Watch the full episode here❤kzbin.info/www/bejne/qKC1gH6ij82Nr9E Don't forget to Like & Comment! 🙌🏽
@thebuildreview Жыл бұрын
Hard work is essential and ultimately rewarding if you know where you're heading. You cannot expect success to drop in your lap, and that's why we have such a hard time recruiting now. When people think that's its perfectly acceptable to expect everything when they do nothing, and moan when they don't get it is truly disappointing. Whoever started this movement is really damaging society.
@GattiOK Жыл бұрын
Love the whole interview and this clip. Great Monday morning wake up call!
@ShabanaK2011 Жыл бұрын
Jazakallah Khair sister. This video reminded me of my toxic ex spouse and ex in-laws and helped me to understand why they behaved the way they behaved with me. So glad these toxic people are out of my life SHUKAR ALLAH HUMDULLILAH! 🤲
@netsurfer173 Жыл бұрын
This was great, my walk was 100 times better listenin to things I am currently feeling
@dominic7015 Жыл бұрын
The paycheck’s speak. I slave away for that paycheck, and when that money lands I love it. Mortgage, Kids and a lifestyle that needs to be maintained is all the motivation I need. Stash some cash away for the pension, and a rainy day - job done. YES finding your passion that can actually be monetised is amazing and often the case study for all ‘famous’ successful people… however there will be a larger % of successful people who simply are willing to: work hard - even if it’s not in a job they wanted to to do when they grew-up. Working smart is key i.e. a job that actually pays - and the no1 bit of advise within that, if it’s not your own company, ensure you have a great boss who will actually reward you. Don’t waste your time otherwise.
@DeanLedger-io6xd Жыл бұрын
This 8.36 is right on point about hard work beats talent as we live in an excuse society where people only got where they are today because of talent. Also about the school system and how it focuses too much on the things we aren't good at then focusing on what we are good at. I would love to play this to my kids but there is too much swearing, is there away that it could be bleeped out???????
@thisisadiman Жыл бұрын
Imposter syndrome is basically reflective of being self aware about the scope for improvement, which is a good thing. The alternative is boosted ego, which does no good, at least not in the long run.
@marias8007 Жыл бұрын
Follow your dreams if your dreams are what you're best at... yes!!!
@Jojo.R.Chipelago Жыл бұрын
I don't disagree with Jimmy but I think he misses the point a bit. Hard work and talent in sports are both directly correlated to success, because you can't win in sports from nepotism or favouritism. Unfortunately the majority of workers are industrial or office workers, where management don't necessarily have a proper method of identifying hard work and talent. In some places, this information is recorded but kept confidential from staff so that staff don't have leverage to ask for a raise which would properly compensate for their hard work. It isn't a matter of only being motivated by the paycheck, because every single money making entity is motivated by money. That's why they don't want to hand out raises in the first place - to maintain larger profits.
@TheDiaryOfACEOClips Жыл бұрын
Watch the full episode here❤kzbin.info/www/bejne/qKC1gH6ij82Nr9E Don't forget to Like & Comment! 🙌🏽
@themonrovian8441 Жыл бұрын
If I had listened to my inner critic I’d have killed myself a long time ago. I wouldn’t have found the woman who became my wife, had kids, or had my own business. Some people like me have an inner critic that is evil…success for me came from damping that voice down enough to try. A lot of people had narcissistic parents that low key try to make you commit suicide.
@jenslittlewins Жыл бұрын
Dont usually like Jimmy but really enjoyed this, quite surprised. Please do GARY VAYNERCHUCK
@MrMsrahman24 Жыл бұрын
That was my phenomenal
@to2burger Жыл бұрын
Can you have Lex Friedman on? Thomas Sowell? Joe Rogan?
@ReactionsHQ Жыл бұрын
Hard work beats talent when talent doesn’t work hard
@Sinkobafode Жыл бұрын
How do you quantify talent?
@dinosemr8141 Жыл бұрын
💖❤️💖🙏❤️💖❤️
@nuttsy3662 Жыл бұрын
The Delta variant dealt with them 😆
@Tottorul Жыл бұрын
Disagree, you need talent pluss various amounts of work. without the genetic predisposition you can probably never beat the genetically gifted person and sometimes that means a lot of wasted time. Some people with talent also doesnt need to work that hard, there is a basket player who barely trained but still putperformed
@leighharwood91615 күн бұрын
Hard work is a meaningless concept. Who defines 'hard work'? Is 'hard work' measured physically or intellectually or with respect to risk-taking from a business perspective? I would argue that hard work is not only toxic, but insane. You only have one body to last a lifetime and you must take care of it. The concept of hard work suggests pushing yourself beyond the normal or average limits. This is just plain dumb and only a regressive society would even contemplate promoting the idea of hard work. Work is necessary, but society promotes the narrative from an early age that hard work is virtuous. There is nothing virtuous about fucking up your health to get ahead financially.
@bigALmagicDOTcom8 ай бұрын
"Asking a comic to improvise an hour long show is like asking a magician to do real magic." As a magician, I couldn't agree more. Just because we make it appear spontaneous doesn't mean that it actually is. It's called good acting. If it's worth paying to see, there's a great deal of rehearsal behind it.