then, a lot of peers don’t have the social consciousness to begin understanding their privilege, because they compare themselves to me, the richest of the people they surround themselves with, and go “oh yeah, I’m middle class”.
I moved to one of the most affluent places in California when I was 15, and I came from a very poor background. My mom and I were homeless, so I moved in with my aunt and uncle, and when I told people that at my new high school, they literally looked at me like I was an alien. It was almost like they didn’t know people suffered like that.
The funny thing is even my aunt and uncle were at the low end of income for the area they lived in, so I was still “the poor one” to the people in my high school even though I was living in the biggest house I’d ever lived in, had a room to myself for the first time ever, and didn’t have to worry about my next meal.
damn what? third quintile all shared the same toothbrush? what country you living in? that's crazy I mean I know like half the world still shits outside like a bear in the woods but sharing a toothbrush is just unsanitary.
I legit felt the same about the TH-camrs i used to watch, and became really unsatisfied with what I had because my room and lifestyle didn't look like a beauty vloggers!
I know this isn’t a perfect solution, but there are a lot of videos about creating cool, pretty home decor from stuff from dollar tree. Trick your friends! Spend $5 instead of $60! ... that sounded insincere, but I really like those videos lol
As somebody who came from an affluent community (though I’m about 5 years older than you,) I can tell you that no, young people don’t realize that they’re rich if they’re surrounded by other rich people. People say culture is like water, and the fish don’t notice the water. That’s 100% true. If you’re not exposed to the way other teens with less means live, you don’t realize that what you have is a luxury to many. It’s only once you get into a more diverse setting, whether it’s college or a different community in the “real world”, that you realize how much privilege you have/had.
Yes, and simultaneously it’s easy for them to STAY in the “super rich” bubble when they go to uni. “Normal” people cannot afford to go to a uni out of state in a big, expensive city, and if they manage to, they’re usually working their way through it. My boyfriend comes from a very wealthy family and his sister went to uni in NYC (they’re not even from the US). All her friends are similarly wealthy to her, their parents pay their tuition/rent/credit card bills and they don’t really hang around the crowds of people who aren’t that fortunate because their lives are totally incompatible. They think what they experience is normal, and even I didn’t realize until I was 18/19 that despite being middle class and always financially comfortable, my parents couldn’t come close to affording to send me to uni in another city and pay my way through it.
Right, my college was expensive but gave a lot of scholarships, and that was the first time I saw a huge range of incomes/how people get by. For some, $100 was way too much money to spend, and then we also had students who wore new $5000 shoes every week.
Yes! I feel those comments were worse. It makes people feel like their parents aren't. I would have like if she referenced Alana Arbuccis video about her money. She's in ther 20s and a good example of everything mentioned but now a days
Yep. Also, you can’t claim your parents work as your own. If you are benefiting off of someone else’s work, that’s privilege. You don’t have to apologize for it, but don’t pretend like you were puttin’ in the hours if the work happened before you were born.
@@Kaybye555 Alana's comments in that video were a mess lmao. she really could not comprehend that hard work doesn't always mean financial success, esp if you're bipoc & you're literally not given loans at the same rate as your white counterparts. she also said most wealthy people were self-made lol. I think she really needs to take a sociology/history class or something...
@@nalad9387 I used to like her but I unsubscribed. Her ideas have been a mess lately. That particular video was an eye opener for me. She really finds success in money only (and apparently looking good) and I just don't agree. I think she just perpetuates the idea that white and beautiful got things because they worked hard. Most of not all of her subscribers found her because they find her attractive
What kind of kid doesn't think their parents are working hard. I feel like people say "my parents worked hard" to "make up" for the fact that their parents are rich. I think these people do have class consciousness, they just know that if they admitted to being rich it would break their down to earth "girl next door" persona and they'd lose followers.
“Anyone can become famous on the internet” is a huge myth. You have to be above average in looks, have some money, and have charisma. Not everyone can film a video for TH-cam and get noticed.
A lot of it depends on what kind of content you make. For example, I am a big fan of Swell Entertainment and she is hardly a 10/10. You probably won't be famous, but you could very well be mildly successful.
@@chengliu872 also helps having a special talent like being a great cook or make up. Doing make up tutorials can work you dont need to brag about every product Just put it on box coments. Lisa Eldridge is a great example. She is a make up artist Who happens yo have a TH-cam chanel. There is also Laura Vitale she gives great Home made recipes. She doent flaunt her life style or makes tour homes. Her chanel is about cooking and Its what makes her great. Adult TH-camrs like lisa Eldridge or shea whitney are the Best. Shea does her hauls but i like that latley she does target or Amazon hauls. She started with luxury and does some luxury videos sometimes. But latley she has more affordable Hauls we cant get everything she buys but we can sometimes buy one or two things from her hauls. I find Adult TH-camrs more interesting
@@sarizonana Yeah talent and charisma. You need to draw people in and then have the talent to keep them there or you will only get a large influx of money once and not make it your career.
YES!!! I’m crying typing this. My parents brought me to America from Mexico. We were low income and had zero insurance plus I know my parents hate me for saying this but they never instilled dental hygiene. I would brush my teeth sporadically. Fast forward I’m now 32 I’ve had about $10k+ worth of work and need more. I didn’t go to the dentist until I was 18 then needed a root canal. I never had braces although thankfully my teeth are relatively straight. I didn’t go back to the dentist until I was 25 and had a dental insurance through work. I remember the assistant asking very rudely WTF was up with me and why my teeth were so bad. I could’ve died right then and there.
the thing about the rich people not being able to cook reminded me of that one scene from arrested development. "its a banana, michael, how much could it cost? $10?" "you've never actually been inside a grocery store, have you?"
@@tiffanyferg I started watching Among Us content when it popped off. One of the creators I've been watching was Hafu and I startled when I learned that she never even boiled water in her life. In fact, I am still having hard time understanding how one can live 30 years without boiling water even for once :) But the most shocking part was how half of the audience was trying to normalize this.
👀 I feel called out. I never used to look at the prices of anything when shopping, because my parents thought it was in bad taste. I never even realized how privileged I grew up until I went to a magnet high school across the county. I met people for whom living off of food stamps was a normal way of life, and to get free lunch was expected. I’m not ashamed of it; my parents worked really hard to get where they are, but as a result they did their very best to insulate me from a lot of harsh realities. Just a reminder that sometimes the picture is a little more complicated than you think. Some folks really are that naïve, simply because of a lack of exposure to how other people live. I’m so glad I got that reality check as I was growing into my sense of self. It was painful and awkward at times, but I honestly think I’m a better person because of it.
I think “kids being born in a family that could give them comfortable life styles aren’t evil millionaires and they shouldn’t feel responsible for financial inequality that they didn’t cause” and “they should acknowledge their status and privilege even if it makes them less relatable” can both be true.
i hate when rich people say "we're comfortable" when they're clearly just rich. or "my parents have money" that means you do too. even if they don't buy you everything you want you have the privilege of growing up in a wealthy home, having better access to healthcare, education, possibly growing up in a neighborhood with a low crime rate, or even gated community, and having access to better food. all of that gives someone massive privilege. not to mention connections their parents may have in the workplace that give their children opportunities the rest of us don't get
And that’s how children should be brought to experience this world in families that cactually can afford them a “comfortable” life. What’s the point to have 4-5 kids in a 3 bedroom house? Having children when you can’t feed them “better food”? When you can’t afford to give them “better” education, healthcare, a healthy environment with low crime rates? Where’s the accountability when it comes to parenting…
@Kill Bm nah the wealthy owe the people they got rich off of (their workers) a lifestyle with dignity. Whether that be through living wages or tax dollars going to social programs, idc
yea when I think abt this it makes me pretty confident that I was lower middle class in my early childhood and upper middle class near the end. it was confusing bc I didn't know we were on food stamps and got financial aid from school and free breakfast and only shopped at thrift stores and budget groceries. I thought all of that was normal, but I also went to private school so for the other kids that was definitely not normal lol. nowadays my parents still have a cheap mindset but are willing to fork over money for a new phone to replace my 5 yr old one, they'd prolly pay for my college and buy the bigger things for me if I needed them like maybe a $100 piece of furniture. but im moved out with flatmates and living paycheck to paycheck and am appalled when my friends say some $80 pants at a vintage store was a good deal 🤨🤨 so anyway at this point I'm just reminiscing and ranting lol
It’s so true. My cousin lives rent free in her parents Oceanside vacation home and drives a car her parents bought her, while going to University (tuition paid fully paid by her parents). She doesn’t think her family is rich 😳. I was so shocked I didn’t even try to set her straight,
The funniest thing to me is when wealthy tiktokers or youtubers purposely ignore questions like “how do you afford all of this?” “where do you work?” because they know that they have never worked for anything and that their lifestyle is funded by their parents. And it’s always so sad to see kids ask those questions because you can sense their desperation for a lifestyle such as theirs.
I feel like if you don’t know what class you are or what’s your parents’ financial situation when you’re a teenager, it means that you’re pretty good financially (most times at least). When I was younger and kept asking my mom money for clothes and makeup or to go out with friends or money for a phone etc, she sat down with me and literally showed me what our income was and what our expenses were. I was shocked to see that, and I never talked about getting those things again. Since then I grew up knowing exactly what my situation is. “Rich” kids do not have an idea of what’s going on, what’s their situation or/and where they stand in society.
That's true. Lower income kids grow up to a constant tune of "that's too expensive" and "we cannot afford that". We know exactly what our financial situation is. 😂
I think that just falls on the parents. If I were to have that privilege in the future to not have to worry about bills or whatever, I will make sure my kids understand how privileged they are, to the extent of even traveling to show them how other kids live so they can see how lucky they are. I think parents shouldn't shelter their kids so much. It's not gonna take away the kids innocence as much as people think.
I was talking to a now ex and the topic of social status came up somehow. He told me "you don't realize what you are", and I had literally never thought about it. Since then, I have been paying more attention. And it's true that some guys I have met talked or mentioned "pegar un pelotazo" around me, which is a Spanish way of saying that they hit the jackpot, or something like that, by going out with a rich girl.... At one point I told one of them "I've got one word for you: prenup." Laughed about it.. but I was dead serious. And as I mature I realize the only ones I feel comfortable around are people at the same station as me. It's ridiculous to try to deny it. I really feel uncomfortable when they even mention money. I never talk about it, not because it's tacky, but because it's boring and unnecessary unless we are married or need to take care of business with family. But I guess that just speaks of how money has never been a big deal for me bc I never had to worry about it. Honestly. I have had some hardships in my life. I always say my life was comfortable but never easy. And I wouldn't wish hardships like taking care of an alcoholic verbally abusive father on anyone. I am glad and somewhat confused when I meet people who have never seen their parents drunk and shouting at their spouse. I am happy for them and realize how hard I've had it and how far I've come despite it all. Why can't people be happy for others good circumstances? Nothing makes sense in this life. Why bother worrying about how much or how little someone has and just try to be happy with what we have? And if it isn't enough for someone, they should go out and do all they can to make it happen. Once your basic needs are covered, it's true that money does not buy happiness. I am eternally grateful for what I have and wish others felt the same with what they have too.
Being exposed to that kind of content while living in a “2nd or 3rd world” country adds another layer to the whole experience. It’s not just that your family could never afford those luxuries, but also that many symbols of such lifestyles wouldn’t even be present in your country (we literally didn’t have malls or big amusement parks or proper restaurants or even houses that looked remotely like the classic “american dream” ones). Anyways, thanks for the video.
Just to give some perspective, not all of America looks like the America you see on social media, though. I would say the only thing we had in the rural area I grew up is actual restaurants... and even then my single mother and I rarely went to them. Most of the times we did before my mom made a little more money, it was my grandmother who married a wealthy man that took us out. But he was very conservative, so it isn't like we got help otherwise. And even if people have access to malls, amusement parks, restaurants, or have seen regular American houses... doesn't mean they have experienced any of those things. I think honestly it's actually worse to be near that stuff, but you just can't go. I grew up in an area not around that stuff (tbh, we had to go out of our way to even see a legit restaurant, too) and it was the same for most people I went to school with... most of them didn't have access to those things, either. Let's put it this way, I had never seen a lot of wealthy things growing up so that after college when I had a sales job, I didn't even realize my boss was driving me around training me in a Mercedes. I actually was disappointed, because most of us have heard of the brand at least, but it just seemed like a regular 'ol car to me. I think it shocked my Indian boss when he realized I didn't know the brand of the car, too.
Yes, I relate so much! She mentioned most people have a smartphone these days and I was like 'lol no'. It really depends where you come from. Apart from that, there is the privilege of being a native speaker and creating content in english, the most spoken language in the world, wich allows your channel to reach more people...
I think the most ridiculous thing about this, that you didn’t mention, is the reason these people are making so much money is because they’re literally just walking advertisements. When you realise that advertising companies are just using young people to sell their products, it makes a lot more sense why influencers make so much money and why it feels so wrong to the average person that they do. Its consumerism disguised as entertainment
Well, they are making massive amounts of money bc the people that complain about their wealth are also the very same people who help them get that wealth by being their viewers.
I used to say we were comfortable because we weren't starving and got presents on Christmas and birthdays. But we didnt go to the doctors unless it was hospital worthy and even then my dad stitched his own arm rather than pay for the ER. We did dishes in the bathtub because the kitchen sink was broke. Our furnace broke so we didnt have heat for several years but had to buy space heaters so the water pipes in our ceiling wouldnt freeze which still happened even with the heaters on truly cold days. I said comfortable because I compared us to people I saw who lived on the street or in shelters. I mean I had a home and food, that was comfortable to me.
I'm glad you were able to make the best out of what you had growing up! At the same time I wish no one ever had to worry over healthcare costs or the cost to repair essential things that break down randomly in the house.
I needed glasses in high school and instead got reading glasses from dollar tree, I broke a finger and couldn’t afford the doctor, and had a breast tumor (not cancerous thank goodness) for a year before finally getting treated. But you always see what you have first because you know someone always has it worse.
As a european with free school and healthcare etc, hearing from people "we couldn't afford to go to the ER" is really horrifying. I go to the doctors at least every 3 months and have a lot of expensive medication that I can get for free over here. I feel so bad for you all :(
@@heejsaan5648 school here is free (well paid for in taxes) but medical care is rough. I'm 26 now and haven't been to see a medical professional for years, nor because I cant afford it but because it's so ingrained in me that you dont go in
I feel like the middle class lifestyle has been taken over by more wealthier people. It’s not affordable or normal to be spending 200$ on clothes or be getting the newest iPhone every Christmas
It's definitely not. I'm from an upper middle class family and I can only think of one or two times where we ever spent $200 on clothes in one trip, and my family still has their iPhone 6s from 2016. It's just not realistic and not good habits to get into. As I like to say, just because you can afford it doesn't mean you SHOULD buy it! Honestly I don't know anyone in real life who spends that frivolously
yeah, the middle class is definitely a dwindling crowd. i feel like at this point there’s really no such thing as the middle class if we consider the fact that an outstanding majority of us are closer to homelessness than ever having 500,000 dollars to our name
@@Sierra_Polerina There is a distinct difference in my family. My mom, who was so poor she could barely keep the heat on for us as kids, married my step-dad who was very wealthy. As a kid, I got to enjoy the amenities, such as the pool and A/C and even multiple bathrooms, but never once did I ask either of them for money for new clothes or anything I wanted. My step-sisters go out WEEKLY and spend hundreds of dollars on new clothes and things they dont need! Theyve never worked a real job, have no real responsibilities, and are not held accountable for any of their actions. While it is difficult for me to watch this behavior from them, I am glad that it is not me. I am much more humble in what I have, and I work hard for the things I want!. Haha if you read all this, thanks :D
Fr!! I describe myself as upper middle class, yet my family would have gone broke a long time ago if we spent all our money the way a lot of "comfortable/middle class" TH-camrs spent their money. I just bought a MacBook today since my old laptop is literally being held together with duct tape, and I nearly cried blood. Not to mention that the only way I was able to afford a new MacBook was thanks to gifts for graduating HS this year.
yeah, I'm fairly comfortable now and have my own apartment but it's not very new or modern and it kinda looks dingy as a result, so it's not ideal TH-cam space for vlogging cos it looks like I live in a weird box
I grew up in upper-middle class, and honestly didn't even realize how well-off we were until my fiance. He grew up extremely poor, often going without meals entirely. When we talk about our experiences, he's helped me see that I grew up with a lot of privilege; I didn't realize it because my mother made sure to raise me not to be spoiled, I just never went wonting for anything. I agree with a lot of comments here that kids who grow up wealthy or at least comfortable have no idea and don't need to think about it.
this was my experience. my partner really was very poor growing up and when he tells me that they didnt have lunch at school or a bus to take them and I had everythign plus more. it does make me think.
Same! Like, I wanna know how ppl think good teeth represent and stuff. Yup, I'm interested in teeth. No need to say that I'm weird cuz we all love something that is supposedly "weird" so... I wanna become a dentist so that's a HUGE factor abt why I'm looking into teeth and what ppl think of her good teeth and bad teeth represent or some stuff, get what I mean?
Same, I grew up with some really unfortunate teeth issues from genetics so I'd love a video on it. I've been wearing braces, had teeth implants that failed (which had to be paid for by my grandparents and other family coming together), and having other appointments with various specialists since I was 15 (I am now 22). This was largely because the only braces we could afford weren't adequate, so I got older and had to "undo" a lot of what was done before. I'm still trying to get decent teeth now and I'm paying for it through my student loan rip
I am looking forward to it. my family was poor but I was born with really good teeth and my mom took so much pride in these free teeth and spoke of them constantly, like she used to ask me to show them to people.
I wonder how many of those “rich” people are actually living their lifestyle on credit and no savings. Especially people in the upper middle class. I have so many friends that live extravagant lifestyles but they earn less than I do. Our banker once admitted that most people’s savings accounts are empty. I think there’s a huge segment of society that’s faking it.
Most of my friends live like that. It gets so tiring trying to advise them. One of my friend is now being hunted by loan sharks and still applied for another loan
1000000%. America is literally completely founded on credit, most people are not nearly as wealthy as they look. House? Mortgaged. Cars? Leased with a payment plan. Living off of credit cards, etc.
I think people don’t talk enough about how challenging it can be to date someone from a different socioeconomic status. I had a boyfriend whose parents had three houses, and was genuinely confused why my family did not have a lake house. But on the flip side, I have also dated someone who was houseless at times growing up. It’s so easy for even middle class people to be so unaware of their privilege (myself included)
This!!! In the UK our healthcare is completely free but dental work mostly isn't (probably why the British are known for horrible teeth) and if you need dental work it can be cripplingly expensive and hard to access! Teeth are very much seen as a luxury or something purely aesthetic here but last year I almost died from a dental related issue and it really made me re-evaluate this
Yeah I wonder if its because in prior human history, teeth falling out was seen as normal to inevitable, so it was like "why bother if its only going to happen anyway." But now we have modern science and we understand how to prevent this from happening, plus its so easy to provide this "fluffy" type care (regular dental cleanings and screenings) versus providing intensive care (such as jaw surgery and feeding tubes if things go uncared for long enough). In addition to allowing people to retain their comfort and dignity. Teeth and the mouth are also a window to the bones and the health of the rest of the body. Let's move teeth up to "regular bones" status! We aren't cavemen anymore...
@@jelkel1928 Well in the 18th century poor people used to literally sell their teeth and then rich people would buy and wear them so dentistry clearly has a weird capitalist history! I think they should definitely be classed as real bones, modern dentistry is a big part in us living longer so it's pretty essential if you ask me
In my country braces are free ( alongside all other dental work) up until you are 18. You do need bad teeth to get braces tho... They wont just give it to anyone but I never knew braces was a luxury thing. It was always just seen as reallyyyyy embarassing to be seen in braces here lol
The beginning iteration of lifestyle creators were directly coming off the high of MTV shows like Cribs and Sweet 16. They successfully made us think that materialism was more interesting than a personality.
so I'm ten minutes in and I'm already crying even tho there's nothing emotional in the video? I'm someone from a third world country and my perception of the West came from these TH-cam videos. I remember feeling pitiful and sad about not having a teenage like this. When you said that you felt left out of this niche of teenagers I actually feel seen for once. Thank u for being my best friend Tiff ilysm
Its mortifying and beings about alot of sadness and anger I'm 23 now and am still feeling salty and bitter asf especially now that the wage gap is rapidly widening everyday.
@@chantlmcclary6419 This is exactly why I'm not having children until I have built enough wealth. 25 and doing good so far. I had a privilege upbringing so by God my babies will have the best!
"My parents worked really hard for their money" is quite an ignorant and insensitive thing to say when addressing wealth. Like I'm sure your parents did work hard for their money, but that doesn't mean they've worked harder than those who do not have money. Not all people who have money have worked for it, especially those who come from intergenerational wealth where money is passed down through the family. It also implies that people who work jobs that are lower income (retail workers, hospitality etc) don't work hard and aren't faced with challenges of their own which is not true, and anyone who has worked those jobs knows that.
I don’t understand how “my parents worked really hard for their money” implies that other people don’t work hard to earn what they have. Doesn’t it just mean that they weren’t the mega-rich people who had intergenerational wealth? Sometimes I don’t understand what people expect of these rich teenagers, surely they don’t have to apologize for being born into a rich family should they?
@@WeiCloudy Thank you--I was going to ask the same thing. I don't understand where people get these alleged implications from; that's not what saying "my parents worked hard" is implying at all. It boggles the mind how one can do such mental gymnastics to arrive there, but I personally think it all boils down to projection (that stems from jealousy and insecurity for their own perceived inadequacies, be quite frank).
@@WeiCloudy honestly I think the self awareness is good. I would always take this instead of not acknowledging that you benefited from your parents wealth (ie it's my parents money, not mine) One of my college friends was really well off and she said this line a lot, and not once did I feel spoken down to as a kid from a lower middle class family. But that's just based on my own experiences.
I’ve always worked in the service industry and what is disgusting is the way rich people treat us. They treat us like they own us. I’ve had many encounters with rude customers.
@@lisar.271 yaassss! I feel like Tiffany, along with a lot of people in the comment section are projecting their insecurities on other people who had it better early on in life. And what bugs me even more is when she straight up says that the teenage girls should admit that they’re “rich,” but tbh isn’t “working really hard to provide a comfortable life” exactly the definition of a well of middle/upper middle class? Tiffany needs to stop ranting like a thirteen year old and then covering it up by saying they could’ve acknowledged their privileges blablabla It’s not that acknowledging one’s privileges isn’t important, it’s just really ironic when she got to live in a wealthy city in California. Despite being on the low income end, I’m sure she would come across as one of the rich people in other areas of the country.
I grew up in a middle class family with 4 siblings. I knew that at times money was tight but i never had to worry abt having food, shelter, etc. Moving out and living paycheck to paycheck has been so so different then what I grew up with. I really took being financially secure for granted
Honestly, I'm less annoyed by a youtuber/influencer that can say "yes, I am rich" than one that will pretend they're broke when they always have the latest tech and drop $500 on new clothes every week. I mean tbh, when I'm rich, I will be so happy to say that I am lolol. I also remember watching these christmas hauls and honestly feeling sad that i was only receiving 2-3 gifts. To add insult to injury, they would always say "this is in no way bragging, this is just what my parents got me. I'm not rich though", and then would unbox the newest iPhone even in 2012 when they weren't a thing yet. Note: I was absolutely NOT poor growing up (I wasn't rich either though). My parents just spent their money on stuff we needed rather than everything we wanted. This whole consumerism side of youtube is actually the reason why i never took youtube seriously when growing up. I tried to create a beauty channel back in 2013, and I ended up giving it up rather quickly after realizing I would never be able to compare to these other beauty youtuber coming out with a new 1000$ haul every other day. I've actually recently moved into a new apartment, which is very beautiful and actually matches what's "in trend". And you know what? I moved a month ago, and my Instagram following has literally doubled when I haven't changed anything. Still using the same hashtags, and actually I've been putting much less effort into interacting with people than I used to do. Yet, my photos are getting hundreds (and even thousands) more likes than they used to. Does it make sense? Nope. I've also seen the same phenomenon happen on TH-cam. My videos are doing insanely better now that I've moved to this apartment. I mean, maybe I've improved a lot in my content over the past month, but it seems to be a weird coincidence. It's understandable though. People want to see pretty things. It makes sense for a person who's able to get good lighting, has a pretty apartment and films decently well to blow up and make it on the internet. But it's also true that it is SUCH a huge privilege to be able to afford this living situation... Anyway, I could go on and on... maybe I should do my own commentary on the issue lool 🥲
Wow that’s such a fascinating example of your environment helping you gain more followers! Either that or an extreme coincidence in the timing hahaha but it’s totally true that people love to interact with well-lit, “aesthetic” content
lmao i was scrolling thru tiffany's video and saw your comment. but yeah i definitely noticed it too - you don't post much different stuff but every photo looks pretty af and aesthetically pleasing and that does really help getting likes. your growth/the change in your pictures has really made me think like if my desk wouldn't be brown + the lighting and surrounding would be nicer (even tho i rly love my desk and that it is big, it's still just a part of my student housing room) then i would probably post even more pictures on my studygram. because i do have high standards for my pics and i would post wider shots but the background etc. just doesn't work the way i'd want it to. anyways your pics are hella pretty and i love them all and defo make a vid on this
It’s truly a sign of how much capitalism gaslights us all that budding class consciousness must be apologized for as ‘pettiness’ or ‘jealousy’ or ‘being a hater’ on the part of the not-rich/less-privileged. I can so relate to younger Tiffany - I was constantly in awe of the lifestyles of my rich peers…..but for some reason **I** was the weird one for thinking their lives were not normal and shouldn’t be normalized 🤔
@Kill Bm A fundamental effect of overconsumption is a reduction in the planet's carrying capacity. Excessive unsustainable consumption will exceed the long-term carrying capacity of its environment (ecological overshoot) and subsequent resource depletion, environmental degradation and reduced ecosystem health.
@Kill Bm how is “spoiling” not a bad thing? It’s one thing to provide for your child and give them treats but spoiling is excess. Children are still learning the value of items and how they’re earned. Being provided every desire with no sense of their value creates entitlement that effects consumption in adulthood. Spoiled children grow up with less financial responsibility for themselves - it leaves them less able or willing to earn on their own or plan for their own spending. It also makes them less understanding of people who earn less and increases the gap between classes. Spoiled children can learn to manage their own money and work hard and empathize with those who were not spoiled but it’s much harder to do so. You’re not doing your child any favors by “spoiling” them, you’re just setting them up for a very hard reality check.
@Kill Bm idk why you’re aggressive or speaking as if you know me personally but spoiling a child has always been considered a negative thing - hence the use of the word “spoil” which denotes something literally going bad. It has less to do with providing for your children and more to do with behavioral problems resulting from overindulgence of parents. That’s not my subjective opinion, that’s the very definition of “spoiled children.” If you’re not comfortable with people responding to your questions with an explanation, perhaps don’t ask.
When I was a kid my dad would describe our economic status as: ''We have enough so we dont have to worry if we will be able to pay the bills and not be hungry.'' And that was accurate, the food was basic food, we didnt get sweets and ice scream was a once in a while treat, I wore a lot of hand me downs from my brother, we would buy jackets that were too big and fold the sleeves so that we could wear them for at least one or 2 extra years cause kids grow. We maybe didnt understand class and money properly, but we had a decent idea, recently I was on a walk with my mom and saw a huge doll house in a store window, I commented how silly it was how much i wanted to have one of those as a kid, she was confused cause I never told her. And I didnt, neither did my brother, we knew we cant afford expensive stuff so why even ask. But I still feel uncomfortable talking about money and generally would rather not. I had a few run ins with a couple of my friends from college recently, where they complained to no end about how their income is horrible and how hard they are struggling. One of them is earning double that I do and the other a bit over a tripple of my current income, no kids etc. They are far more well off than the majority of people in my country. But when you grew up in a family where have a near live in maid to clean and cook for the family, your idea of struggling is different.
I'm fascinated by the tooth talk... living in Canada where we have free healthcare, we don't have free dental care, and as an adult, you can almost tell someone's class or status by looking at the quality of their teeth... also Trixie Mattel talks about as soon as she got rich and famous she replaced all her busted teeth with veneers.. And Katya tells a story about her high school teacher who was a nice lady but had awful teeth and low confidence because of it always hiding her face, and then after one weekend she came in and had all new teeth and her confidence had skyrocketed
I know the UK has a bad reputation for teeth, but it's the same here. Most dental healthcare isnt covered by the NHS and as we dont have an insurance system for just teeth, it's got to be paid at the reception desk (though I'm sure you can do it through a bill for larger sums). It means most people on low incomes just cant factor it into their expenses and dont go frequently/when they need to/at all. It also contributes to peoples fear of the dentist. It used to be a running joke that the people on jeremy Kyle all have bad teeth, which in actuality just correlates with their low average income
Yes, it's so hard to have bad teeth. I'm in Canada too and it has been a long-time pain point for me. I think I am getting closer to afford dental care but I am in my 30s so it feels late. I've spent many years hiding my smile.
@@emilyclarke8222 i agree with your point, but dental care is free here for under 18s, and most kids will get braces completely free, therefore (at least just in my experience) i haven’t really noticed teeth as an indicator of class at all compared to the situation in the states. this probably was more of the thing in the past before braces were common for teenagers so there were more problems in later life that you do have to pay for
As someone who grew up pretty wealthy, I believe there is a conscious effort by many parents and financial advisors to deny their children a class conscious upbringing. It ensures the preservation of the family wealth. A culture of silence about inequality makes it easier to ignore the questions (why do we have this? Do we deserve it? Etc)
I’m sure that what you’ve said is true for a lot of people but on the flip side, I also grew up fairly wealthy and my parents really made an effort with class consciousness and living way below their means and things like that. They pushed me to understand personal finance and take classes on it which in the end will probably help with wealth preservation. Taking that personal finance class actually inspired me to become what is basically a wealth advisor for people who don’t have a lot of money because people without a lot of money work very hard and deserve to keep as much as they can. I want to learn all the ways I can advise people to prioritize different loans based on interest rates and paying the least amount of interest possible or other things like that. it’s a niche but concrete way I can really help people.
@@manyagaver1946 It sounds like our upbringings have a lot in common haha. I was more so speaking to what seems to me like a general cultural trend. Wealth redistribution ftw :)
@@manyagaver1946 Its really good you have frugal parents. they are well ofb but dont spend much. Its a very responsible way of living. Because If you are Middle class but spend too much the money Will go away. Its great you have parents who are conservative in that matter
i vaguely know a guy who goes to this crazy private school with like the prime ministers kid and apparently its bc his mom is a diplomat so the government pays but also like. he is SO rich i do not care what he thinks
I'm 33 and Irish and have slightly crooked teeth that aren't perfect white. Didn't bother me too much until Instagram stories ....I got so used to seeing people talk into the camera with PERFECT teeth. Now I am wearing Invisalign which I have treated myself to with my savings...when they come off I'm getting them whitened... Irish and British people did not care much about teeth and it was never a huge class indicator/beauty standard until recently. Some Americans thought that some Irish/British celebrities with 'bad' teeth were wearing fake ones for a joke. An iconic famous Irish singer had to have his teeth on his album cover photoshopped so his album could be sold in the USA lmao.
@@tiffanyferg Oh from a European pov Americans seem almost brainwashed into believing bright white teeth (that are filed down) are the only teeth that are "healthy", when I was always told that they're supposed to be slightly yellow-ish because that's their natural colour
@@epicmarschmallow5049 as I said somewhere else on here even the Mexicans say dientes ingleses to mean bad teeth, but actually they are some of the healthiest teeth in the world! they just aren't always straightened and whitened because both of those can actually be BAD for the health of the teeth
yeah I'm irish and americas obsession with teeth is actually wild to me. like if they're so wonky they're causing a problem of course get braces but like idk why people care so much about other ppls teeth
I find it quite shocking that it seems like "success" now means to be rich or wealthy. It is like you can't call yourself successful anymore if you graduate and become a nurse like thousands who do every year....now you can only be considered successful if you do own a Lamborghini and such because few people can. This lifestyle of overflowing materialism is just ridiculous to me.
Thank You! I’ve been thinking about this a lot lately and for awhile I’ve had a materialistic definition of what success is and up until recently for me my definition of success changed to me success is commuting to a thing until you can’t anymore or progress at the thing you are trying at.
Well I dont know if its a symptom of a social media in particular or some sort of mentality, but I never saw someone I know with a Lamborghini. So, when someone achieve their dreams, the people where I come from often view this as success. "You made it as a teacher? damn congrats". But its an external point of view as I dont know the level of satisfaction of those people.
We all have different meaning of "success", being a good mother (for me) is success, and i'm 19 years old, without kids. But i just want to be the mother that i never had, and make my children's happy.
As someone who’s about to graduate to become a nurse, I’d consider that EXTREMELY successful! Success is relative, but nursing has been my dream for years. That definitely sounds like success to me. 😊
I never want to forget or brush aside how much privilege I come from. My parents, while they didn't have the money to have family vacations abroad or a big house or new cars, could always pay for my music lessons. They're both college professors, and with that came with enough disposable income to pay for things like music lessons, tickets to the local theater, my sister's dance classes, things in that vein (not to mention the best gift they could possibly have given us, free undergrad tuition at the college my mom works at). I'm a trained composer with a degree and a half now, and if I ever make it big I will never say it's because of hard work. Yes, I work hard, but anyone can work hard. If hard work got you success then every creator would be successful. It's all luck. Luck to be born into a family that could pay for me to learn music at a young age, luck to have a mom working at a school that gives kids of faculty free tuition, luck to have a family that's been stable enough to let me stay at home and save up before moving to a big city so I don't need a full time job for a while and can focus on my creative work. Not everyone is so lucky, and that needs to change.
Yeah, that is quite a bit a privilege... growing up poor I wouldn't ever dream of music or dance lessons. I'm actually surprised your parents didn't have other nice things, but it might depend on the area you grew up, too. Usually college professors make really good money.
@@NickaLah It really depends on the type of professor and the college. State colleges pay less than private ones, and lesser known private ones pay less than really famous schools. Also, when I was a very young child my parents were adjunct professors (which are essentially criminally underpaid teaching slaves, the concept of adjuncts/contingent faculty needs to go away or at least be extremely reformed), but that was before I had music lessons. I grew up in a town with an ivy league university, but my parents worked at smaller colleges. Because of the ivy league school, housing prices are suuuuper inflated so even families with solidly middle class incomes can't find affordable housing easily. But it's so important to fight for solid arts programs in public schools and music schools that give free lessons to low income students, because it's awful how cost prohibitive music can be, everyone should have the chance to learn it
Nah if you make it big you ARE definitely allowed to say it was because of hard work, just don’t disregard all the advantages and privilege you’ve had, as it’s a combination of both. Also thanks for sharing, I like how honest you were cause a lot of people with wealth, privilege and the ability to afford things, try to shy away from the fact they grew up with money/have money. I wish you the most luck in the future.✨✨
I kinda agree, but not with everything. It’s true that luck should be taken into account, but it shouldn’t just build down to that. I don’t want my hard work to be diminished just to make others feel better. I worked hard, and so do other successful people.
Every time I hear a lifestyle youtuber go into a long winded response to being asked if they’re rich instead of just saying yes or no, I know the answer is yes
Yes!! This is fantastic. I love this shit. As someone who grew up bordering lower class/lower middle class, I shared a room with my mum and sister, and later just my sister until I moved out at 20. And even then, I was sharing with my boyfriend at the time. When the relationship ended and I moved again, I had my own room for the first time at 21 and only for 4 months before moving back home to share a room with my mum. I’ve been watching TH-cam for god knows how long and it’s so interesting to see how content has changed. I’ve always believed that poverty begets poverty and having a wealthier upbringing supports you more in being able to maintain that wealth into adulthood
I shared a room with my mom too which imo seemed extra poor and embarrassing. it's somewhat normal to share a room with a sibling, people do it on tv shows and in movies. but mostly im really resentful, not for the stuff, but the opportunities you dont have as a poor kid.
you're so right when you say poverty begets poverty. our world is structured so that the rich keep getting richer at the cost of the poor getting poorer
As a European I’m always shocked to hear about people not being able to go to the doctor or endless student debt... not that poverty doesn’t exist here and there aren’t people who struggle, but health care and education are free...
I'm Middle European too. What's important to keep in mind about free education though is that when your family's income too low to support you not making money when you could, it doesn't matter that the education would be free. The thing that's not affordable is family members not making any money because they're pursuing further education and not the education itself. Granted it obviously still opens up more opportunities than if it was as expensive as in other regions, it's just another aspect to keep in mind
but is it good healthcare and education?? Is great that is free but doesn't the people have to be in waiting list for months until a doctor can see you??
Honestly I feel like Tik Tok is the epitome of pretty privilege. On TH-cam, anyone has the potential to grow a decently-sized audience if they work hard enough and select a niche that suits them well. However, on Tik Tok? Yes, true, anyone can blow up just like they can on tik tok. But someone can also just post a 5s video of themselves looking in the mirror and get hundred of thousands of likes and followers?
Speaking of teeth, I work in the dental field. When you mention people who are rich but think they’re middle class…. That’s most dentists. I work for a husband and wife team that own a dental practice and real estate. They are millionaires, but definitely not Jeff Bezos rich. Listening to them talk about money like it’s nothing makes me cringe. This past winter my furnace shit out and luckily for me, I know an HVAC guy who was able to replace mine for only $2000. When having a casual convo with my one of bosses, he commented that I was lucky and “$2000 is nothing”. It made me want to vomit. My paychecks aren’t even $2000, my mortgage isn’t cheap, and I strongly considered trying to go without heat that winter. They have *no clue* how hard it is.
Haha I'm about to start dental assisting with a couple very similar to this. They're literally millionaires but won't pay me for placement; I also need to take time off my paid work for it. Lmao wanna get in there and leave...
That’s gross of them. They’re bosses, they should know about how much you make if they are a privately owned establishment. You’re entire pay isn’t a good deal for what you had to pay. That sets you back. They own a business like that, they’re well off
If $2000 is nothing, then they should pay you more than that 😂 so many bosses are both stupid and out of touch it's unreal Perfect opportunity to both humble them and ask for a raise
that moment when Parasite, a story about class struggle, won an Oscar for best film and millionaire celebrities all stood up giving a roaring applause Edit: replying to some comments, no i did not mean that the audience shouldn't have applauded, but rather that the whole thing is just quite ironic
Just a few weeks later, smash cut to Ellen furloughing her unionized employees and getting a non-union crew up to her mansion to film. Also all those other Hollywood dummies singing "Imagine" to the service class from next to their pools.
To be fair, parasite is not only criticizing the rich, but also the poor and how part of why they are in the circumstances they are in is partly their fault.
I mean, if they didn't stand and clap it probably would have come across as rude and racist instead of "oh wow look at them knowing their privilege". You are right in that it's very ironic, though.
@@KillerQueen-gx4vb I've watched a lot of videos of Bong Joon Ho, almost obsessively... and he's never worded it like you have. The only way Parasite criticizes the poor, which it only does somewhat, is that our circumstances cause us to fight with other poor people. But he's not saying being poor is usually a poor person's fault, like how you're making it sound. The inspiration for this movie actually came to him because he was a tutor for a wealthy family, and he admits he didn't deserve the job.... he was a math tutor despite being bad at math. He said, that's how those jobs work, though, it's entirely dependent on who you know and luck.
@HannaBanana Actually it is... if someone works more than one job and only has time to sleep, or maybe look presentable for work... I'm not going to hate on them.
As a kid who grew up ""comfortable"", it did take me a long time to realize how rich I was. My family always told me that we were middle class, comfortable, etc, and everyone around me was a similar level of wealth, so I genuinely had nothing to compare to. Among other kids, there was no awareness of class and all of us assumed that our lifestyle was the norm. I didn't become aware of my class privilege until almost going to a private high school (didn't end up going, but still). Online I heard people talk about college, debt, money issues, and how impossible it all was to afford - yet here I was, with parents that could spend tens of thousands of dollars on high schools. It was shocking and it felt like I'd been lied to my whole life. The rich teens you talk about in these videos are basically the people I grew up with. And I guarantee, they have no clue how rich they are. They're parroting what their parents say and they truly believe they are the middlest of middle class.
I went to Public school. My house got destroyed by a hurricane when I was 13 and I had to buy my own car and rent. I couldn’t afford college even with top grades and a scholarship of 30 percent. There are many people like us out there that rely on food stamps and the like.
Re: contextualizing your family's wealth, I think this is largely due to age. I pretty much had no idea what my parents' actual financial situation was until I went into college and got involved in money discussions. But growing up I could understand my family's position by comparing my family's lifestyle to my friends'. When you go to one friend's house and it's a small apartment with kids sharing rooms, another friend's house is modern with extra space and amenities, and you're in the middle, you gauge it on that. As someone with parents who grew up poor and working class, the hard work argument makes sense to me. My parents were frugal and didn't spend money on things "rich people" buy (we almost never went on vacation or ate at restaurants, i didn't get everything i asked for, etc) but I knew we didn't have a problem buying things we needed. Maybe this has something to do with understanding concept of money itself because as a kid you may not understand savings, investments, or money that isn't cash. Also both of my parents worked a lot when I was growing up and I always associated that with needing the money (again I had friends with parents who needed to have multiple jobs and friends who had a stay at home parent). Ok I'm rambling lol but I think the younger creators explaining their financial situation likely don't have a full understanding of it
From the other end of this - I’m definitely from an upper middle class household. Growing up, I had no idea how different my life was from others. I never really asked my parents for things (or felt comfortable with it), so I started to notice in late elementary school that I didn’t have what others did in terms of colorful pens or cool clothes. Then I started going to friends houses in middle school and saw that mine was so much larger and it was super confusing because I’d thought that we were not as well off (especially with my mom stressing over debt). I don’t even think I recognized fully where my family sat on the class scale until high school. It’s definitely still weird because I tend to live on my own salary from my campus job and, as such, only do what I personally can afford. I know I have no understanding of money, so I tend to spend way less than my friends with less and stress about how much I save way more. Meanwhile my parents are doing things like getting an RV or putting a down payment on a weekend home. I do what I can to use my privilege to help my friends, like by paying for friends when we go out or covering the cost of gas. I dunno, this was super long and rambly lol
My parents also actively shielded us from any kind of hard numbers on how much money we had. I think if I have kids I won't do this though, I'll want them to understand our place in the world so they aren't ignorant.
@@tiffanyferg same, no shade on others, but I genuinely cannot understand being a child that doesn't have a gague on your parents wealth because its so a part of me. And it seems like, at least in hindsight, it should be easy to figure it out with context clues.
That's so true, I literally had to have a fight with my dad for him to finally be transparent with me about how much my parents make and how much debt they were in. I think he was ashamed to admit it, and my parent never wanted us to worry about money growing up so they spent money they didn't have. During the housing crisis I knew things were bad because my parents fought a lot over money and my mom admitted to me once that we might lose the house, but growing up without any sense of money made it so abstract and I feel really unprepared to be an adult and manage my own money as a result
I grew up in an upper middle class family, but every time I hear about Americans' economic situation I feel like I grew up a damn millionaire because I can go to the hospital for free, and I never had to take loans to pay for school. America is wild.
My assumption: “both your parents have a masters degree or established career” because if they admit to that there’s rly no denying they come from a rich family. they’d rather say “my parents worked so hard”! So poor people don’t work hard? Ugh 😑
@@LangBellsChannel I think most younger creators from middle class backgrounds don’t always grasp their families income/financial situation. I remember seeing some Reddit discussions about this and it’s pretty common for parents pto try to shield their kids away from financial matters until they are on the verge of adulthood, as things are“comfortable”. I would say that my parents worked hard to get where we are now, because it true, barely saw my father growing up, with my mom it inverted, as now I barely see her because of work.
Trust even people with master degrees struggle. I know 3 ppl with one and none of them get paid what they should with the amount of education they have...one is going back for a 2nd masters to be a therapist to make more.
That point you made about some people not being able to go to the doctors because they are afraid their family might go bankrupt really adding into putting things into perspective about how privileged I am. Thank you
what’s funny is that early youtube didn’t disclose when it was paid promotion so a lot of the time we thought they were genuine hauls when some of them were gifted the clothes or given paid promo to sell things to their impressionable young audiences. I think it wasn’t until the FTC started regulating it around 2017 when we started to know when a person was giving us brand deals or authentic content
As a kid, and even now, my parents like to tell me that we aren’t wealthy; we’re comfortable. And I guess the description “comfortable” fits in the sense that money is not a point of contention or insecurity. There is no question of affording doctors, braces, or house/auto repairs. But I never had a new car; the one I got when I was 18 and am still driving at 20 is from 1991, and the paint is coming off. My parents don’t buy new cars either. My parents would get me a few gifts every birthday and Christmas, and usually there would one thing that’s worth a few hundred dollars. But comfortable is a downplay when you own a property that brings in more passive income than the median American. Or when you have enough money saved that you can pay for your child to get a master’s degree. That’s a substantial amount of wealth and privilege. And when you’re told “that’s not wealthy, that’s comfortable”, and mostly interact with people in the same socioeconomic situation as you (or higher), of course that’s what you’re going to believe it, because you probably don’t have that class conciseness. I know I wouldn’t if I didn’t have friends that couldn’t afford McDonalds, didn’t get an allowance, or had insurance that didn’t cover eye care. Most of my friends were what I’d say comfortable; they had their own rooms, enough food, and knew they’d have power, A/C, heating, and presents on birthday and holidays. But if something serious were to happen (a family member had to go out of work for a long while or the house had an major issue), it wouldn’t be that easy to recover. The kids also had to pay for their own college. So yeah… the way the rich view wealth and the what the upper class actually is are very different.
I am comfortable because I have always lived below my means. Old small house in an up and coming neighborhood. Second hand clothes, furnishings and car. My car is a 17 year old Corolla….still running strong. We grew up as a struggling two parent working household…although both parents drank and smoked…it was not lost on us that there was no money for piano lessons and sports. I am lucky that my son’s disability enables him get Medicaid that pays for his massive prescriptions. Otherwise we would be living in our 17 year old Corolla. But it obvious that my mind goes to future homelessness because my choice for choosing cart of the year is Target.
When you said "I dont think I'll be making this much money forever" I immediately thought about age privilege and a video on ageism would be hella interesting!
hi tiffany, i’m currently a dental student in the US and just wanted to say that you can reach out to me if you want another perspective on the issue regarding lack of access to care in dentistry!
When they say “it’s not like I can have whatever I want” it sounds like they’re trying to be humble but in reality it’s probably their parents just being parents and not spoiling their kids, not that their parents can’t afford to buy them whatever they want lol.
I think too that they’re not just trying to downplay their family’s wealth, but they DO also want to make sure people know they weren’t spoiled, since they know that’s a negative association people make about kids who grew up wealthy. I feel like it’s a defensive reaction because they feel like they’re being “accused” of being spoiled or materialistic when people refer to them as rich, when in reality… calling someone rich is just a statement. It’s like when people get “accused” of having white privilege or whatever and they get defensive and try to deny it by saying they didn’t get everything in life handed to them. Well, sure, that might be true, but no one said that. It’s a defensive reaction that derails the conversation because they’re missing the point and interpreting acknowledgement of their status as a personal attack. A person’s parents might have been strict as hell and/or raised them to be a humble and empathetic person but that has nothing to do with the fact that they still grew up rich and had the security and benefits that provides.
It depends so much what “middle class” means, for example as a “middle class” person living in mexico, i can say i may have the same lifestyle as a middle class american person but i would be considered pour because here living is so much less expensive than in america, and that happens in america too, a middle class person in a certain place may be broke in LA and a middle class in LA may be rich in some other place.
Yes, i was just thinking about that. I am brazilian and personally i can say that if you dont live in the big cities like Rio de Janeiro and São Paulo, it's "much easier" to be considered middle class in comparison to the US. But i bet that if we went to the United States, we would be considered poor because of the living standart. For example: in Brazil we don't have to pay to go to hospitals, to go to universities and schools, and we have a variaty of local restaurants that are really low priced in comparison to Mc Donalds (I cant remember the last time that i ate thete lol, its very expensive)
As someone that grew solidly lower class, our family did not have the money to spend for things like braces. Or even regular dentist visits. It took me til I was almost 30 and had enough credit built up to be able to afford to pay for braces with a credit card. I was so crippled with self esteem issues because of this. I settled for men that treated me bad because I thought I was ugly and wouldn't even apply for good jobs because I was so embarrassed. Anyways all this to say that people that never had to worry about these things automatically have an upper hand. And that video about teeth sounds super interesting to me! Love your videos as always💙💙
Hi, I'm 20 and I'm in the same situation about braces. I gave up years ago because I heard that you can't use braces when you are older than 18 years old and I definitely cannot afford it sooner than 25 years old (when I graduate uni and have a stable job). You actually give me hope about getting braces someday. Thank you. And yes I agree. My classmates who had braces always said they're not rich, which made me mad and sad :(
@@aoitetsu2947 you can definitely get braces when your older! I believe it just may take longer because when your older your teeth are not as moveable as when you are young. But it's for sure possible💙 I'm so glad I gave you hope😭 I truly felt the same way. Yes so many of my peers were "poor" but they still got braces as a teen. It was a very difficult thing to deal with as a child and teenager. I wrote a narrow version of my story but I could write a novel on all the ways it has negatively impacted my life. Sending you hugs and love!💙
@@aoitetsu2947 You definitely can! Once I was done with school and started making enough money, I almost immediately got invisalign. It took a couple of years to straighten my (very crooked) teeth, but it was so worth it!
@@aoitetsu2947 a dentist will tell you if you personally are a good candidate for braces but as far as i know there's no age limit. i know people who got braces at 40-45 years old
About class consciousness: In my experience, comparing yourself to others goes both ways. Rich people compare themselves to those who are richer, but poor people can compare themselves to those who have it worse. I grew up in a poor working class community, and because everyone around me had it even worse, it took me many years of therapy to acknowledge that we were actually poor. (It was also very normal to have alkcoholic parents who beat you and/or neglect you and I didn't think any of it counted as child abuse until I started college.)
as someone who grew up (and still lives in) a 'comfortable' family, these kind of videos have made me realise that my family are rich. not loaded, not eight boats whatever but it's so easy to fall down the rabbit hole of pointing out the things we DON'T have rather than the things we DO. such a well-researched and interesting video!!
that's the thing though right? jealousy benefits the system in this case. if all eyes are on who's better off than us, why would we notice the ways people struggle that we've never had to think about?
I think about this a LOT as I see more and more "day in my life in NY" videos from young influencers on TikTok vs. lower income comedy TikTok influencers. When I've seen lower income influencers gain followings it's mainly off of personality-based content, and they tend to be judged much more harshly on how engaging and funny they are as individuals vs. influencers who are able to use their wealth privilege as a basis for their content. The second type of influencer can coast by using their wealth and don't have to worry about how appealing they are as people as much as lower income influencers do. Even with pretty privilege, lower income influencers often have to work harder to put out content that will be appealing because they don't have the flashy lifestyle and sustainable clothing hauls? It's really interesting to me to see just how much wealth influences the content we often see and choose to consume.
Not only social media. With the whole COVID-19 situation, universities are asking us to take exams from our homes and, to be sure there's no one in your same room to suggest you, they ask you to let them see your room. I'm not that well off and law school... Oh boi, it's classist. In the last exam I took, I felt so humiliated showing my poor student room to wealthy lawyers and fellow students. At the end I got a very difficult question and a bad grade, even if I passed. Overall an awful experience.
I grew up so fortunate but even I struggled with inviting people to my house because I didn’t have a pool, my backyard was small, my house wasn’t decorated as well, etc The popular kids always ended up being the richer kids. I always wonder why that is. Like is it a coincidence?
YEPPP good point! They have nice houses to host parties or even just have friends over casually, they usually have exciting birthdays… could all contribute to being seen as cool or well-liked
Sure, the basic means of recording and uploading videos are more accessible than ever, but the bar has also been raised in other areas. Viewers expect you to have good lighting, good editing and good hair and makeup at the very least, and you'll get bonus points for costumes, music, props, animations, locations... all of which are tough to provide without a lot of money and time.
I have been on tik tok a lot lately and I can see a lot of girls around 18~20 making content about their routines (rich houses, exercises and green juices, studying, internships that look fancy), their closets, their 50 luxury bags, expensive cars, etc. They are not famous people, but I see that they gather a lot of followers making content all about being rich. And when you start watching something on tik tok, you get like 100 videos about the same topics on your “for you” page so it makes you feel that everyone is rich, but you. I’m 29 now and it still makes me feel bad that I’m much older and I don’t have that.
Green juice is the worst. $5 for a drink that is just mineral/vitamin water. Just actually eat your veggies and you'll be fine plus they have extra fiber. I do like the taste of it sometimes but can rarely ever justify the price. My bf's mom got a juicer recently and I recommend it for anyone who enjoys them-- you can save in the long run if you use it often. I will say it is pretty wasteful though-- a lot of the fruit and veg goes to waste to make a drink with few calories. I like to use it to get through extra plant material from my garden that otherwise would have gone to waste-- but buying produce with juicing it specifically in mind seems very expensive
A lot of things are normalized like shopping for stuff all the time and eating out all the time. It wasn't until I went to community college that I realized that isn't normal and just how privileged I was. My parents make an upper middle class income but insist that we're just middle class because they're always comparing us to richer families. Idk it's really weird how money can make you out of touch with reality. I didn't even realize it. I was raised into it so I thought it was normal.
As someone who definitly grew up with a lot of privileges (in germany) I often feel ashamed for that, because I KNOW, that so many people struggle with their daily expenses. I always play it down, because I simply don't have any answer, why it was me, and not some other kid, that grew up in that circumstances.
Agreed completely. I was raised in America born to immigrants but this is exactly how I feel growing up with wealth privilege, especially seeing how other immigrants that are not white and their children rarely move up in class in America
I will NEVER get over them girls/boys on TIKTOK showing their day in life where all they do is drinking matcha latte, shopping, pelatonin or whatever, and watching at sunsets…like what you do to fund your perfect Manhattan condo with a view? Why are they keep lying when answering that question? SELF MADE MY ASSS😂
being lower middle class/low income in an environment filled with rich kids leaves you with so much to unpack lol I was a scholarship kid in a private college and I ended up dropping out and switching to a different one
me rn bestie. i’m on scholarship in a private uni and i’m gonna have to drop out bc even with the scholarship and financial aid, it’s still soooo much money. my financial aid advisor said “wow you’re lucky to not be paying so much money” but a girl is struggling🙄✋🏻
THIS 100%!!! I used to go to a private uni on scholarship and I just transferred. The atmosphere of the private uni I went too was just really shit. While people were partying and going out constantly I was busting my ass off studying to keep my scholarship and because I was broke college student. It’s just so wild to see the disconnect and how this kinda atmosphere can affect ur school life.
I feel like some of my pent up teenage sadness about being the poor kid at the rich school started to thaw while commiserating with Tiffany in this video. I’m going to have some grief to air out these next few days.
@@Victoria68213 exactly i went to private college w incredibly wealthy ppl. It was shocking. I realized for the first time in my life that I was kinda poor. But I busted my ass and 15 years later, I make more than most of the people i went to school with. Keep studying, it will be worth it. ❤️
“My Super Sweet 16” was the precursor of lifestyle content because it focused, majority of the time, on ordinary, “non-celeb”, rich kids. We expect celebrities to have super nice places and things because they are celebrities. Yet watching Sweet 16 as a teenager was a whole nother level. These girls were going to Europe for customized dresses, received the latest luxury cars, and had people fawning over them for an invite. As a teen watching it, I remember being a bit jealous but it was a momentary feeling. You watched the episode, maybe talked about it with friends, and that was it. But now? Who cares about having the latest makeup or a nice bedroom. Where’s your designer everything, lavish home, luxury cars, and fancy ass vacations? How are you 20-something and “I’m only 20 and I bought a 5 bedroom house”? Social media cut out the middle man and gives ordinary (mostly white) teens a means to capitalize on their following and make so much money. Disney who? Everyday is My Super Sweet 16 and then some on social media.
i have to say a lot of people in the comments are agreeing with you and grew up lower class and are explaining how they felt and it’s really opened my eyes. I grew up watching these youtubers and i also happen to grow up upper middle class and live in an upper middle class neighbourhood. So everyone at my school was in the same boat as me financially. You would go to school (public) and there would be a BMW and a Tesla and just the way we talked about money and what we had basically describes what you’re saying and growing up in that you think it’s normal. I think since i’ve left hs and talked to just regular middle/ lower middle class people i’ve learned a lot about privilege and you bring up some really good points that i never really thought of because i was always in the same boat as these youtubers. I am canadian and so there is way more social security here, tuition costs are low compared to the US and so that part isn’t as relevant here in Canada. But just growing up this way and then leaving that “world” has really opened my eyes to my privilege and i hope to continue the discussion and check my privilege more often. It’s not a bad thing to be from any class, it’s a birth right, but it’s what you do with it and I hope to be someone that uses their privilege correctly if that makes sense :)
I’m from Canada, and I can assure you these issues are just as relevant. The only advantage we have is free health care (which I’m very thankful for). Tuition is very expensive, and it takes years to pay off student loans. Students have it pretty tough, unfortunately.
Nah-university tuition in the states is on a different level. Several of my classmates came to Canada for university because their *in-state* tuition was more expensive than our international student fees-absurd!
Of course, compared to some tuition standards in Europe/what they used to be, Canada’s not that cheap-and yes student loans still hang over people’s heads. But we’re talking like 5000 cad per year versus 13,000 usd up to 50,000+ usd per year.
I'm from Australia and although we have student loans that set us back they're all: through the government, interest-free for 10 years after you last studied (last I recall) and are taxed from our income (so our repayments are means-based to some extent: no repayments if we earn below a particular threshold - which, sidenote, our rich jerk conservatives have been lowering of course). They aren't inherited either. So you could say we do still have debt and it can be considerable for a given person, especially depending on what they studied etc. but it just doesn't influence our lives to the extent of students in the US.
as someone who was very low income (grew up in subsidized housing, group housing section 8, food stamps all that shit) It was interesting that going to college was actually the most money I ever made, not after, DURING. People like to say "broke college student" but as someone on the lowest end of the spectrum, even the income of college students was astounding to me.
While in college (22 years old), a friend was chocked I hadn’t gone shopping in years and only a few times before that in my lifetime, while she had gone weekly in her lifetime. I was so busy either working trying to make enough money to pay my rent or studying. I was amazed on how surprised she was at the fact that not everyone lived such a privilege lifestyle at such young age.
This is hitting extra hard today 💔 A loved one passed away a few days ago. She knew something was wrong and after doctors visits bills started coming in, she couldn’t afford to get checked out. When she wouldn’t take “nothing is wrong” as an answer at the ER a couple weeks ago, she was threatened with calling the police. Now she’s dead. After the autopsy, turns out it was totally preventable, all she needed was a scan. She faced so many financial hardships that kept her from medical care. (Her cat died yesterday, too. It must have been sadness) Sometimes I’m accused of being a “hater” of the rich, or of being bitter. But let’s just be honest, if you understand the gaps and inequalities, you know that there’s a lot to be bitter about. So excuse me if I roll my eyes at trust fund kids on the internet. Some wealthy people like to characterize their struggles as different but equal…no, they are not. Sorry for the rant, I don’t have many people to talk to rn. Ima try to afford a grief counselor in the coming weeks Ps. I learned yesterday that it costs $75 to put her hair in a braid at the funeral home.
I'm sorry about your loved ones passing. I hear you - it feels like many people don't realize the huge amount of preventable illness & deaths that occur because of poverty & lack of access to healthcare. And that death costs too! Have you found an affordable grief counselor?
This is what I don't understand. People act like being frustrated with wealthy people flaunting their wealth is "petty", or due to jealousy or hate. But wealthy people flaunting their wealth shows that they are ignorant of life, they're taking advantage of unknowing youth, perpetuating consumption and materialism, and overall, it's glorifying the thing that's destroying our planet. Being upset about this is normal.
I’m not from the US, i’m from Chile and i started watching these kinds of videos when i was 13 (2013) so it always impressed me the amount of presents the girls had on Christmas or on their birthdays. Their rooms being so big and with a lot of clothes was like a dream to me... still is a dream hahaha
I think the "I'm not rich" thing that teens say really comes from perspective. I've always known I was well off because I saw poverty in my highschool, but never thought I was rich due to seeing wealth flaunted by my cousins. My mom once explained it to me as such: Living as the poorest person in the wealthiest neighborhood.
as someone who doesn’t celebrate christmas those “what I got for christmas” videos distorted my perception of what an average christmas looked like sooo much
for a few years when I was in highschool during the early days of instagram (I lived in the suburbs with uber wealthy families) people would routinely post their christmas presents every year on insta??It was so disheartening for me never getting anything that compared to what ended up being thousands of dollars for their presents and I hate that social media so quickly turned into a show of wealth that immediately excluded me
@@ccmbrli That does sound really disheartening. I can imagine someone who was super happy over their modest and sentimental gifts suddenly feel worse when they see the new cars or brand new iPhones gifts their friends are posting on Social media. Definitely not in the spirit of the holidays
@@ccmbrli omg, I'm in Ireland and I remember this happened here too!! In like 2009 and the early 10s. people would post their Christmas presents on social media or post a Facebook status detailing what they got
I don't think there's any more class consciousness amongst big TH-camrs, I think there's more of a class annoyance lmao. They know they're wealthy and they want to put out their wealthy content without being bombarded by comments of us lower class folks talking about their wealth, so that's why they put those disclaimers. The disclaimers make everyone in the comments who mentions their wealth seem petty and it sets up all of their supporters to reply saying "omg she worked for this money! she's not rich at all, you don't know her, you're just bitter!!" I think TH-cam (and Insta) are some of the least progressive social media apps.
My best friends dad is an extreme important President of a university. He probably makes a million a year. They had three kids. 2 went to Ivy League and she get less than for going to UCLA. 🙄And she thought the “average” American home was 5 bedrooms. She wasn’t the richest family where she grew up because she would see billionaires homes. But I grew up in a true middle class family who can’t afford to have their foundation fixed. And have cracks in our tile floor and walls so we have to cover them with rugs so we don’t cut our feet. She had no idea how privileged she is and it causes rifts in our friendship. She would say stuff to me like “If I were as pretty as you I would be such a successful actress” and she gets mad that I don’t go on auditions all the time like she does. But she doesn’t get that I have to work to pay my rent and I’m exhausted from working so much and don’t want to wake up at the crack of dawn to go audition. Her parents still take care of her and pay her rent at 23 years old. The only “job” she’s ever had is an occasional stint as an extra in a tv show.
It can make friendships hard, a college friend of mine just bought a second home not far from me and wants me to visit. Not gonna lie my first thought was how angry I was that my hubby and I aren't even close to buying our first home, yet. I also hope she didn't get the home ahead of someone trying to get their first one, too :-/
@@soniao2034 Yea they really didn’t. But she’s also on the spectrum so I wonder if that has any impact on it. I’m very aware that I am privileged as middle class. My parents and I went deep into debt to put in one of the best colleges in the nation, where I met my friend... But living somewhere being surrounded by extreme wealth and mostly extremely privileged people is really hard. Almost all the people I know who are “working” in acting after college are still dependent on their parents. They don’t pay rent or have jobs to support themselves. They just audition all the time and puddle around. They say in America you can come from nothing and become extremely successful... but they don’t mention how hard it is to overcome generational struggles. Her dad is the president of a university. My dad didn’t go to college. During the pandemic when acting jobs and ny entire industry fell to nothing, I considering going to law school or med school, but I legitimately cannot go as I’ve already maxed out the amount I can take out in federal loans for education.
@@soniao2034 also the reason I posted this is because I am in the “entertainment industry” and I’m just highlighting how these actors, actresses, and media moguls mostly start with a large leg up on their competition.
People relate more to each other through class than race. It definitely is a strain on relationships. My significant other and I went shopping the other day (a couple days before my rent was due) and they spent $260 at Zara. I went home and was so disappointed with myself for spending $30…
I remember growing up, I started watching video game content because my parents couldn't buy those video games. It was my way of "playing" those games and being able to participate in conversations with my friends. Watching videos of The Sims 3 or GTA was my way to live vicariously through the internet. Something similar happened when I started to watch Jeffree Star (not anymore) and Nikki Tutorials. It was a way of participating in this "rich" and lavish lifestyle and be able to "enjoy" products that I would ever have known existed. I don't fault people for watching these rich creators because it is a way to dip our toes in the life we wish we had.
More parents should talk to their children about their financial situation and how they are dealing with it, it's a very good lesson. I remember my dad talking about our budgets for clothes and food each month. My sisters and I knew how much we could spend each month, we had a set allowance for food in school each week and I think that really taught us how to deal with money, but also made us aware of our overall financial situation.
I completely disagree! My parents told me when they were struggling and it gave me crippling issues and anxiety with money. Like I was a growing kid and was too scared to ask for new clothes when I had grown out of mine and other stuff like that.
@@synr9611 Well that's not neccessarily what I'm talking about. I never knew how much exactly my parents made but I knew how much we could spend on what, what were our financial priorities etc.
new internet analysis!! let's discuss wealth & class in lifestyle content. ps English captions are live now! || check out Care/of for easy, convenient vitamins in cute lil compostable packs! bit.ly/34uo0D0
What an interesting discussion on necessary topic tbh.
GREAT VIDEO TIFFANY
also if you want to help out with your privalige, maybe look into mutual aid
A video on about people getting new veneer teeth as it’s quite popular online
Logical analysis makes me so happy
The internet is so full of people who don't use logic and it's just a mess
Not enough people take time and question what they see
Loved the video!
why use word like democracy instead of word like meritocracy? How does it relate? (bad eng)
When I was about 18, I had a friend who refused to believe that I'd never been to the theatre and never been to a restaurant with my family. She insisted that everyone has done that, and I felt so embarrased to tell her that my family didn't have money to do that. Like, it's usually kids who are 'well off' who don't know about their family's status because they've never had to think about it. But poor kids are extremely aware. even at like 6 years old, our teachers asked us to describe what we did on our break, I lied and said we went to theme parks etc, cos in reality we stayed home because we had no money. I never had friends over at my house because my mum didn't have food to feed them. Kids pointed out that my shoes had holes in them, but I had to lie and say I liked them like that, because I only got one new pair of shoes per year. People don't believe that children could live like this in the UK, but we did.
I hope you can go to all the theme parks, theaters, and restaurants you want now. I’ve seen the affects of things like this on my dad who grew up in a trailer park with 2 brothers. Luckily for me he and my mom both worked very hard and I have never had to worry about money, but I know that sometimes hard work isn’t enough depending on the circumstances.
I just realised I am rich? I always thought I was kinda just middle classes cause everyone around me was more “well of” but after reading yours and others comments I know this is not true. They are just RICHER than me I guess? I have always thought it was normal to go to the theatre and restaurants but I guess it’s not. I’m only 14 though so I have time to be an aware adult some time in the future. I just want to say thanks for, idk(?) telling ur story. Bye
ngl my family is at least middle class since we moved to a country where the currency is higher but its true bc back before we moved i realized we were pretty well off. maybe bc i was a kid i didnt have to think about our status but now that im wondering... ngl i still dunno. i'm not familiar with these things and i dont like thinking about it but recently my mom was fired so 😬
@@augusta2638 it does not necessarily mean your are rich, my family can afford to go out eat at a restaurant a few times a year, or go to the theater once a year or on a vacation every 3 to 5 years.... But we don't have a car for example, we can't afford that, not being poor does not automatically mean being rich. Sometimes it's also about where you put 'excess' money, for example if i have 50€ extra a month, do i purchase some cheap thing from h&m every month to have a huge closet with cheap things or do i put it on the side, have only a really small capsule wardrobe, but buy a new mac book every 7 years from my 50€ a month.... Having A luxury doesn't mean you are rich, there is an in between, also i do understand that livig in America is much different, i don't have to spend money on my education oder doctors appointments, we have good infrastructure that is relatively cheap so we don't need a car...
This is so interesting - I'm so glad you've brought this up. Shamefully, I have definitely been that person in the past. When I went to university (in traditionally working class city) it was the first time I'd been exposed to people who had come from a different class to me (after being from the Home Counties, and going to boarding school) - I was taken aback by it. After many years of research, listening, understanding, I can't believe I ever behaved in that way, so on behalf of anyone who has ever made you feel like that, I'm so sorry.
The whole “ it’s not polite to talk about money “ is rooted from the 1% not wanting an open discussion of just how unbalanced our economy is
Exactly. No one ever says it's impolite when we are talking about how much money they saved vs. how much they spent. And only rich people dislike discussing money because they know how ridiculous it sounds when they take the numbers off of paper
True, although I know around my rich friend, I also don't necessarily like the money talk, so I appreciate it not being talked about as well. She's only really ever had her lifestyle plateau or improve regarding how much disposable income she's had. It grates on the nerves to realize she doesn't understand what it's like to not have any money. She doesn't try to rub it in my face or anything, but she talks about investing and some related things, and how it's frustrating for her because it's not making her much money, and I have an out of body experience because I only recently started feeling financially secure enough to buy the brand name ketchup.
Also avoiding saying how exactly they make money. It is easier to say it's "improper" than explain "oh I don't pay taxes, have my money in an offshore account and I exploit my workers" fx
I HATE that Kylie Jenner can even be labeled "self-made." Yes, I'm sure she worked incredibly hard to create her brands and help build her wealth. However, she was raised by millionaires. I'm sure she always had Mommy Kris to write her a check if she ever had to cut her losses at something
i dont even think she worked incredibly hard. celebrities get approached all the time with ready-made concepts for apps, clothing lines, make-up lines to put their name on it. Paris Hilton has said it herself, she was on Hot Ones and they approached her to put her name on replica sex dolls, apps, etc. Her and Kim were INVITED by music industry insiders to record music and make tv and movie cameos.
I'm pretty fucking sure Kylie Jenner's lip thing was about to blow up and someone approached her with a PR strategy to tell the truth about her lips then start selling lip kits which turned into her boring makeup empire.
this is totally different from endorsements. while i know they endorse skinny teas and such on instagram posts. clothing lines etc that they "created" and heavily advertise are also someone else's ideas that they just have a vested interest in and the bigger it gets the more credit they get for it
I have a hard time believing that people above the age of 21 or with a minimum of critical can think that the last daughter of an already existing empire with all the connections, free publicity and oportunities that come with it can be defined as "self-made". All of these people are second, third generations of real safe-made people (and even then, we would have to look into history to know how the first fortune was generated). We are witnessing modern nepotism. The lack of self-awareness in a multidimensional matrix that builds each individuals is all I see. And even while writing this, I understand that it's quite unfair to expect from these kids to be or even want to be this aware of their own circumstances. As she said, what would motivate ourselves from wondering about these things, our own disconfort, feeling of unjustice...
@@monochromatic_melodramatic Kylie Cosmetics was her idea... that Kris used her position and power to approach the owner of Seed Beauty (a massive company, with a not-public owner) to create it. Because of her power, it wasn't hard to make it happen. However Seed Beauty ALREADY had the materials and existing manufacturing, so all she had to do was pick some colors, pour them into a lipstick tube, and slap her copyright-infringing logo on it. I hate how she is considered "self-made" when mommy Kris did (does???) all the real work.
@@TheLaurieJi Well said! Also, some people don't know that the Kardashians were already wealthy before they became famous. If you read Kris Jenner's memoir, she talked about how she was hanging out with all these rich & famous people in LA in the 80s and 90s. Even if Keeping Up With the Kardashians never happened, Kylie would still be extremely privileged.
No one is self made. No one can survive in this world without help. No one.
it's interesting because i think rich kids are really thriving on tiktok. every time i see one of those haul videos or "a day in my life" vlogs, there's just a lot of comments saying "i wish this was me" "want this for myself." and i feel like it's because of tiktok's unique algorithm? maybe people who like/share hyper-consumerist content are genuinely interested in that stuff so the algorithm creates an echo chamber in the comments. whereas people who are anti-consumerist/anti-capitalist don't see any of these vids on their for you pages, and therefore can't interact with them. it just leads to a lack of class consciousness because no one is checking anyone.
Yesss that’s a great point! Tik tok can be extra insular in that way
yea
@@DyslexicMitochondria Hey bro I watch ur channeII. Big fan of ur vidss
True, I'm always shocked when I see other peoples FY pages bc mine is so targeted and not full of hyper-consumerism
ily mina!!
Something that I really can't stand is when people my age (in their twenties) tell me: "oh you've never been a year abroad?" or "you only have visited these few places? You have to travel, it opens your mind, it's so important to see the world!" Like, ok I know that, I would love to travel but I don't have the money.
i honestly wanna punch a wall whenever i hear "You haven't traveled the country/world?" How am I supposed to travel the world when I'm broke with debt? tell me!
And any spare time is spent working.
This also pisses me off when Europeans say this to Americans like sorry my country is fucking huge. I’ve only ever been to the west coast once and it’s still so expensive to travel never mind the process of exchanging money. It’s honestly easier and cheaper to travel around our own country and see what we have to offer.
When I was in college I asked my dad if we could look into studying abroad for one semester but he said it was too expensive. He worked 2 jobs for a year to save enough to pay the last 2 years of my college in full. And that was hard enough.
But there’s such a stupid stigma about not being “worldly and well traveled” most people don’t make enough money to travel abroad or even get jobs that allow enough time off to truly experience a new place. It’s so elitist and the ignorant when people don’t realize that travel is not accessible to everyone, it makes me so angry.
Same
@@kerdunne3422 EXACTLY. I like I'd love to travel all around the world some day but I have to take it one place at a time. I live in England and travelling even just within the uk costs a ton so flying around the rest of Europe would be so costly especially due to our economic and political standing rn. We have really beautiful countryside and brilliant city landmarks that dont get boring.
“My parents worked really hard for what we have” is my personal nemesis. As if poor people don’t work hard? A single mother working 3 jobs is working hard but statistically, her kids probably don’t have this much money.
And let’s be honest, a single mother working 3 jobs works a lot harder than most wealthy/middle-class people ever worked in their lives.
Erm, wealthy people often do work hard.
They've
+taken risks,
+been innovative,
+creative,
+made sacrifices and
+persisted with ideas when everyone was telling them they're crazy etc.
Sure a single mother working 3 jobs works hard. But poor people don't have a monopoly on hard work and industriousness. Often the wealthy often work "smarter", too. Not all hard work is positive, sometimes there more efficient ways of doing a task. Why should the wealthy feel guilty? Single mother made her choice to continue with her pregnancy. She made her choice to not get educated to better. She made her choice not to find opportunities to make money.
Why wasn't she buying cryptocurrencies @ just $2 in 2009 ? Plenty of rich kids knew about bitcoin over 10 years ago. Kids from rich backgrounds know about wealth management, investment, financial education. There's privileged 8 year olds who know about inflation and commodities. It's not the wealthy person's fault the poor don't teach their kids about financial education.
Why isn't single mother coming up with ideas in her work sphere? She's a cleaner? Come up with a cleaning innovation etc. She chose to be a single mum. The wealthy person didn't force her to have kids.
@@michelleannor6944 the point is not that poor people have a monopoly on hard work, the point is that rich people don't because they will often fall back on that when people talk about how incredibly rare that someone attains that kind of wealth. You're not as rich as you are simply because you worked hard, if that were how it worked then a shit ton more poor people would be rich.
@@michelleannor6944 I hope the boot tastes good.
In all seriousness. Risk is a lot easier to take when you have a safety net. Amazon didn’t make money for years because of their strategy of undercutting pricing. It’s a lot easier to stick with that if you can still eat and have a roof over your head and don’t risk the welfare of other people.
It’s easy to invest in things that might not work out if you are happy to lose some money. I knew about crypto in 2012 as well and to be honest I thought it was dumb and a joke. Haha look who is laughing now.
But the point is that investing needs a starting capital. Investments bring greater returns the more you invest. But if you have a choice between risking $500 on an investment (and often it should be more than that to make a difference) or using that money to feed your kids and put towards your rent? Feed your kids and pay your bills. It is extra money that you have after paying your costs that can and should be invested but a lot of people do not have that extra money.
But also, coming up with ideas and building technology is easier with education and at least in the US, the entry barrier there is money as well.
I come from a country where I didn’t pay money for university and it is still not feasible for a lot of people because they’d need to work while studying to pay for cost of living, which often means worse grades etc if your parents cannot support you.
You can live comfortably working a normal job if you are smart with your money, too. However, you cannot be ultra-rich unless you exploit someone. No ones time is that valuable. They are not that smart. A lot of ultra-smart people do not make billions.
A lot of CEOs say they work 80 hour weeks but count reading a book towards that because “they better themselves”. Ok well if we count reading I don’t even want to know how many hours I “work”.
The point here is that these people had starting capital, a safety net, and access to an education that gave them the tools to have these ideas and then make them reality. Not everyone has those. Not everyone needs or wants to be ultra-rich but they become ultra-rich by paying that single mother a poverty wage. Every job is a skilled job. Labour is valuable, otherwise there wouldn’t be such a demand for it. That single mother might be working long shifts for Jeff Bezos but he will profit far more from it.
Lastly, I know that single mother we are talking about is not a specific person but I find your lack of empathy for your fellow man disappointing.
@@michelleannor6944 I get the impression you think I am a single mother working 3 jobs. I assure you I am not. I was very fortunate with my parents who gave me a stable background to build my own career on but I know that it was a privilege not everyone has.
1) where did I say this was rich peoples fault? I did not. I purely stated that the argument of hard work isn’t great
2) if ultra-rich people paid their taxes and paid their employees living wages, it would make a huge difference, actually. They also lobby politicians for lower wages and fewer protections which is a whole other can of worms
3) in the US, birth control is made super expensive for no reason. In the UK, you get it free on the NHS which makes it easier for poor people to not have unplanned children
4) I am fine, actually, if my tax money is used to support people in financially precarious situations. There are people with disabilities that CANT work full time. I think they still deserve to live.
5) there is a world of difference between a dentist or someone working in tech, and ultra-rich people like Jeff Bezos. They are not at all the same
6) I don’t think I am guilt tripping anyone, but as is mentioned in the video, a lot of people don’t like to outright say that they are rich, so they default to saying their parents work hard. All I meant to say was that it really is a bad argument and it implies things that simply aren’t true 🤷🏼♀️
7) lastly. Lots of people try to be innovative and create something but there can’t be 50 Facebooks. Some people work hard and just have bad luck.
Fun fact: In the US, disabled people who receive supplemental income from the government (usually not totaling more than $7,000 a year) can’t get married because they lose their supplemental income. You also can’t have more than $2,000 in the bank, if you make any money that reduces the amount of supplemental income you receive (so if you make 5k a year, you’ll only receive 2k), and living with family also means you’ll receive less income. Basically, don’t get married, don’t make any money and live on your own somehow, too, don’t save any money, and don’t work even if you can. The whole system in incredibly broken and keeps disabled people poor. 🙃
Yes thank you!! It’s such an impossible situation. Our SSI system needs a complete overhaul
This makes perfect sense. You can't make enough money to sustain yourself then still require help from the government.
@@Bandito.Swiftie ugh, sorry you experienced that! It sucks that they do that and don’t warn you and punish you for everything. People seem to think you can live off disability (payments) alone, but you can’t live off 7k a year. And again, if you can work part-time, you’re often not eligible. I know it’s absurdly hard to get disability in the US. I’m 25, too, and am able to work part-time, but it’s such a struggle not feeling like my worth is tied to what I make/my job. It might not mean much from a random internet stranger, but please know you are inherently valuable and worthy. Sending good vibes and spoons your way!
@@emilydeaton1169 it actually means a lot. It might sound pathetic but I don't really hear that very often and I sort of have a hard time comforting myself. It's very overwhelming. We're currently hopping from sublet to sublet, roommates to roommates, because we can't pay for 1st and last, a deposit, and a non refundable administration fee at time of application which won't be returned if we get denied. We already go to the food bank so we can't exactly save each month to get an apartment. Trying. There's got to be some relief somewhere. Sometimes it just takes kind words like yours to keep going towards that future. All this to say thank you for caring about a random internet stranger :)
Yes this! My little brother has Down syndrome and currently supplemental income is charging my parents almost $5k because they made a mistake on their paper work in 2017 to 2018. So my mom is going to appeal it because it’s not their fault for their mistake. It’s ridiculous because my parents don’t even make more than 40k a year. They also had to lie about me living at the house when they use to visit so they wouldn’t reduce the pay. As well as my parents are thinking of getting a divorce just so they can receive more help for my brother 🤦🏻♀️
I remember back in those Bethany Mota days, she would share "OOTDs" and link where she bought clothes. So one time when I went to a new shopping mall, I saw J. Crew and Anthropology, ready to buy the cute tops that she had, and saw the tag, my heart sank. As a young girl that was hard for me. I thought my mom giving me $50 for the mall was so much money and it couldn't even get me one shirt that the youtuber I liked had.
also can we talk about her Aeropostale collab and how the clothes were pretty expensive for her audience of young girls at the time
I know somebody who got an allowance from her grandma to get clothes on top of the 900dlls her dad gave her monthly for her expenses, as a teenager, living at home, driving the car her parents bought for her. What expenses she could possibly have? But she wouldn't have said she was rich.
I watched a lot of her videos when I was a teenager. I really enjoyed her content and I thought that all American teenagers live like her; casually eating fruits mixed with greek yoghurt for breakfast, bring a can of whole almond only as a snack for flight, and I also remember one of the "Back to School" videos by Meredith Foster and was surprised when she said that her new bag costs around $90. I really thought that that was the standard price for a bag in the US, so it made me believe that American students must be really rich. It made me insecure that I can't obtain the same lifestyle like theirs considering that I'm from a third world country and live in a small village. I still watch some of their old videos for nostalgia tho.
edit: I just realized Bethany deleted her old videos 😔
At least you got to go to the mall in the first place
I’m 28 and make okay money. People push madewell to young people and even I, someone aging out of madewell products, cannot afford madewell. I can barely afford it 2nd hand. It’s very detached from their market.
I am so hyped for this upcoming video about teeth
same!!!
Of course this comment had to come from Micarah
Fr I hope she makes it
Hope she addresses how teeth are an inherent part of us and thus we have the right to KEEP them! Lol
Yeah same. Feel like this is becoming more n more of an obsession online now
Being on the internet young really warped my perception of money and how easy it is to make it.
I used to think it’s normal to spend $200 on a haul and get a luxury vehicle for your birthday and don’t even get me started on the what I got for Christmas videos and I could never understand why I couldn’t have those things because when they described how wealthy they were they said “I’m comfortable”, because I would’ve described my middle class family as comfortable but we couldn’t afford half of those things.
Their in debt
YES this is exactly my experience as well! also, in retrospect, i realize now that when i was watching lifestyle/beauty vloggers heavily in my teens, i can absolutely say that i was also spending the most money on clothes/makeup etc that i’ve ever spent in my life (even though i was a broke highschooler with a part-time job). i really had to rewire my brain after highschool and realize that the people i was watching and trying to mimic weren’t actually MAKING all of their money - they came from it, which is fine, but unrealistic for most of us
Always good to focus on creators revenue model (or lack thereof).
@@gabrielar9611 THIS. I know a guy like this in real life who always has new stuff from "hype" brands (LV, gucci, off white, supreme, just to name a few) and he was actually buying it all on credit and having to borrow credit from his girlfriend so that he wouldn't accumulate interest. It was pretty unfortunate and unnecessary because he had like $20,000 worth of stuff lying around his house that he could resell. Almost felt like a shopping addiction tbh. I remember one time he skipped dinner with our friends to go shop at the luxury mall nearby to buy things with money he didn't have... I also knew another girl who's family went into debt while she was only in high school because they were always buying her the newest tech (iPhones, Apple Watch, new Mac, etc) that she didn't need
yeees I had a best friend in high-school who was constantly spending tons of money on clothing and expensive make up pallets and she HATED to be called rich but I grew up in poverty so to me she was... her family would even Uber us back and forth between our houses twice a day most days (and we lived an hour away from eachother) so to me she was very rich but her insistence that she wasn't rich and I was blowing it way out of proportion made me feel even poorer because even though my family has been in poverty all my life my parents were always good at budgeting and making sure we had food and everything else we needed so I never truly felt how poor I was until I saw people who were well off telling me they were poor
As someone who also grew up lower income In Orange County I completely get your frustration with wealth around you and people not seeing how wealth played a role in their upbringings
Amanda !!!!
I vividly remember being 18 and living in England. I was talking to my housemates about another girl we all knew and they were saying “oh, but she is super wealthy” and my reaction was “nah. She’s normal” (we went to the same school. her sister was in my class)
Their reply was “yeah, because you are rich too”.
I honestly never considered it. Ever. Not once.
Even as a Colombian getting a gap year in the UK. Payed for by mum & dad.
It really does come down to being sheltered and living in a bubble.
I’ve grown out of that and take my privilege into account every day and I am thankful for it. I also use it well to help others.
Btw. Love your content.
💛💛💛
I grew up/currently live in OC. When we first moved here we were pretty money tight for a long time. It was crazy to see how I became more popular once my parents started to make more money. Money definitely plays a huge role in everyone's development here, and I feel like no parent has taught their kid the value of the dollar. I'm wrapping up college now, and I can't tell you how many of the kids I grew up with have still never had a job. It's honestly depressing
Amanda omg! I love your videos and happy you watch Tiffany too.
It was such a trip to realize that wealth = popularity as a kid. I would always wonder why the other girls had such nice hair and trendy clothing, cute school supplies, etc. They would go on fun international trips. I would go to birthday parties or other kids houses and they had huge backyards with pools. And of course, they were wildly popular at school. Then one day, it just clicked.
Lmao ikr. When I was in High School, most of the popular kids in my school were wealthy. Most of the non popular ones were, you guessed it, poor. Hint: I wasn’t very popular. That’s when I started to grasp the concept of wealth, money, class, and how it affected the way how people see and treat you, sadly.
It is so true, with sooo few exceptions to it
I don’t know how much of this is true. Like a lot of the popular kids in my school are middle class and like i grew up a more priviledged lifestyle than them(i won’t say rich bcuz it wasn’t rich but like upper middle class) and i certainly wasn’t popular bcuz i was so shy and awkward and didn’t know how to interact with other ppl. But like in my school the material stuff actually didn’t matter much like it mattered to know how to socialize and be nice(even tho some of the popular kids were complete assholes but most of them were actually sweet) but like there was this rich girl in our school who was constantly bragging about Versace and Gucci and like nobody actually liked her bcuz she was so shallow and always criticizing “how broke others were”(wanna mention that the whole Versace thing was bcuz her mom is a seamstress and she’d make her her clothes look like Versace and Gucci)
funny, in my school the "comfortable" could go either ways. 1 local family used to make big birthday/halloween bashes that anyone she personally invites could go to, but it was the stuff in the house and not externally that showed their affluence. another classmate was considered ok, but just kept bragging to me about her wealthy grandma that bought her stuff from nordstom. rich people houses were only talked about if they worked there somehow, or brownnosed a kid of theirs.
@@Moana_moo hey i totally hear where you’re coming from, not all the affluent kids will necessarily be more popular! But coming from that background of wealth gives them an undeniable edge that those from middle and especially lower income backgrounds have to work harder to overcome.
it’s like all these tiktokers being like “yeah i just got up and decided to move to nyc after high school!!!” and they have these ‘aesthetic’ videos of going out w their friends, in their giant apartments and walking along the streets of manhattan and cute outfits- and there are so many people seeing that and not realizing these aren’t smart teenagers “living their lives” they are incredibly wealthy individuals who have the privilege to be able to live rhat life. it’s so frustrating.
preach
There's a tiktoker who brags about being unemployed (idk if before or during the pandemic) doing day in the life vids in NYC that just shits on the ppl who live here being "unconventional," while having their own apartment with a partner closer to Manhattan 🙄
@@DMCpawn who?i think i know tho
I see these people whenever I have to go through the west village or soho. They just look like tourists to me.
@@jaym18082they are @furbylesbian I absolutely can't stand their videos!!!! (And can't be bothered to check pronouns so staying gender neutral) Like I'm not a native nyer, I don't live there anymore, but it just feels like she's mocking poor ppl and saying they and their parts of town are stinky, gross, and weird :(
They avoid saying they're rich to have their cake and eat it, too. Want to benefit from wealth without alienating their audience, or seeming out of touch because of that wealth and privilege. They want to stay rElAtaBle and the rich are not relatable.
Rich means they didn't earn anything they show off. You can't have their life if your family isn't already rich. A much less compelling story than I'm a lucky girl who receives lots of love and buys things with my hard earned money, you and I are the same, you can be me. Gag
this is so succinct and well said
i agree! so many people deflected and rambled when asked if they were rich instead of simply just acknowledging they come from money.
I've just kinda learned to decode phrases like "were comfortable", "well off" and "we get by" well off means rich as hell, comfortable means slightly rich, getting by means paycheck to paycheck
Which is why even though she’s problematic, I liked fancy vlogs with Gabby. She never tried to pretend she wasn’t privileged.
I am 24 now and recently started to make a really decent living. I asked my 12 year old godniece what she wanted for Christmas and she said “I’m really into pens lately”. I immediately knew what that meant. Her family is poor and she goes to school with wealthier kids. She really just wanted to be able to blend in or shine in her own way with her school supplies. I went and bought her some cute, fluffy notebooks and really cute pens with the fuzzy poof balls on top. I know how much it would’ve meant to me as a kid to go to school and be able to flex. That’s really what she was asking me for, so I’m doing my best to make it happen for her. It’ll do wonders for her self esteem.
Maybe she was speaking about calligraphy
i remember thinking mechanical pencils were fancy 😂
@@Botatochicken I’m an adult and I still think they’re fancy. I like splurging on myself by buying them😂
💖
I remember my mom would have this one nice pen (a pilot pen I think?) and it was like so cool to me. We never significantly struggled (at least not in a way that I had to be violently aware of) but I was definitely not of the same class as most of my school. I think I was able to get one book once from the infamously expensive scholastic book fair one year and it was so magical for me. I knew we weren’t the same as others at my school, but I knew we were safe ❤
Something I’ve always found interesting is how my dad refuses to accept that we’re rich. He’s an immigrant and had a really rough childhood and young adulthood and struggled financially to the point where he basically had to join the army. But by the time I came around, my parents were very well off. They have no debt and because of their money management and income, neither do I. I’m starting off life on my own with a tremendous amount of advantages. Yet when I try to explain to my parents that “reasons x, y, and z make us upper middle class” my dad doesn’t want to accept that. It’s interesting how he’s simultaneously grateful he’s not in the financial situation he was in 30 years ago but he’s still attached to his identity from then.
I think that’s common! (And probably even more so coming from a poor immigrant background) - we internalize our upbringing and it can be difficult to reassess and process where we currently stand
While wealth and classes certainly do help and give us advantages, being upper middle class and being truly “rich” are world’s apart. And provide different opportunities, I think acknowledging privilege is extremely important but it can also include realizing that most of the population is still a “working class” and do not own the means of production (I do realize this isn’t the main point of your comment, I just see people commonly conflate upper middle class and rich)
I can relate to this feeling. I grew up quite poor - a lot more poor than I realized when I was actually living in it. But many of the things we had to do to save money growing up are so internalized in my lifestyle that I feel like I will always identify with it. I made it through college on need-based scholarships and I am now working as a behavior therapist, and even though I make more money than my mom ever did growing up, I haven't quite figured out the line where I don't feel "poor" anymore.
On paper, I am middle class, but I still find myself engaging in the same kinds of behaviors that many lower income families engage in, like hoarding supplies in case I can't afford them later and refusing to buy expensive brands, even if they are better quality and I could realistically afford them now. I've had to push myself past the feelings of guilt and anxiety when spending my money on more expensive things, even if the increase in quality justifies it. And I don't know if I'll ever lose that feeling.
Same here!
Same with my immigrant parents! And we are from Europe.
Rich kid here! I think you were pretty spot on in guessing that rich kids assume they're middle class as a result of having little understanding of the spectrum of wealth in the world. Most rich people exist in communities that poorer people can't enter, and so the boundary for being middle class in rich kids' perspectives switches from "not being able to afford healthcare or house repairs" to "only owning a couple houses".
I remember one day at the private school I was going to, in my social studies class, the teacher put up a graphic showing the five quintiles of wealth in the world. Without telling us the boundaries for each quintile, she asked us to guess whether we fell into the poorest, second poorest, middle, second richest, or richest quintile. No one in the class guessed the richest. Once we had all answered and placed ourselves in the third or fourth quintile, the teacher described the daily lives of each quintile. The example family for the third quintile all shared the same toothbrush, and the example for the fourth quintile couldn't afford to heat or cool their house. It turned out every single person in my class fit into the upper part of the fifth quintile, where the first example of families having matching silverware sets and their own individual rooms started popping up.
When rich communities make up your entire world, you're more likely to fit yourself on a spectrum of "wearing hand-me-down clothes" to "having a pop star perform at your birthday party" than on the actual spectrum of class that the majority of the world lives in.
wow this is fascinating, thank you!!
Yes this! I went to public school and had a friend who’s dad couldn’t afford to put fuel in his car to drive her to my house, and even then the ball didn’t drop about what wealth I had. It’s only now as a 22 year old am I beginning to understand the privilege I have.
For instance, I’m a musician, and the only reason I can be is because my parents could afford to give me piano lessons, could afford to buy me a piano, could afford to let me enter piano exams, could afford to send me to a music university, and can afford to let me live at home rent-free to pursue my career. It makes me angry that only the children of the wealthy can afford to be artists. It makes me feel guilty and underserving. And even then, a lot of peers don’t have the social consciousness to begin understanding their privilege, because they compare themselves to me, the richest of the people they surround themselves with, and go “oh yeah, I’m middle class”.
I moved to one of the most affluent places in California when I was 15, and I came from a very poor background. My mom and I were homeless, so I moved in with my aunt and uncle, and when I told people that at my new high school, they literally looked at me like I was an alien. It was almost like they didn’t know people suffered like that.
The funny thing is even my aunt and uncle were at the low end of income for the area they lived in, so I was still “the poor one” to the people in my high school even though I was living in the biggest house I’d ever lived in, had a room to myself for the first time ever, and didn’t have to worry about my next meal.
damn what? third quintile all shared the same toothbrush? what country you living in? that's crazy
I mean I know like half the world still shits outside like a bear in the woods but sharing a toothbrush is just unsanitary.
I legit felt the same about the TH-camrs i used to watch, and became really unsatisfied with what I had because my room and lifestyle didn't look like a beauty vloggers!
!!!!!
same, i always watched these room tours and would yearn to have something like that because I thought everyone had their own “aesthetic tumblr” room
i love your channel!!
@@lunarraii this... ahahaha. relate.
I know this isn’t a perfect solution, but there are a lot of videos about creating cool, pretty home decor from stuff from dollar tree. Trick your friends! Spend $5 instead of $60!
... that sounded insincere, but I really like those videos lol
As somebody who came from an affluent community (though I’m about 5 years older than you,) I can tell you that no, young people don’t realize that they’re rich if they’re surrounded by other rich people. People say culture is like water, and the fish don’t notice the water. That’s 100% true. If you’re not exposed to the way other teens with less means live, you don’t realize that what you have is a luxury to many. It’s only once you get into a more diverse setting, whether it’s college or a different community in the “real world”, that you realize how much privilege you have/had.
Yes, and simultaneously it’s easy for them to STAY in the “super rich” bubble when they go to uni. “Normal” people cannot afford to go to a uni out of state in a big, expensive city, and if they manage to, they’re usually working their way through it. My boyfriend comes from a very wealthy family and his sister went to uni in NYC (they’re not even from the US). All her friends are similarly wealthy to her, their parents pay their tuition/rent/credit card bills and they don’t really hang around the crowds of people who aren’t that fortunate because their lives are totally incompatible. They think what they experience is normal, and even I didn’t realize until I was 18/19 that despite being middle class and always financially comfortable, my parents couldn’t come close to affording to send me to uni in another city and pay my way through it.
Right, my college was expensive but gave a lot of scholarships, and that was the first time I saw a huge range of incomes/how people get by. For some, $100 was way too much money to spend, and then we also had students who wore new $5000 shoes every week.
I HATE the ‘my parents worked so hard’ argument. Like, ok, mine too, but that does not defines class of justyfies privilege.
Yes! I feel those comments were worse. It makes people feel like their parents aren't. I would have like if she referenced Alana Arbuccis video about her money. She's in ther 20s and a good example of everything mentioned but now a days
Yep. Also, you can’t claim your parents work as your own. If you are benefiting off of someone else’s work, that’s privilege. You don’t have to apologize for it, but don’t pretend like you were puttin’ in the hours if the work happened before you were born.
@@Kaybye555 Alana's comments in that video were a mess lmao. she really could not comprehend that hard work doesn't always mean financial success, esp if you're bipoc & you're literally not given loans at the same rate as your white counterparts. she also said most wealthy people were self-made lol. I think she really needs to take a sociology/history class or something...
@@nalad9387 I used to like her but I unsubscribed. Her ideas have been a mess lately. That particular video was an eye opener for me. She really finds success in money only (and apparently looking good) and I just don't agree.
I think she just perpetuates the idea that white and beautiful got things because they worked hard. Most of not all of her subscribers found her because they find her attractive
What kind of kid doesn't think their parents are working hard. I feel like people say "my parents worked hard" to "make up" for the fact that their parents are rich. I think these people do have class consciousness, they just know that if they admitted to being rich it would break their down to earth "girl next door" persona and they'd lose followers.
“Anyone can become famous on the internet” is a huge myth. You have to be above average in looks, have some money, and have charisma. Not everyone can film a video for TH-cam and get noticed.
A lot of it depends on what kind of content you make. For example, I am a big fan of Swell Entertainment and she is hardly a 10/10. You probably won't be famous, but you could very well be mildly successful.
The need for high production values these days too.
@@chengliu872 also helps having a special talent like being a great cook or make up.
Doing make up tutorials can work you dont need to brag about every product Just put it on box coments.
Lisa Eldridge is a great example. She is a make up artist Who happens yo have a TH-cam chanel.
There is also Laura Vitale she gives great Home made recipes. She doent flaunt her life style or makes tour homes.
Her chanel is about cooking and Its what makes her great.
Adult TH-camrs like lisa Eldridge or shea whitney are the Best.
Shea does her hauls but i like that latley she does target or Amazon hauls.
She started with luxury and does some luxury videos sometimes.
But latley she has more affordable
Hauls we cant get everything she buys but we can sometimes buy one or two things from her hauls.
I find Adult TH-camrs more interesting
@@sarizonana Yeah talent and charisma. You need to draw people in and then have the talent to keep them there or you will only get a large influx of money once and not make it your career.
I disagree. It mostly luck what gets people noticed online.
omg I’m actually so excited for the video on teeth and dentistry, my constant struggle
Hope your implant process is going well! ❤️❤️
Me too! I haven’t been to the dentist in years because I don’t have benefits or dental coverage, it’ll be an interesting one for sure.
YES!!! I’m crying typing this. My parents brought me to America from Mexico. We were low income and had zero insurance plus I know my parents hate me for saying this but they never instilled dental hygiene. I would brush my teeth sporadically. Fast forward I’m now 32 I’ve had about $10k+ worth of work and need more. I didn’t go to the dentist until I was 18 then needed a root canal. I never had braces although thankfully my teeth are relatively straight. I didn’t go back to the dentist until I was 25 and had a dental insurance through work. I remember the assistant asking very rudely WTF was up with me and why my teeth were so bad. I could’ve died right then and there.
I think we all thought of Sarah when Tiffany mentioned dentistry ahaha
i swear i instantly thought of you when i heard that
the thing about the rich people not being able to cook reminded me of that one scene from arrested development. "its a banana, michael, how much could it cost? $10?" "you've never actually been inside a grocery store, have you?"
The whole arrested development lol
luv arrested development forever!!
@@tiffanyferg I started watching Among Us content when it popped off. One of the creators I've been watching was Hafu and I startled when I learned that she never even boiled water in her life. In fact, I am still having hard time understanding how one can live 30 years without boiling water even for once :) But the most shocking part was how half of the audience was trying to normalize this.
A girl I went to high school with FaceTimed my friend to ask what boiling water looked like - she was trying to make Mac n cheese. We were 16/17
👀 I feel called out. I never used to look at the prices of anything when shopping, because my parents thought it was in bad taste. I never even realized how privileged I grew up until I went to a magnet high school across the county. I met people for whom living off of food stamps was a normal way of life, and to get free lunch was expected. I’m not ashamed of it; my parents worked really hard to get where they are, but as a result they did their very best to insulate me from a lot of harsh realities. Just a reminder that sometimes the picture is a little more complicated than you think. Some folks really are that naïve, simply because of a lack of exposure to how other people live. I’m so glad I got that reality check as I was growing into my sense of self. It was painful and awkward at times, but I honestly think I’m a better person because of it.
I think “kids being born in a family that could give them comfortable life styles aren’t evil millionaires and they shouldn’t feel responsible for financial inequality that they didn’t cause” and “they should acknowledge their status and privilege even if it makes them less relatable” can both be true.
Totally agree!
Charlie Damelio
Yesss exactly!
perfect wording
i hate when rich people say "we're comfortable" when they're clearly just rich. or "my parents have money" that means you do too. even if they don't buy you everything you want you have the privilege of growing up in a wealthy home, having better access to healthcare, education, possibly growing up in a neighborhood with a low crime rate, or even gated community, and having access to better food. all of that gives someone massive privilege. not to mention connections their parents may have in the workplace that give their children opportunities the rest of us don't get
And that’s how children should be brought to experience this world in families that cactually can afford them a “comfortable” life. What’s the point to have 4-5 kids in a 3 bedroom house? Having children when you can’t feed them “better food”? When you can’t afford to give them “better” education, healthcare, a healthy environment with low crime rates?
Where’s the accountability when it comes to parenting…
@@lt.2992 we shouldn't be going at the problem by saying "poor people shouldn't have kids", poverty just shouldn't exist.
@@lt.2992 that line of thinking is really popular amongst the ultra wealthy actually, it’s called eugenics
@@AAAAAAAHHHHHHH !!
@Kill Bm nah the wealthy owe the people they got rich off of (their workers) a lifestyle with dignity. Whether that be through living wages or tax dollars going to social programs, idc
It’s so funny how people “don’t know” if they came from a rich background, if you were poor you would KNOW.
Accurate
yea when I think abt this it makes me pretty confident that I was lower middle class in my early childhood and upper middle class near the end. it was confusing bc I didn't know we were on food stamps and got financial aid from school and free breakfast and only shopped at thrift stores and budget groceries. I thought all of that was normal, but I also went to private school so for the other kids that was definitely not normal lol. nowadays my parents still have a cheap mindset but are willing to fork over money for a new phone to replace my 5 yr old one, they'd prolly pay for my college and buy the bigger things for me if I needed them like maybe a $100 piece of furniture. but im moved out with flatmates and living paycheck to paycheck and am appalled when my friends say some $80 pants at a vintage store was a good deal 🤨🤨 so anyway at this point I'm just reminiscing and ranting lol
BINGO!
It’s so true. My cousin lives rent free in her parents Oceanside vacation home and drives a car her parents bought her, while going to University (tuition paid fully paid by her parents). She doesn’t think her family is rich 😳. I was so shocked I didn’t even try to set her straight,
💯
The funniest thing to me is when wealthy tiktokers or youtubers purposely ignore questions like “how do you afford all of this?” “where do you work?” because they know that they have never worked for anything and that their lifestyle is funded by their parents. And it’s always so sad to see kids ask those questions because you can sense their desperation for a lifestyle such as theirs.
I feel like if you don’t know what class you are or what’s your parents’ financial situation when you’re a teenager, it means that you’re pretty good financially (most times at least). When I was younger and kept asking my mom money for clothes and makeup or to go out with friends or money for a phone etc, she sat down with me and literally showed me what our income was and what our expenses were. I was shocked to see that, and I never talked about getting those things again. Since then I grew up knowing exactly what my situation is. “Rich” kids do not have an idea of what’s going on, what’s their situation or/and where they stand in society.
That's true. Lower income kids grow up to a constant tune of "that's too expensive" and "we cannot afford that". We know exactly what our financial situation is. 😂
Sadly true X'D
I think that just falls on the parents. If I were to have that privilege in the future to not have to worry about bills or whatever, I will make sure my kids understand how privileged they are, to the extent of even traveling to show them how other kids live so they can see how lucky they are. I think parents shouldn't shelter their kids so much. It's not gonna take away the kids innocence as much as people think.
I'm 22 and my parents still refuse to tell me our annual income as a household. I have no idea what's a splurge and what's normal for us
I was talking to a now ex and the topic of social status came up somehow. He told me "you don't realize what you are", and I had literally never thought about it. Since then, I have been paying more attention. And it's true that some guys I have met talked or mentioned "pegar un pelotazo" around me, which is a Spanish way of saying that they hit the jackpot, or something like that, by going out with a rich girl.... At one point I told one of them "I've got one word for you: prenup." Laughed about it.. but I was dead serious. And as I mature I realize the only ones I feel comfortable around are people at the same station as me. It's ridiculous to try to deny it. I really feel uncomfortable when they even mention money. I never talk about it, not because it's tacky, but because it's boring and unnecessary unless we are married or need to take care of business with family. But I guess that just speaks of how money has never been a big deal for me bc I never had to worry about it.
Honestly. I have had some hardships in my life. I always say my life was comfortable but never easy. And I wouldn't wish hardships like taking care of an alcoholic verbally abusive father on anyone. I am glad and somewhat confused when I meet people who have never seen their parents drunk and shouting at their spouse. I am happy for them and realize how hard I've had it and how far I've come despite it all. Why can't people be happy for others good circumstances? Nothing makes sense in this life. Why bother worrying about how much or how little someone has and just try to be happy with what we have? And if it isn't enough for someone, they should go out and do all they can to make it happen. Once your basic needs are covered, it's true that money does not buy happiness. I am eternally grateful for what I have and wish others felt the same with what they have too.
Being exposed to that kind of content while living in a “2nd or 3rd world” country adds another layer to the whole experience. It’s not just that your family could never afford those luxuries, but also that many symbols of such lifestyles wouldn’t even be present in your country (we literally didn’t have malls or big amusement parks or proper restaurants or even houses that looked remotely like the classic “american dream” ones).
Anyways, thanks for the video.
Completely relate to you.!!!
Really important perspective!
THIS!
Just to give some perspective, not all of America looks like the America you see on social media, though.
I would say the only thing we had in the rural area I grew up is actual restaurants... and even then my single mother and I rarely went to them. Most of the times we did before my mom made a little more money, it was my grandmother who married a wealthy man that took us out. But he was very conservative, so it isn't like we got help otherwise.
And even if people have access to malls, amusement parks, restaurants, or have seen regular American houses... doesn't mean they have experienced any of those things. I think honestly it's actually worse to be near that stuff, but you just can't go. I grew up in an area not around that stuff (tbh, we had to go out of our way to even see a legit restaurant, too) and it was the same for most people I went to school with... most of them didn't have access to those things, either. Let's put it this way, I had never seen a lot of wealthy things growing up so that after college when I had a sales job, I didn't even realize my boss was driving me around training me in a Mercedes. I actually was disappointed, because most of us have heard of the brand at least, but it just seemed like a regular 'ol car to me. I think it shocked my Indian boss when he realized I didn't know the brand of the car, too.
Yes, I relate so much! She mentioned most people have a smartphone these days and I was like 'lol no'. It really depends where you come from. Apart from that, there is the privilege of being a native speaker and creating content in english, the most spoken language in the world, wich allows your channel to reach more people...
I think the most ridiculous thing about this, that you didn’t mention, is the reason these people are making so much money is because they’re literally just walking advertisements. When you realise that advertising companies are just using young people to sell their products, it makes a lot more sense why influencers make so much money and why it feels so wrong to the average person that they do. Its consumerism disguised as entertainment
Well, they are making massive amounts of money bc the people that complain about their wealth are also the very same people who help them get that wealth by being their viewers.
ebgbjo2025 ok?
🎯
!!! You said well
So true
I used to say we were comfortable because we weren't starving and got presents on Christmas and birthdays.
But we didnt go to the doctors unless it was hospital worthy and even then my dad stitched his own arm rather than pay for the ER. We did dishes in the bathtub because the kitchen sink was broke. Our furnace broke so we didnt have heat for several years but had to buy space heaters so the water pipes in our ceiling wouldnt freeze which still happened even with the heaters on truly cold days.
I said comfortable because I compared us to people I saw who lived on the street or in shelters. I mean I had a home and food, that was comfortable to me.
This, 1000% percent. So incredibly relatable to my experience growing up- the furnace situation happened to my family when i was growing up.
I'm glad you were able to make the best out of what you had growing up! At the same time I wish no one ever had to worry over healthcare costs or the cost to repair essential things that break down randomly in the house.
I needed glasses in high school and instead got reading glasses from dollar tree, I broke a finger and couldn’t afford the doctor, and had a breast tumor (not cancerous thank goodness) for a year before finally getting treated. But you always see what you have first because you know someone always has it worse.
As a european with free school and healthcare etc, hearing from people "we couldn't afford to go to the ER" is really horrifying. I go to the doctors at least every 3 months and have a lot of expensive medication that I can get for free over here. I feel so bad for you all :(
@@heejsaan5648 school here is free (well paid for in taxes) but medical care is rough. I'm 26 now and haven't been to see a medical professional for years, nor because I cant afford it but because it's so ingrained in me that you dont go in
I feel like the middle class lifestyle has been taken over by more wealthier people. It’s not affordable or normal to be spending 200$ on clothes or be getting the newest iPhone every Christmas
It's definitely not. I'm from an upper middle class family and I can only think of one or two times where we ever spent $200 on clothes in one trip, and my family still has their iPhone 6s from 2016. It's just not realistic and not good habits to get into. As I like to say, just because you can afford it doesn't mean you SHOULD buy it! Honestly I don't know anyone in real life who spends that frivolously
yeah, the middle class is definitely a dwindling crowd. i feel like at this point there’s really no such thing as the middle class if we consider the fact that an outstanding majority of us are closer to homelessness than ever having 500,000 dollars to our name
@@Sierra_Polerina There is a distinct difference in my family. My mom, who was so poor she could barely keep the heat on for us as kids, married my step-dad who was very wealthy. As a kid, I got to enjoy the amenities, such as the pool and A/C and even multiple bathrooms, but never once did I ask either of them for money for new clothes or anything I wanted. My step-sisters go out WEEKLY and spend hundreds of dollars on new clothes and things they dont need! Theyve never worked a real job, have no real responsibilities, and are not held accountable for any of their actions. While it is difficult for me to watch this behavior from them, I am glad that it is not me. I am much more humble in what I have, and I work hard for the things I want!. Haha if you read all this, thanks :D
Fr!! I describe myself as upper middle class, yet my family would have gone broke a long time ago if we spent all our money the way a lot of "comfortable/middle class" TH-camrs spent their money. I just bought a MacBook today since my old laptop is literally being held together with duct tape, and I nearly cried blood. Not to mention that the only way I was able to afford a new MacBook was thanks to gifts for graduating HS this year.
yeah, I'm fairly comfortable now and have my own apartment but it's not very new or modern and it kinda looks dingy as a result, so it's not ideal TH-cam space for vlogging cos it looks like I live in a weird box
I grew up in upper-middle class, and honestly didn't even realize how well-off we were until my fiance. He grew up extremely poor, often going without meals entirely. When we talk about our experiences, he's helped me see that I grew up with a lot of privilege; I didn't realize it because my mother made sure to raise me not to be spoiled, I just never went wonting for anything. I agree with a lot of comments here that kids who grow up wealthy or at least comfortable have no idea and don't need to think about it.
this was my experience. my partner really was very poor growing up and when he tells me that they didnt have lunch at school or a bus to take them and I had everythign plus more. it does make me think.
damn girl what was that like
This this this
your teeth video idea actually sounds so interesting. i'm 100% down for that
maybe speaking a little bit about the recent smile direct club law suits in that vid as well?
Same! Like, I wanna know how ppl think good teeth represent and stuff. Yup, I'm interested in teeth. No need to say that I'm weird cuz we all love something that is supposedly "weird" so...
I wanna become a dentist so that's a HUGE factor abt why I'm looking into teeth and what ppl think of her good teeth and bad teeth represent or some stuff, get what I mean?
Same, I grew up with some really unfortunate teeth issues from genetics so I'd love a video on it. I've been wearing braces, had teeth implants that failed (which had to be paid for by my grandparents and other family coming together), and having other appointments with various specialists since I was 15 (I am now 22). This was largely because the only braces we could afford weren't adequate, so I got older and had to "undo" a lot of what was done before. I'm still trying to get decent teeth now and I'm paying for it through my student loan rip
I am looking forward to it. my family was poor but I was born with really good teeth and my mom took so much pride in these free teeth and spoke of them constantly, like she used to ask me to show them to people.
I wonder how many of those “rich” people are actually living their lifestyle on credit and no savings. Especially people in the upper middle class. I have so many friends that live extravagant lifestyles but they earn less than I do. Our banker once admitted that most people’s savings accounts are empty. I think there’s a huge segment of society that’s faking it.
Most of my friends live like that. It gets so tiring trying to advise them. One of my friend is now being hunted by loan sharks and still applied for another loan
You can only fake it for so long.
When you say credit do you mean credit cards or generational wealth?
1000000%. America is literally completely founded on credit, most people are not nearly as wealthy as they look. House? Mortgaged. Cars? Leased with a payment plan. Living off of credit cards, etc.
But to what extent can you fake it? There has to be some basis to begin with.
I think people don’t talk enough about how challenging it can be to date someone from a different socioeconomic status. I had a boyfriend whose parents had three houses, and was genuinely confused why my family did not have a lake house. But on the flip side, I have also dated someone who was houseless at times growing up. It’s so easy for even middle class people to be so unaware of their privilege (myself included)
Dating rich people sucks so bad. I hate when men talk about money cus I know they’ll be so out of touch.
Someone called teeth “luxury bones” to me once and that is basically perfect. Mine need so much work I can’t even fathom affording. 😩
Luxury bones that don’t accept the same insurance or care as regular bones!! It is truly asinine
This!!! In the UK our healthcare is completely free but dental work mostly isn't (probably why the British are known for horrible teeth) and if you need dental work it can be cripplingly expensive and hard to access! Teeth are very much seen as a luxury or something purely aesthetic here but last year I almost died from a dental related issue and it really made me re-evaluate this
Yeah I wonder if its because in prior human history, teeth falling out was seen as normal to inevitable, so it was like "why bother if its only going to happen anyway." But now we have modern science and we understand how to prevent this from happening, plus its so easy to provide this "fluffy" type care (regular dental cleanings and screenings) versus providing intensive care (such as jaw surgery and feeding tubes if things go uncared for long enough). In addition to allowing people to retain their comfort and dignity. Teeth and the mouth are also a window to the bones and the health of the rest of the body. Let's move teeth up to "regular bones" status! We aren't cavemen anymore...
@@jelkel1928 Well in the 18th century poor people used to literally sell their teeth and then rich people would buy and wear them so dentistry clearly has a weird capitalist history! I think they should definitely be classed as real bones, modern dentistry is a big part in us living longer so it's pretty essential if you ask me
In my country braces are free ( alongside all other dental work) up until you are 18. You do need bad teeth to get braces tho... They wont just give it to anyone but I never knew braces was a luxury thing. It was always just seen as reallyyyyy embarassing to be seen in braces here lol
The beginning iteration of lifestyle creators were directly coming off the high of MTV shows like Cribs and Sweet 16. They successfully made us think that materialism was more interesting than a personality.
so I'm ten minutes in and I'm already crying even tho there's nothing emotional in the video? I'm someone from a third world country and my perception of the West came from these TH-cam videos. I remember feeling pitiful and sad about not having a teenage like this. When you said that you felt left out of this niche of teenagers I actually feel seen for once. Thank u for being my best friend Tiff ilysm
I relate so much to that 13 year old bitterness still hanging around. Being aware that your family doesn’t have much as a kid is rough.
Its mortifying and beings about alot of sadness and anger I'm 23 now and am still feeling salty and bitter asf especially now that the wage gap is rapidly widening everyday.
@@chantlmcclary6419 This is exactly why I'm not having children until I have built enough wealth. 25 and doing good so far. I had a privilege upbringing so by God my babies will have the best!
"My parents worked really hard for their money" is quite an ignorant and insensitive thing to say when addressing wealth. Like I'm sure your parents did work hard for their money, but that doesn't mean they've worked harder than those who do not have money.
Not all people who have money have worked for it, especially those who come from intergenerational wealth where money is passed down through the family. It also implies that people who work jobs that are lower income (retail workers, hospitality etc) don't work hard and aren't faced with challenges of their own which is not true, and anyone who has worked those jobs knows that.
I don’t understand how “my parents worked really hard for their money” implies that other people don’t work hard to earn what they have. Doesn’t it just mean that they weren’t the mega-rich people who had intergenerational wealth? Sometimes I don’t understand what people expect of these rich teenagers, surely they don’t have to apologize for being born into a rich family should they?
@@WeiCloudy Thank you--I was going to ask the same thing. I don't understand where people get these alleged implications from; that's not what saying "my parents worked hard" is implying at all. It boggles the mind how one can do such mental gymnastics to arrive there, but I personally think it all boils down to projection (that stems from jealousy and insecurity for their own perceived inadequacies, be quite frank).
@@WeiCloudy honestly I think the self awareness is good. I would always take this instead of not acknowledging that you benefited from your parents wealth (ie it's my parents money, not mine) One of my college friends was really well off and she said this line a lot, and not once did I feel spoken down to as a kid from a lower middle class family. But that's just based on my own experiences.
I’ve always worked in the service industry and what is disgusting is the way rich people treat us. They treat us like they own us. I’ve had many encounters with rude customers.
@@lisar.271 yaassss! I feel like Tiffany, along with a lot of people in the comment section are projecting their insecurities on other people who had it better early on in life. And what bugs me even more is when she straight up says that the teenage girls should admit that they’re “rich,” but tbh isn’t “working really hard to provide a comfortable life” exactly the definition of a well of middle/upper middle class?
Tiffany needs to stop ranting like a thirteen year old and then covering it up by saying they could’ve acknowledged their privileges blablabla
It’s not that acknowledging one’s privileges isn’t important, it’s just really ironic when she got to live in a wealthy city in California. Despite being on the low income end, I’m sure she would come across as one of the rich people in other areas of the country.
I grew up in a middle class family with 4 siblings. I knew that at times money was tight but i never had to worry abt having food, shelter, etc. Moving out and living paycheck to paycheck has been so so different then what I grew up with. I really took being financially secure for granted
Felt that one
Honestly, I'm less annoyed by a youtuber/influencer that can say "yes, I am rich" than one that will pretend they're broke when they always have the latest tech and drop $500 on new clothes every week. I mean tbh, when I'm rich, I will be so happy to say that I am lolol.
I also remember watching these christmas hauls and honestly feeling sad that i was only receiving 2-3 gifts. To add insult to injury, they would always say "this is in no way bragging, this is just what my parents got me. I'm not rich though", and then would unbox the newest iPhone even in 2012 when they weren't a thing yet.
Note: I was absolutely NOT poor growing up (I wasn't rich either though). My parents just spent their money on stuff we needed rather than everything we wanted.
This whole consumerism side of youtube is actually the reason why i never took youtube seriously when growing up. I tried to create a beauty channel back in 2013, and I ended up giving it up rather quickly after realizing I would never be able to compare to these other beauty youtuber coming out with a new 1000$ haul every other day.
I've actually recently moved into a new apartment, which is very beautiful and actually matches what's "in trend". And you know what? I moved a month ago, and my Instagram following has literally doubled when I haven't changed anything. Still using the same hashtags, and actually I've been putting much less effort into interacting with people than I used to do. Yet, my photos are getting hundreds (and even thousands) more likes than they used to. Does it make sense? Nope. I've also seen the same phenomenon happen on TH-cam. My videos are doing insanely better now that I've moved to this apartment. I mean, maybe I've improved a lot in my content over the past month, but it seems to be a weird coincidence.
It's understandable though. People want to see pretty things. It makes sense for a person who's able to get good lighting, has a pretty apartment and films decently well to blow up and make it on the internet. But it's also true that it is SUCH a huge privilege to be able to afford this living situation...
Anyway, I could go on and on... maybe I should do my own commentary on the issue lool 🥲
I would watch your video, send me a link when you do :)
Wow that’s such a fascinating example of your environment helping you gain more followers! Either that or an extreme coincidence in the timing hahaha but it’s totally true that people love to interact with well-lit, “aesthetic” content
lmao i was scrolling thru tiffany's video and saw your comment. but yeah i definitely noticed it too - you don't post much different stuff but every photo looks pretty af and aesthetically pleasing and that does really help getting likes. your growth/the change in your pictures has really made me think like if my desk wouldn't be brown + the lighting and surrounding would be nicer (even tho i rly love my desk and that it is big, it's still just a part of my student housing room) then i would probably post even more pictures on my studygram. because i do have high standards for my pics and i would post wider shots but the background etc. just doesn't work the way i'd want it to.
anyways your pics are hella pretty and i love them all and defo make a vid on this
It’s truly a sign of how much capitalism gaslights us all that budding class consciousness must be apologized for as ‘pettiness’ or ‘jealousy’ or ‘being a hater’ on the part of the not-rich/less-privileged. I can so relate to younger Tiffany - I was constantly in awe of the lifestyles of my rich peers…..but for some reason **I** was the weird one for thinking their lives were not normal and shouldn’t be normalized 🤔
@Kill Bm in over excess yes.
@Kill Bm better question is how is over consumption not a bad thing?
@Kill Bm A fundamental effect of overconsumption is a reduction in the planet's carrying capacity. Excessive unsustainable consumption will exceed the long-term carrying capacity of its environment (ecological overshoot) and subsequent resource depletion, environmental degradation and reduced ecosystem health.
@Kill Bm how is “spoiling” not a bad thing? It’s one thing to provide for your child and give them treats but spoiling is excess. Children are still learning the value of items and how they’re earned. Being provided every desire with no sense of their value creates entitlement that effects consumption in adulthood. Spoiled children grow up with less financial responsibility for themselves - it leaves them less able or willing to earn on their own or plan for their own spending. It also makes them less understanding of people who earn less and increases the gap between classes. Spoiled children can learn to manage their own money and work hard and empathize with those who were not spoiled but it’s much harder to do so. You’re not doing your child any favors by “spoiling” them, you’re just setting them up for a very hard reality check.
@Kill Bm idk why you’re aggressive or speaking as if you know me personally but spoiling a child has always been considered a negative thing - hence the use of the word “spoil” which denotes something literally going bad. It has less to do with providing for your children and more to do with behavioral problems resulting from overindulgence of parents. That’s not my subjective opinion, that’s the very definition of “spoiled children.” If you’re not comfortable with people responding to your questions with an explanation, perhaps don’t ask.
When I was a kid my dad would describe our economic status as: ''We have enough so we dont have to worry if we will be able to pay the bills and not be hungry.'' And that was accurate, the food was basic food, we didnt get sweets and ice scream was a once in a while treat, I wore a lot of hand me downs from my brother, we would buy jackets that were too big and fold the sleeves so that we could wear them for at least one or 2 extra years cause kids grow. We maybe didnt understand class and money properly, but we had a decent idea, recently I was on a walk with my mom and saw a huge doll house in a store window, I commented how silly it was how much i wanted to have one of those as a kid, she was confused cause I never told her. And I didnt, neither did my brother, we knew we cant afford expensive stuff so why even ask.
But I still feel uncomfortable talking about money and generally would rather not. I had a few run ins with a couple of my friends from college recently, where they complained to no end about how their income is horrible and how hard they are struggling. One of them is earning double that I do and the other a bit over a tripple of my current income, no kids etc. They are far more well off than the majority of people in my country. But when you grew up in a family where have a near live in maid to clean and cook for the family, your idea of struggling is different.
omg the doll house thing is so real
I'm fascinated by the tooth talk... living in Canada where we have free healthcare, we don't have free dental care, and as an adult, you can almost tell someone's class or status by looking at the quality of their teeth... also Trixie Mattel talks about as soon as she got rich and famous she replaced all her busted teeth with veneers.. And Katya tells a story about her high school teacher who was a nice lady but had awful teeth and low confidence because of it always hiding her face, and then after one weekend she came in and had all new teeth and her confidence had skyrocketed
I know the UK has a bad reputation for teeth, but it's the same here. Most dental healthcare isnt covered by the NHS and as we dont have an insurance system for just teeth, it's got to be paid at the reception desk (though I'm sure you can do it through a bill for larger sums). It means most people on low incomes just cant factor it into their expenses and dont go frequently/when they need to/at all. It also contributes to peoples fear of the dentist. It used to be a running joke that the people on jeremy Kyle all have bad teeth, which in actuality just correlates with their low average income
Yes, it's so hard to have bad teeth. I'm in Canada too and it has been a long-time pain point for me. I think I am getting closer to afford dental care but I am in my 30s so it feels late. I've spent many years hiding my smile.
@@emilyclarke8222 i agree with your point, but dental care is free here for under 18s, and most kids will get braces completely free, therefore (at least just in my experience) i haven’t really noticed teeth as an indicator of class at all compared to the situation in the states. this probably was more of the thing in the past before braces were common for teenagers so there were more problems in later life that you do have to pay for
@@emilyclarke8222 I thought under 18s got free dental care and those on benefits like UC get free dental care, similar to opticians ways of working
As someone who grew up pretty wealthy, I believe there is a conscious effort by many parents and financial advisors to deny their children a class conscious upbringing. It ensures the preservation of the family wealth. A culture of silence about inequality makes it easier to ignore the questions (why do we have this? Do we deserve it? Etc)
absolutely, great point.
I’m sure that what you’ve said is true for a lot of people but on the flip side, I also grew up fairly wealthy and my parents really made an effort with class consciousness and living way below their means and things like that. They pushed me to understand personal finance and take classes on it which in the end will probably help with wealth preservation.
Taking that personal finance class actually inspired me to become what is basically a wealth advisor for people who don’t have a lot of money because people without a lot of money work very hard and deserve to keep as much as they can. I want to learn all the ways I can advise people to prioritize different loans based on interest rates and paying the least amount of interest possible or other things like that. it’s a niche but concrete way I can really help people.
@@manyagaver1946 It sounds like our upbringings have a lot in common haha. I was more so speaking to what seems to me like a general cultural trend. Wealth redistribution ftw :)
@@manyagaver1946 Its really good you have frugal parents. they are well ofb but dont spend much.
Its a very responsible way of living. Because If you are Middle class but spend too much the money Will go away.
Its great you have parents who are conservative in that matter
it's crazy how many people who went to private school k-12 genuinely consider their childhood middle class
i vaguely know a guy who goes to this crazy private school with like the prime ministers kid and apparently its bc his mom is a diplomat so the government pays but also like. he is SO rich i do not care what he thinks
I went to a private school, because of My grandma. Of never realized how much it was because my parents were terrible with money. 😂
I'm 33 and Irish and have slightly crooked teeth that aren't perfect white. Didn't bother me too much until Instagram stories ....I got so used to seeing people talk into the camera with PERFECT teeth. Now I am wearing Invisalign which I have treated myself to with my savings...when they come off I'm getting them whitened... Irish and British people did not care much about teeth and it was never a huge class indicator/beauty standard until recently.
Some Americans thought that some Irish/British celebrities with 'bad' teeth were wearing fake ones for a joke. An iconic famous Irish singer had to have his teeth on his album cover photoshopped so his album could be sold in the USA lmao.
Yessss I definitely want to research the history of the Americanized / Hollywood smile trend
@@tiffanyferg Oh from a European pov Americans seem almost brainwashed into believing bright white teeth (that are filed down) are the only teeth that are "healthy", when I was always told that they're supposed to be slightly yellow-ish because that's their natural colour
It gets even weirder when you realize that the UK has statically better dental care than the US. It's all just aesthetics
@@epicmarschmallow5049 as I said somewhere else on here even the Mexicans say dientes ingleses to mean bad teeth, but actually they are some of the healthiest teeth in the world! they just aren't always straightened and whitened because both of those can actually be BAD for the health of the teeth
yeah I'm irish and americas obsession with teeth is actually wild to me. like if they're so wonky they're causing a problem of course get braces but like idk why people care so much about other ppls teeth
I find it quite shocking that it seems like "success" now means to be rich or wealthy. It is like you can't call yourself successful anymore if you graduate and become a nurse like thousands who do every year....now you can only be considered successful if you do own a Lamborghini and such because few people can. This lifestyle of overflowing materialism is just ridiculous to me.
Thank You! I’ve been thinking about this a lot lately and for awhile I’ve had a materialistic definition of what success is and up until recently for me my definition of success changed to me success is commuting to a thing until you can’t anymore or progress at the thing you are trying at.
Well I dont know if its a symptom of a social media in particular or some sort of mentality, but I never saw someone I know with a Lamborghini. So, when someone achieve their dreams, the people where I come from often view this as success. "You made it as a teacher? damn congrats". But its an external point of view as I dont know the level of satisfaction of those people.
We all have different meaning of "success", being a good mother (for me) is success, and i'm 19 years old, without kids. But i just want to be the mother that i never had, and make my children's happy.
Success has transformed differently now. Some people’s “success” is just having a family. Or being happy.
As someone who’s about to graduate to become a nurse, I’d consider that EXTREMELY successful! Success is relative, but nursing has been my dream for years. That definitely sounds like success to me. 😊
I never want to forget or brush aside how much privilege I come from. My parents, while they didn't have the money to have family vacations abroad or a big house or new cars, could always pay for my music lessons. They're both college professors, and with that came with enough disposable income to pay for things like music lessons, tickets to the local theater, my sister's dance classes, things in that vein (not to mention the best gift they could possibly have given us, free undergrad tuition at the college my mom works at). I'm a trained composer with a degree and a half now, and if I ever make it big I will never say it's because of hard work. Yes, I work hard, but anyone can work hard. If hard work got you success then every creator would be successful. It's all luck. Luck to be born into a family that could pay for me to learn music at a young age, luck to have a mom working at a school that gives kids of faculty free tuition, luck to have a family that's been stable enough to let me stay at home and save up before moving to a big city so I don't need a full time job for a while and can focus on my creative work. Not everyone is so lucky, and that needs to change.
Yeah, that is quite a bit a privilege... growing up poor I wouldn't ever dream of music or dance lessons. I'm actually surprised your parents didn't have other nice things, but it might depend on the area you grew up, too. Usually college professors make really good money.
@@NickaLah It really depends on the type of professor and the college. State colleges pay less than private ones, and lesser known private ones pay less than really famous schools. Also, when I was a very young child my parents were adjunct professors (which are essentially criminally underpaid teaching slaves, the concept of adjuncts/contingent faculty needs to go away or at least be extremely reformed), but that was before I had music lessons.
I grew up in a town with an ivy league university, but my parents worked at smaller colleges. Because of the ivy league school, housing prices are suuuuper inflated so even families with solidly middle class incomes can't find affordable housing easily.
But it's so important to fight for solid arts programs in public schools and music schools that give free lessons to low income students, because it's awful how cost prohibitive music can be, everyone should have the chance to learn it
Nah if you make it big you ARE definitely allowed to say it was because of hard work, just don’t disregard all the advantages and privilege you’ve had, as it’s a combination of both.
Also thanks for sharing, I like how honest you were cause a lot of people with wealth, privilege and the ability to afford things, try to shy away from the fact they grew up with money/have money. I wish you the most luck in the future.✨✨
I kinda agree, but not with everything. It’s true that luck should be taken into account, but it shouldn’t just build down to that. I don’t want my hard work to be diminished just to make others feel better. I worked hard, and so do other successful people.
Every time I hear a lifestyle youtuber go into a long winded response to being asked if they’re rich instead of just saying yes or no, I know the answer is yes
Yes!! This is fantastic. I love this shit. As someone who grew up bordering lower class/lower middle class, I shared a room with my mum and sister, and later just my sister until I moved out at 20. And even then, I was sharing with my boyfriend at the time. When the relationship ended and I moved again, I had my own room for the first time at 21 and only for 4 months before moving back home to share a room with my mum. I’ve been watching TH-cam for god knows how long and it’s so interesting to see how content has changed. I’ve always believed that poverty begets poverty and having a wealthier upbringing supports you more in being able to maintain that wealth into adulthood
I shared a room with my mom too which imo seemed extra poor and embarrassing. it's somewhat normal to share a room with a sibling, people do it on tv shows and in movies. but mostly im really resentful, not for the stuff, but the opportunities you dont have as a poor kid.
you're so right when you say poverty begets poverty. our world is structured so that the rich keep getting richer at the cost of the poor getting poorer
As a European I’m always shocked to hear about people not being able to go to the doctor or endless student debt... not that poverty doesn’t exist here and there aren’t people who struggle, but health care and education are free...
Because health care and higher education are free, it makes European poverty, especially Western European, more mind boggling.
I'm Middle European too.
What's important to keep in mind about free education though is that when your family's income too low to support you not making money when you could, it doesn't matter that the education would be free.
The thing that's not affordable is family members not making any money because they're pursuing further education and not the education itself.
Granted it obviously still opens up more opportunities than if it was as expensive as in other regions, it's just another aspect to keep in mind
but is it good healthcare and education?? Is great that is free but doesn't the people have to be in waiting list for months until a doctor can see you??
Sana all haha
tax funded. not free. we work for those.
okay i would watch the shit out of a video about the privilege of dental care/orthodontics
Honestly I feel like Tik Tok is the epitome of pretty privilege. On TH-cam, anyone has the potential to grow a decently-sized audience if they work hard enough and select a niche that suits them well. However, on Tik Tok? Yes, true, anyone can blow up just like they can on tik tok. But someone can also just post a 5s video of themselves looking in the mirror and get hundred of thousands of likes and followers?
Speaking of teeth, I work in the dental field. When you mention people who are rich but think they’re middle class…. That’s most dentists. I work for a husband and wife team that own a dental practice and real estate. They are millionaires, but definitely not Jeff Bezos rich. Listening to them talk about money like it’s nothing makes me cringe. This past winter my furnace shit out and luckily for me, I know an HVAC guy who was able to replace mine for only $2000. When having a casual convo with my one of bosses, he commented that I was lucky and “$2000 is nothing”. It made me want to vomit. My paychecks aren’t even $2000, my mortgage isn’t cheap, and I strongly considered trying to go without heat that winter. They have *no clue* how hard it is.
Haha I'm about to start dental assisting with a couple very similar to this. They're literally millionaires but won't pay me for placement; I also need to take time off my paid work for it. Lmao wanna get in there and leave...
That’s gross of them. They’re bosses, they should know about how much you make if they are a privately owned establishment. You’re entire pay isn’t a good deal for what you had to pay. That sets you back. They own a business like that, they’re well off
If $2000 is nothing, then they should pay you more than that 😂 so many bosses are both stupid and out of touch it's unreal
Perfect opportunity to both humble them and ask for a raise
that moment when Parasite, a story about class struggle, won an Oscar for best film and millionaire celebrities all stood up giving a roaring applause
Edit: replying to some comments, no i did not mean that the audience shouldn't have applauded, but rather that the whole thing is just quite ironic
Just a few weeks later, smash cut to Ellen furloughing her unionized employees and getting a non-union crew up to her mansion to film. Also all those other Hollywood dummies singing "Imagine" to the service class from next to their pools.
To be fair, parasite is not only criticizing the rich, but also the poor and how part of why they are in the circumstances they are in is partly their fault.
Especially when Elon Musk tweeted that it was his favorite movie...
I mean, if they didn't stand and clap it probably would have come across as rude and racist instead of "oh wow look at them knowing their privilege". You are right in that it's very ironic, though.
@@KillerQueen-gx4vb I've watched a lot of videos of Bong Joon Ho, almost obsessively... and he's never worded it like you have. The only way Parasite criticizes the poor, which it only does somewhat, is that our circumstances cause us to fight with other poor people. But he's not saying being poor is usually a poor person's fault, like how you're making it sound. The inspiration for this movie actually came to him because he was a tutor for a wealthy family, and he admits he didn't deserve the job.... he was a math tutor despite being bad at math. He said, that's how those jobs work, though, it's entirely dependent on who you know and luck.
I'm lower-class, live in a messy cheap apartment, and just turned 40...tempted to start a humble, realistic lifestyle vlog series. 🧐
U go girrrlllll
@HannaBanana chill
Yes! You’ll make a lotta ppl feel seen
Hell, I'd watch it!
@HannaBanana Actually it is... if someone works more than one job and only has time to sleep, or maybe look presentable for work... I'm not going to hate on them.
As a kid who grew up ""comfortable"", it did take me a long time to realize how rich I was. My family always told me that we were middle class, comfortable, etc, and everyone around me was a similar level of wealth, so I genuinely had nothing to compare to. Among other kids, there was no awareness of class and all of us assumed that our lifestyle was the norm.
I didn't become aware of my class privilege until almost going to a private high school (didn't end up going, but still). Online I heard people talk about college, debt, money issues, and how impossible it all was to afford - yet here I was, with parents that could spend tens of thousands of dollars on high schools. It was shocking and it felt like I'd been lied to my whole life.
The rich teens you talk about in these videos are basically the people I grew up with. And I guarantee, they have no clue how rich they are. They're parroting what their parents say and they truly believe they are the middlest of middle class.
I went to Public school. My house got destroyed by a hurricane when I was 13 and I had to buy my own car and rent. I couldn’t afford college even with top grades and a scholarship of 30 percent. There are many people like us out there that rely on food stamps and the like.
The Myth of Meritocracy
true
Re: contextualizing your family's wealth, I think this is largely due to age. I pretty much had no idea what my parents' actual financial situation was until I went into college and got involved in money discussions. But growing up I could understand my family's position by comparing my family's lifestyle to my friends'. When you go to one friend's house and it's a small apartment with kids sharing rooms, another friend's house is modern with extra space and amenities, and you're in the middle, you gauge it on that. As someone with parents who grew up poor and working class, the hard work argument makes sense to me. My parents were frugal and didn't spend money on things "rich people" buy (we almost never went on vacation or ate at restaurants, i didn't get everything i asked for, etc) but I knew we didn't have a problem buying things we needed. Maybe this has something to do with understanding concept of money itself because as a kid you may not understand savings, investments, or money that isn't cash. Also both of my parents worked a lot when I was growing up and I always associated that with needing the money (again I had friends with parents who needed to have multiple jobs and friends who had a stay at home parent). Ok I'm rambling lol but I think the younger creators explaining their financial situation likely don't have a full understanding of it
Yes those are great points! I guess I couldn’t relate bc my parents were always way too transparent about their income and expenses hahaha
From the other end of this - I’m definitely from an upper middle class household. Growing up, I had no idea how different my life was from others. I never really asked my parents for things (or felt comfortable with it), so I started to notice in late elementary school that I didn’t have what others did in terms of colorful pens or cool clothes. Then I started going to friends houses in middle school and saw that mine was so much larger and it was super confusing because I’d thought that we were not as well off (especially with my mom stressing over debt). I don’t even think I recognized fully where my family sat on the class scale until high school. It’s definitely still weird because I tend to live on my own salary from my campus job and, as such, only do what I personally can afford. I know I have no understanding of money, so I tend to spend way less than my friends with less and stress about how much I save way more. Meanwhile my parents are doing things like getting an RV or putting a down payment on a weekend home. I do what I can to use my privilege to help my friends, like by paying for friends when we go out or covering the cost of gas. I dunno, this was super long and rambly lol
My parents also actively shielded us from any kind of hard numbers on how much money we had. I think if I have kids I won't do this though, I'll want them to understand our place in the world so they aren't ignorant.
@@tiffanyferg same, no shade on others, but I genuinely cannot understand being a child that doesn't have a gague on your parents wealth because its so a part of me. And it seems like, at least in hindsight, it should be easy to figure it out with context clues.
That's so true, I literally had to have a fight with my dad for him to finally be transparent with me about how much my parents make and how much debt they were in. I think he was ashamed to admit it, and my parent never wanted us to worry about money growing up so they spent money they didn't have. During the housing crisis I knew things were bad because my parents fought a lot over money and my mom admitted to me once that we might lose the house, but growing up without any sense of money made it so abstract and I feel really unprepared to be an adult and manage my own money as a result
Your transparency about your bad and good experiences with money is so refreshing.
I grew up in an upper middle class family, but every time I hear about Americans' economic situation I feel like I grew up a damn millionaire because I can go to the hospital for free, and I never had to take loans to pay for school. America is wild.
America is still a great country where 50 million immigrants from around the world call home.
My assumption: “both your parents have a masters degree or established career” because if they admit to that there’s rly no denying they come from a rich family. they’d rather say “my parents worked so hard”! So poor people don’t work hard? Ugh 😑
I think they say their parents work hard to make them sound poor
@@LangBellsChannel I think most younger creators from middle class backgrounds don’t always grasp their families income/financial situation. I remember seeing some Reddit discussions about this and it’s pretty common for parents pto try to shield their kids away from financial matters until they are on the verge of adulthood, as things are“comfortable”. I would say that my parents worked hard to get where we are now, because it true, barely saw my father growing up, with my mom it inverted, as now I barely see her because of work.
@@mariakiwi1428 Yeah, I grew up poor and didn't know until I was a teenager.
Trust even people with master degrees struggle. I know 3 ppl with one and none of them get paid what they should with the amount of education they have...one is going back for a 2nd masters to be a therapist to make more.
@@tiamarie1226 that’s why I wrote “or established career” a degree won’t do anything for you if you don’t get your foot in the door career wise
That point you made about some people not being able to go to the doctors because they are afraid their family might go bankrupt really adding into putting things into perspective about how privileged I am. Thank you
makes sense, the lifestyle girlies are selling a dream to us tbh🤷🏿♀️
Same as TV ads. TH-cam is essentially an advertisement platform.
what’s funny is that early youtube didn’t disclose when it was paid promotion so a lot of the time we thought they were genuine hauls when some of them were gifted the clothes or given paid promo to sell things to their impressionable young audiences. I think it wasn’t until the FTC started regulating it around 2017 when we started to know when a person was giving us brand deals or authentic content
As a kid, and even now, my parents like to tell me that we aren’t wealthy; we’re comfortable. And I guess the description “comfortable” fits in the sense that money is not a point of contention or insecurity. There is no question of affording doctors, braces, or house/auto repairs. But I never had a new car; the one I got when I was 18 and am still driving at 20 is from 1991, and the paint is coming off. My parents don’t buy new cars either. My parents would get me a few gifts every birthday and Christmas, and usually there would one thing that’s worth a few hundred dollars.
But comfortable is a downplay when you own a property that brings in more passive income than the median American. Or when you have enough money saved that you can pay for your child to get a master’s degree. That’s a substantial amount of wealth and privilege. And when you’re told “that’s not wealthy, that’s comfortable”, and mostly interact with people in the same socioeconomic situation as you (or higher), of course that’s what you’re going to believe it, because you probably don’t have that class conciseness. I know I wouldn’t if I didn’t have friends that couldn’t afford McDonalds, didn’t get an allowance, or had insurance that didn’t cover eye care.
Most of my friends were what I’d say comfortable; they had their own rooms, enough food, and knew they’d have power, A/C, heating, and presents on birthday and holidays. But if something serious were to happen (a family member had to go out of work for a long while or the house had an major issue), it wouldn’t be that easy to recover. The kids also had to pay for their own college.
So yeah… the way the rich view wealth and the what the upper class actually is are very different.
Thank you for your perspective! These are great points ❤️
I am comfortable because I have always lived below my means. Old small house in an up and coming neighborhood. Second hand clothes, furnishings and car. My car is a 17 year old Corolla….still running strong. We grew up as a struggling two parent working household…although both parents drank and smoked…it was not lost on us that there was no money for piano lessons and sports.
I am lucky that my son’s disability enables him get Medicaid that pays for his massive prescriptions. Otherwise we would be living in our 17 year old Corolla. But it obvious that my mind goes to future homelessness because my choice for choosing cart of the year is Target.
When you said "I dont think I'll be making this much money forever" I immediately thought about age privilege and a video on ageism would be hella interesting!
This would be a great topic for Tiffany to cover
You predicted it
hi tiffany, i’m currently a dental student in the US and just wanted to say that you can reach out to me if you want another perspective on the issue regarding lack of access to care in dentistry!
When they say “it’s not like I can have whatever I want” it sounds like they’re trying to be humble but in reality it’s probably their parents just being parents and not spoiling their kids, not that their parents can’t afford to buy them whatever they want lol.
Yas! " I asked for that bag and it's not like it got it"...okay but the point is that your family could have easily bought it for you.
That makes them sound even more ridiculous
I think too that they’re not just trying to downplay their family’s wealth, but they DO also want to make sure people know they weren’t spoiled, since they know that’s a negative association people make about kids who grew up wealthy. I feel like it’s a defensive reaction because they feel like they’re being “accused” of being spoiled or materialistic when people refer to them as rich, when in reality… calling someone rich is just a statement. It’s like when people get “accused” of having white privilege or whatever and they get defensive and try to deny it by saying they didn’t get everything in life handed to them. Well, sure, that might be true, but no one said that. It’s a defensive reaction that derails the conversation because they’re missing the point and interpreting acknowledgement of their status as a personal attack. A person’s parents might have been strict as hell and/or raised them to be a humble and empathetic person but that has nothing to do with the fact that they still grew up rich and had the security and benefits that provides.
It depends so much what “middle class” means, for example as a “middle class” person living in mexico, i can say i may have the same lifestyle as a middle class american person but i would be considered pour because here living is so much less expensive than in america, and that happens in america too, a middle class person in a certain place may be broke in LA and a middle class in LA may be rich in some other place.
Yes, i was just thinking about that. I am brazilian and personally i can say that if you dont live in the big cities like Rio de Janeiro and São Paulo, it's "much easier" to be considered middle class in comparison to the US. But i bet that if we went to the United States, we would be considered poor because of the living standart. For example: in Brazil we don't have to pay to go to hospitals, to go to universities and schools, and we have a variaty of local restaurants that are really low priced in comparison to Mc Donalds (I cant remember the last time that i ate thete lol, its very expensive)
As someone that grew solidly lower class, our family did not have the money to spend for things like braces. Or even regular dentist visits. It took me til I was almost 30 and had enough credit built up to be able to afford to pay for braces with a credit card. I was so crippled with self esteem issues because of this. I settled for men that treated me bad because I thought I was ugly and wouldn't even apply for good jobs because I was so embarrassed. Anyways all this to say that people that never had to worry about these things automatically have an upper hand. And that video about teeth sounds super interesting to me! Love your videos as always💙💙
Hi, I'm 20 and I'm in the same situation about braces. I gave up years ago because I heard that you can't use braces when you are older than 18 years old and I definitely cannot afford it sooner than 25 years old (when I graduate uni and have a stable job). You actually give me hope about getting braces someday. Thank you. And yes I agree. My classmates who had braces always said they're not rich, which made me mad and sad :(
@@aoitetsu2947 you can definitely get braces when your older! I believe it just may take longer because when your older your teeth are not as moveable as when you are young. But it's for sure possible💙 I'm so glad I gave you hope😭 I truly felt the same way. Yes so many of my peers were "poor" but they still got braces as a teen. It was a very difficult thing to deal with as a child and teenager. I wrote a narrow version of my story but I could write a novel on all the ways it has negatively impacted my life. Sending you hugs and love!💙
@@amymarie9107 Thank you so much ❤️ Sending virtual hugs too~
@@aoitetsu2947 You definitely can! Once I was done with school and started making enough money, I almost immediately got invisalign. It took a couple of years to straighten my (very crooked) teeth, but it was so worth it!
@@aoitetsu2947 a dentist will tell you if you personally are a good candidate for braces but as far as i know there's no age limit. i know people who got braces at 40-45 years old
I remember Gigi Gorgeous doing an "assumptions about me" video and got the assumption "You're rich" and she just goes "Ha.. YEah" lol she's amazing
About class consciousness: In my experience, comparing yourself to others goes both ways. Rich people compare themselves to those who are richer, but poor people can compare themselves to those who have it worse. I grew up in a poor working class community, and because everyone around me had it even worse, it took me many years of therapy to acknowledge that we were actually poor. (It was also very normal to have alkcoholic parents who beat you and/or neglect you and I didn't think any of it counted as child abuse until I started college.)
I find it odd how rich people always “discover” fashion trends that usually are started by lower class people
A good example of this is the current gentrification of thrifted clothing
Then they inflate the prices and lower class yet again can't buy clothes :(
Oh yeah, so true
bc they have access to everything besides the one thing lower class has and thats creativity with the limited resources they have
@@kirstene9131 Ooh good point. I did not think of that!
as someone who grew up (and still lives in) a 'comfortable' family, these kind of videos have made me realise that my family are rich. not loaded, not eight boats whatever but it's so easy to fall down the rabbit hole of pointing out the things we DON'T have rather than the things we DO. such a well-researched and interesting video!!
that's the thing though right? jealousy benefits the system in this case. if all eyes are on who's better off than us, why would we notice the ways people struggle that we've never had to think about?
I think about this a LOT as I see more and more "day in my life in NY" videos from young influencers on TikTok vs. lower income comedy TikTok influencers. When I've seen lower income influencers gain followings it's mainly off of personality-based content, and they tend to be judged much more harshly on how engaging and funny they are as individuals vs. influencers who are able to use their wealth privilege as a basis for their content. The second type of influencer can coast by using their wealth and don't have to worry about how appealing they are as people as much as lower income influencers do. Even with pretty privilege, lower income influencers often have to work harder to put out content that will be appealing because they don't have the flashy lifestyle and sustainable clothing hauls? It's really interesting to me to see just how much wealth influences the content we often see and choose to consume.
Not only social media. With the whole COVID-19 situation, universities are asking us to take exams from our homes and, to be sure there's no one in your same room to suggest you, they ask you to let them see your room. I'm not that well off and law school... Oh boi, it's classist. In the last exam I took, I felt so humiliated showing my poor student room to wealthy lawyers and fellow students. At the end I got a very difficult question and a bad grade, even if I passed. Overall an awful experience.
Damm your university were cruel.
I grew up so fortunate but even I struggled with inviting people to my house because I didn’t have a pool, my backyard was small, my house wasn’t decorated as well, etc
The popular kids always ended up being the richer kids. I always wonder why that is. Like is it a coincidence?
YEPPP good point! They have nice houses to host parties or even just have friends over casually, they usually have exciting birthdays… could all contribute to being seen as cool or well-liked
imagine being insecure to invite people because you don't have a pool or your house isn't that decorated!!!
Sure, the basic means of recording and uploading videos are more accessible than ever, but the bar has also been raised in other areas. Viewers expect you to have good lighting, good editing and good hair and makeup at the very least, and you'll get bonus points for costumes, music, props, animations, locations... all of which are tough to provide without a lot of money and time.
I have been on tik tok a lot lately and I can see a lot of girls around 18~20 making content about their routines (rich houses, exercises and green juices, studying, internships that look fancy), their closets, their 50 luxury bags, expensive cars, etc. They are not famous people, but I see that they gather a lot of followers making content all about being rich. And when you start watching something on tik tok, you get like 100 videos about the same topics on your “for you” page so it makes you feel that everyone is rich, but you. I’m 29 now and it still makes me feel bad that I’m much older and I don’t have that.
The last part hit me 😭
Green juice is the worst. $5 for a drink that is just mineral/vitamin water. Just actually eat your veggies and you'll be fine plus they have extra fiber. I do like the taste of it sometimes but can rarely ever justify the price. My bf's mom got a juicer recently and I recommend it for anyone who enjoys them-- you can save in the long run if you use it often. I will say it is pretty wasteful though-- a lot of the fruit and veg goes to waste to make a drink with few calories. I like to use it to get through extra plant material from my garden that otherwise would have gone to waste-- but buying produce with juicing it specifically in mind seems very expensive
@@Sierra_Polerinayes, I don’t like juices. I prefer eating fruit + vegetables.
I prefer smoothies over juices so I use all the produce. Seeing the amount of celery people use to make those juices is crazy to me.
A lot of things are normalized like shopping for stuff all the time and eating out all the time. It wasn't until I went to community college that I realized that isn't normal and just how privileged I was. My parents make an upper middle class income but insist that we're just middle class because they're always comparing us to richer families. Idk it's really weird how money can make you out of touch with reality. I didn't even realize it. I was raised into it so I thought it was normal.
same. my dad would always say we don't have any money when we literally had a tesla growing up.
As someone who definitly grew up with a lot of privileges (in germany) I often feel ashamed for that, because I KNOW, that so many people struggle with their daily expenses. I always play it down, because I simply don't have any answer, why it was me, and not some other kid, that grew up in that circumstances.
Agreed completely. I was raised in America born to immigrants but this is exactly how I feel growing up with wealth privilege, especially seeing how other immigrants that are not white and their children rarely move up in class in America
Don't feel bad.
A lot of poor people are always angry and bitter.
I will NEVER get over them girls/boys on TIKTOK showing their day in life where all they do is drinking matcha latte, shopping, pelatonin or whatever, and watching at sunsets…like what you do to fund your perfect Manhattan condo with a view? Why are they keep lying when answering that question? SELF MADE MY ASSS😂
LMAOOOO true af
"Self made?" More like "daddy and mummy bought it all!"
THIS^^
being lower middle class/low income in an environment filled with rich kids leaves you with so much to unpack lol I was a scholarship kid in a private college and I ended up dropping out and switching to a different one
me rn bestie. i’m on scholarship in a private uni and i’m gonna have to drop out bc even with the scholarship and financial aid, it’s still soooo much money. my financial aid advisor said “wow you’re lucky to not be paying so much money” but a girl is struggling🙄✋🏻
THIS 100%!!! I used to go to a private uni on scholarship and I just transferred. The atmosphere of the private uni I went too was just really shit. While people were partying and going out constantly I was busting my ass off studying to keep my scholarship and because I was broke college student. It’s just so wild to see the disconnect and how this kinda atmosphere can affect ur school life.
I feel like some of my pent up teenage sadness about being the poor kid at the rich school started to thaw while commiserating with Tiffany in this video. I’m going to have some grief to air out these next few days.
@@Victoria68213 exactly i went to private college w incredibly wealthy ppl. It was shocking. I realized for the first time in my life that I was kinda poor. But I busted my ass and 15 years later, I make more than most of the people i went to school with. Keep studying, it will be worth it. ❤️
“My Super Sweet 16” was the precursor of lifestyle content because it focused, majority of the time, on ordinary, “non-celeb”, rich kids.
We expect celebrities to have super nice places and things because they are celebrities. Yet watching Sweet 16 as a teenager was a whole nother level. These girls were going to Europe for customized dresses, received the latest luxury cars, and had people fawning over them for an invite. As a teen watching it, I remember being a bit jealous but it was a momentary feeling. You watched the episode, maybe talked about it with friends, and that was it.
But now? Who cares about having the latest makeup or a nice bedroom. Where’s your designer everything, lavish home, luxury cars, and fancy ass vacations? How are you 20-something and “I’m only 20 and I bought a 5 bedroom house”?
Social media cut out the middle man and gives ordinary (mostly white) teens a means to capitalize on their following and make so much money. Disney who? Everyday is My Super Sweet 16 and then some on social media.
i have to say a lot of people in the comments are agreeing with you and grew up lower class and are explaining how they felt and it’s really opened my eyes. I grew up watching these youtubers and i also happen to grow up upper middle class and live in an upper middle class neighbourhood. So everyone at my school was in the same boat as me financially. You would go to school (public) and there would be a BMW and a Tesla and just the way we talked about money and what we had basically describes what you’re saying and growing up in that you think it’s normal. I think since i’ve left hs and talked to just regular middle/ lower middle class people i’ve learned a lot about privilege and you bring up some really good points that i never really thought of because i was always in the same boat as these youtubers. I am canadian and so there is way more social security here, tuition costs are low compared to the US and so that part isn’t as relevant here in Canada. But just growing up this way and then leaving that “world” has really opened my eyes to my privilege and i hope to continue the discussion and check my privilege more often. It’s not a bad thing to be from any class, it’s a birth right, but it’s what you do with it and I hope to be someone that uses their privilege correctly if that makes sense :)
I’m from Canada, and I can assure you these issues are just as relevant. The only advantage we have is free health care (which I’m very thankful for). Tuition is very expensive, and it takes years to pay off student loans. Students have it pretty tough, unfortunately.
Nah-university tuition in the states is on a different level. Several of my classmates came to Canada for university because their *in-state* tuition was more expensive than our international student fees-absurd!
Fair, but doesn’t take away from the fact that it still sets you back and makes it hard to break through.
Of course, compared to some tuition standards in Europe/what they used to be, Canada’s not that cheap-and yes student loans still hang over people’s heads. But we’re talking like 5000 cad per year versus 13,000 usd up to 50,000+ usd per year.
I'm from Australia and although we have student loans that set us back they're all: through the government, interest-free for 10 years after you last studied (last I recall) and are taxed from our income (so our repayments are means-based to some extent: no repayments if we earn below a particular threshold - which, sidenote, our rich jerk conservatives have been lowering of course). They aren't inherited either. So you could say we do still have debt and it can be considerable for a given person, especially depending on what they studied etc. but it just doesn't influence our lives to the extent of students in the US.
as someone who was very low income (grew up in subsidized housing, group housing section 8, food stamps all that shit) It was interesting that going to college was actually the most money I ever made, not after, DURING. People like to say "broke college student" but as someone on the lowest end of the spectrum, even the income of college students was astounding to me.
Yes! Exactly.
I just had that experience im 27 and a sophomore in college. I got an internship and it oays more than any other job ive had, with benfits. Wtf!
While in college (22 years old), a friend was chocked I hadn’t gone shopping in years and only a few times before that in my lifetime, while she had gone weekly in her lifetime.
I was so busy either working trying to make enough money to pay my rent or studying. I was amazed on how surprised she was at the fact that not everyone lived such a privilege lifestyle at such young age.
This is hitting extra hard today 💔 A loved one passed away a few days ago. She knew something was wrong and after doctors visits bills started coming in, she couldn’t afford to get checked out. When she wouldn’t take “nothing is wrong” as an answer at the ER a couple weeks ago, she was threatened with calling the police. Now she’s dead. After the autopsy, turns out it was totally preventable, all she needed was a scan. She faced so many financial hardships that kept her from medical care. (Her cat died yesterday, too. It must have been sadness) Sometimes I’m accused of being a “hater” of the rich, or of being bitter. But let’s just be honest, if you understand the gaps and inequalities, you know that there’s a lot to be bitter about. So excuse me if I roll my eyes at trust fund kids on the internet. Some wealthy people like to characterize their struggles as different but equal…no, they are not. Sorry for the rant, I don’t have many people to talk to rn. Ima try to afford a grief counselor in the coming weeks
Ps. I learned yesterday that it costs $75 to put her hair in a braid at the funeral home.
I'm sorry about your loved ones passing. I hear you - it feels like many people don't realize the huge amount of preventable illness & deaths that occur because of poverty & lack of access to healthcare. And that death costs too! Have you found an affordable grief counselor?
Sending you hugs! It's hard not to be bitter about that. I hope everything works out with you getting a grief counselour. All the best hon
This is what I don't understand. People act like being frustrated with wealthy people flaunting their wealth is "petty", or due to jealousy or hate. But wealthy people flaunting their wealth shows that they are ignorant of life, they're taking advantage of unknowing youth, perpetuating consumption and materialism, and overall, it's glorifying the thing that's destroying our planet. Being upset about this is normal.
Also sorry about your loss. That is heartbreaking.
Thank you for taking the time to share. I am incredibly sorry for your loss.
I’m not from the US, i’m from Chile and i started watching these kinds of videos when i was 13 (2013) so it always impressed me the amount of presents the girls had on Christmas or on their birthdays. Their rooms being so big and with a lot of clothes was like a dream to me... still is a dream hahaha
Yes I thought this was usa normal I'm some how I still think like this, so its eye opening to hear her perspective
The US has a lot of poor people
La cago k si jajaja saludos
I think the "I'm not rich" thing that teens say really comes from perspective. I've always known I was well off because I saw poverty in my highschool, but never thought I was rich due to seeing wealth flaunted by my cousins.
My mom once explained it to me as such: Living as the poorest person in the wealthiest neighborhood.
as someone who doesn’t celebrate christmas those “what I got for christmas” videos distorted my perception of what an average christmas looked like sooo much
for a few years when I was in highschool during the early days of instagram (I lived in the suburbs with uber wealthy families) people would routinely post their christmas presents every year on insta??It was so disheartening for me never getting anything that compared to what ended up being thousands of dollars for their presents and I hate that social media so quickly turned into a show of wealth that immediately excluded me
@@ccmbrli That does sound really disheartening. I can imagine someone who was super happy over their modest and sentimental gifts suddenly feel worse when they see the new cars or brand new iPhones gifts their friends are posting on Social media. Definitely not in the spirit of the holidays
@@ccmbrli omg, I'm in Ireland and I remember this happened here too!! In like 2009 and the early 10s. people would post their Christmas presents on social media or post a Facebook status detailing what they got
I don't think there's any more class consciousness amongst big TH-camrs, I think there's more of a class annoyance lmao. They know they're wealthy and they want to put out their wealthy content without being bombarded by comments of us lower class folks talking about their wealth, so that's why they put those disclaimers. The disclaimers make everyone in the comments who mentions their wealth seem petty and it sets up all of their supporters to reply saying "omg she worked for this money! she's not rich at all, you don't know her, you're just bitter!!"
I think TH-cam (and Insta) are some of the least progressive social media apps.
My best friends dad is an extreme important President of a university. He probably makes a million a year. They had three kids. 2 went to Ivy League and she get less than for going to UCLA. 🙄And she thought the “average” American home was 5 bedrooms. She wasn’t the richest family where she grew up because she would see billionaires homes. But I grew up in a true middle class family who can’t afford to have their foundation fixed. And have cracks in our tile floor and walls so we have to cover them with rugs so we don’t cut our feet. She had no idea how privileged she is and it causes rifts in our friendship. She would say stuff to me like “If I were as pretty as you I would be such a successful actress” and she gets mad that I don’t go on auditions all the time like she does. But she doesn’t get that I have to work to pay my rent and I’m exhausted from working so much and don’t want to wake up at the crack of dawn to go audition. Her parents still take care of her and pay her rent at 23 years old. The only “job” she’s ever had is an occasional stint as an extra in a tv show.
It can make friendships hard, a college friend of mine just bought a second home not far from me and wants me to visit. Not gonna lie my first thought was how angry I was that my hubby and I aren't even close to buying our first home, yet. I also hope she didn't get the home ahead of someone trying to get their first one, too :-/
@@soniao2034 Yea they really didn’t. But she’s also on the spectrum so I wonder if that has any impact on it. I’m very aware that I am privileged as middle class. My parents and I went deep into debt to put in one of the best colleges in the nation, where I met my friend... But living somewhere being surrounded by extreme wealth and mostly extremely privileged people is really hard. Almost all the people I know who are “working” in acting after college are still dependent on their parents. They don’t pay rent or have jobs to support themselves. They just audition all the time and puddle around. They say in America you can come from nothing and become extremely successful... but they don’t mention how hard it is to overcome generational struggles. Her dad is the president of a university. My dad didn’t go to college. During the pandemic when acting jobs and ny entire industry fell to nothing, I considering going to law school or med school, but I legitimately cannot go as I’ve already maxed out the amount I can take out in federal loans for education.
@@soniao2034 also the reason I posted this is because I am in the “entertainment industry” and I’m just highlighting how these actors, actresses, and media moguls mostly start with a large leg up on their competition.
People relate more to each other through class than race. It definitely is a strain on relationships. My significant other and I went shopping the other day (a couple days before my rent was due) and they spent $260 at Zara. I went home and was so disappointed with myself for spending $30…
Also!! These ppl love to talk about the one gig/brief job they had…
I remember growing up, I started watching video game content because my parents couldn't buy those video games. It was my way of "playing" those games and being able to participate in conversations with my friends. Watching videos of The Sims 3 or GTA was my way to live vicariously through the internet. Something similar happened when I started to watch Jeffree Star (not anymore) and Nikki Tutorials. It was a way of participating in this "rich" and lavish lifestyle and be able to "enjoy" products that I would ever have known existed. I don't fault people for watching these rich creators because it is a way to dip our toes in the life we wish we had.
More parents should talk to their children about their financial situation and how they are dealing with it, it's a very good lesson. I remember my dad talking about our budgets for clothes and food each month. My sisters and I knew how much we could spend each month, we had a set allowance for food in school each week and I think that really taught us how to deal with money, but also made us aware of our overall financial situation.
I agree with this totally! It also helps the kids when they grow up to use money sensibly
I completely disagree! My parents told me when they were struggling and it gave me crippling issues and anxiety with money. Like I was a growing kid and was too scared to ask for new clothes when I had grown out of mine and other stuff like that.
@@spreadingthedrewth4643 I guess it depends on how it's presented to you.
Bad idea.....my mom told me how much she makes a month and that did something to me....such a bad idea
@@synr9611 Well that's not neccessarily what I'm talking about. I never knew how much exactly my parents made but I knew how much we could spend on what, what were our financial priorities etc.
Hearing you use all of these sociological terms like “social mobility” and “social safety net” is so comforting to me