Sooooo....did you go to Playa Del Carmen and bail him out?????🤣
@CharlotteDobre Жыл бұрын
I didn’t I called his friend who went and bailed him out 😂😂😂
@getfit4whatyaz105 Жыл бұрын
Right I was wondering the same thing! 🤣🤣just left us hanging
@feliciafee4200 Жыл бұрын
@@CharlotteDobre lol I was just about to write this: So did u still end up going & bailing him out?! Not breathing till I know the answer! I'm so invested! 🤣 but then I saw someone else was curious too & saw your answer! Omg too funny! Love u Charlotte!!
@kristafrederickson4719 Жыл бұрын
I had to know too LoL
@marcilk7534 Жыл бұрын
@@CharlotteDobre Did you find out what he was in jail for? My son lives in Playa del Carmen, and I worry every day he’s going to do something that will get in Mexican jail.
@toscatattertail9813 Жыл бұрын
When i was in high school (1969-72) there was this one girl who used to brag about her $1,000/mo allowance and $500 clothing allowance. One day we were in the hallways and she was bullying me for wearing home made dresses as her mother walked up behind her. Her mom gave her the squint eyed death glare of " what did you just say to her?!?!" and asked me how much allowance i got. I told her, $5.00/week for lunch and bus pass. She asked me where i bought my dress (even as a 15 yr old i was a very good seamstress) i said i made it myself, the girl gets glared at again. Mom reaches into her purse and hands me 3-$20 bills (alot back then), pays my lunch account for the rest of the school year and then informs her daughter she is going to be taking the bus for the next 6 weeks and not hitching rides from friends so she learns what it's like to make do with what you are given. The best part was her total allowance dropped to $25 for that month....She never bothered me again...
@yvonneburns2786 Жыл бұрын
That mom deserves flowers and a hug
@prettyponybaby2007 Жыл бұрын
That's a good mom! She saw that and said to herself "Oh no my child did not just do that! She's gonna learn a really hard lesson today!"
@eighthdoctor Жыл бұрын
That's how it's done. Well done to that mum!👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
@Chrissycolelive Жыл бұрын
I loved this story so much. Her mom was humble the child was a brat. I’m glad her mother made it right.
@moonhunter9993 Жыл бұрын
Well-done. But it's best not to spoil your kid in the first place... just wanna say that.
@pzm2461 Жыл бұрын
I can't remember the movie, but George Clooney uttered this line: "Id like to leave my kids enough money to do something, but not enough to do nothing." Love it.
@maureendance310510 ай бұрын
That's a perfect amount of money.
@useyournoodle1008 ай бұрын
Bill Gates said that.
@joannieb31557 ай бұрын
This line is perfect!
@stephanied917165 ай бұрын
Not sure who actually said it seems to be disputed but that is perfect! I remember Shaq said that his kids need 3 degrees to get the cheese
@MB-uy5kh5 ай бұрын
The movie was The Decedents
@aliciamcbeth Жыл бұрын
This is why I have so much respect for Gordon Ramsay. He’s one of the richest chefs in the world. But he doesn’t spoil his kids, he doesn’t pamper his kids like most rich people do, and he’s made them all get a job that’s NOT at one of his restaurants. More rich celebrity parents gotta take pointers from Gordon.
@goodbher9244 Жыл бұрын
His daughter seems so emotionally mature and well adjusted too. He's definitely a good dad.
@Nil_Sama Жыл бұрын
He knows how hard life can be, because he's lived it. Most celebrities don't or haven't. Since he knows the struggle he understands that he shouldn't set his kids up for failure. I honestly love watching the F Word, because we get see clips of him interacting with his family, and the lessons he teaches his kids~
@pablodelsegundo9502 Жыл бұрын
Maybe, but his grilled cheese is still shit.
@UncleFeedle Жыл бұрын
When they travel somewhere, the kids fly in the cheap seats. If they want first-class, they have to get a job and earn it. 🤣 That's how you instill work ethic in your kids. No shit for free.
@anabee6545 Жыл бұрын
That's the difference from parents who comes from struggling background, they know the value of money and want their kid to know it too. I'm in much better position now then te one I grew up in it, and I do want to give my son everything I couldn't have But also I will teach him the value of things and to be grateful :)
@toscatattertail9813 Жыл бұрын
i remember being in a math class in 1970 and one of the "HILL" (wealthy family) kids was complaining that her parents were punishing her by taking 1/2 her monthly allowance away...But this only leaves me $500/month for the next 6 months.. so they decided to go around the room and ask other kids what their allowance was. I didn't have one, i got paid/chore done (which was not much) and was lucky to get $40/week when school lunches and the bus-pass was $50... --One of the Hill kids decided she was going to pay for my bus-passes for the rest of the school year so i could at least get lunch. She is still one of my best friends 60 years later.
@cashwalk72539 ай бұрын
Aw I love how wholesome this turned out 💜
@robinpesek36578 ай бұрын
Wow. Delightful
@karenward2677 ай бұрын
So nice to read the OP response showing that not all rich ppl are entitled. I’m glad they’re still friends to this day. That is a true friendship.
@DdM12377Ай бұрын
Good parenting makes good people.
@ONIGIRIKINGU Жыл бұрын
I had a good friend whos dad was a billionare. Instead of going to an elite middle school and highschool he wanted to go to a public school. Came to mine we became friends, he didnt go to college cause his father wanted him to start learning the family business. I keep in touch with him sometimes. He never looked down on anyone or bragged about his dads money or anything. Good kid
@xIIIQueenOfSwordsIIIx Жыл бұрын
That’s all it takes. Keeping things as normal as possible.
@jjohnson6833 Жыл бұрын
I wouldn’t take the money! Because he’s not only cutting in front of you - he’s cutting in front of everyone behind you!
@teru_9921 Жыл бұрын
@@jjohnson6833 think you replied to the wrong comment buddy
@luketimewalker Жыл бұрын
STELLAR job from the parents imho.
@rommelangus Жыл бұрын
@@jjohnson6833 lol
@FallstarFL Жыл бұрын
I had a friend in college who was from a family that owned an oil company. She was told that she would get access to a 8 figure trust fund if she 1) got a 4.0 gpa 2) had a career of minimum 10 years 3) had no scandals 4) did something significant for the family business 5) showed that she was financially stable using only her own money She has maybe a year left. As far as I know, she's nailed it. Maybe that kind of thing for rich kids is the way to go.
@samscreations4717 Жыл бұрын
That's a good plan for her to follow
@user-hj8vc2ix7p Жыл бұрын
I definitely think it's an amazing idea to have standards for the kids to work towards goals. I can get behind most of these, however the gradepoint seems a little high and some people are smart but just don't do well in a conventional school system. 4.0 is a perfect grade no mistakes. No scandals is very vague and leaves an impression that she has to likely have no individuality of her own & be on the straight and narrow, that may be suffocating to someone in college (no casual dating, no partying, etc). It essentially leaves no room for her to make mistakes and learn which is important at that age. Also, as far as doing someone significant for the family business - that is imparting your own hopes and dreams onto your child who has no say in the matter. What if she has no interest in the oil industry? Idk, it's almost like her young adult life was chosen for her which seems depressing. However, if she's able to lay low for 10 years, get the money and then do what she wants that may be a good option too! That would probably be what I'd do lol
@kpoppy9635 Жыл бұрын
I wouldn't have gotten that trust fund based on the first requirement lol But maybe they knew she was smart enough to do it.
@stillfangirlingtoday1468 Жыл бұрын
@@kpoppy9635 You don't need to be smart in school (80% of all schools at least) to get a 4.0 gpa, you just need to do your shit. Things do start to go downhill once you're done with school and realize school and college were easy but you fucked up the easiest part of life due to being lazy.
@kpoppy9635 Жыл бұрын
@@stillfangirlingtoday1468 I guess I should give up on life then. 😕 I was born with a development delay so I'm a little slow. I had to study like at least a week ahead of time each night, I did my homework as well, only to get a B. My brother who was born smart literally didn't study at ALL. All he had to do was do his homework and pay attention in class and he got A's. Had he actually studied, I believe he would have had a 4.0. If you don't know the frustration of having to do twice the amount of work as someone else and still not be good enough, then shut up. While of course you should aim for good grades, parents should also be aware of their own child's capabilities. Everyone is different so we shouldnt all be held to the same stanard. Shooting for realistic and attainable goals is more motivating and increases productivity than shooting for the moon.
@kdkay4039 Жыл бұрын
My son pulled the dish crap with me! EXCEPT, it was “MY JOB”, because I was a stay at home mom, and that is what THEY DO! My hubby heard this and our son did the dishes for a YEAR! He only had to do them for one week with ZERO complaints, and he’d have been done. He could not help himself from “whining” about how bad he had it, then BAM 52 weeks have gone by! He’s NEVER complained about a chore again. It’s all “YES MOM! I UNDERSTAND!” 😂🤣😂
@becca1189 Жыл бұрын
Beautiful.
@jlessien3826 Жыл бұрын
The best way to teach them. Your son will at least not depend too much on others as soon as he moves out of the house.
@777SO Жыл бұрын
Has he should 😭🤣I love this👏🏽👏🏽😂not raising a spoil brat good for you guys and for him cause life will teach him sooner or later if you guys don’t.
@stadot1427 Жыл бұрын
I love to see a supportive husband and united parenting!
@basiakost4516 Жыл бұрын
Genius! Doing it without complaint. I'm using that in the future!
@tanyahyde171511 ай бұрын
My youngest son(we are poor) said women belong in the kitchen, one day. I'm not sure if he was joking or not, but I made him cook every dinner we had for a week. He still remembers that. He also has a ton of respect for women now lol 😊
@giovanmorabonilla64003 ай бұрын
You're a great parent
@MikkiMagic Жыл бұрын
When I was in college, I had a roommate who was spending $2000 a DAY so her dad made her allowance $200 a day and she had a complete meltdown! 90% of the closet/dresser space that was supposed to be shared between 4 people was filled with crap she never wore. And she got mad when I wouldn't buy her groceries with my $100 a month 😵💫
@snowwhite5887 Жыл бұрын
Thats crazy!!
@erikarussell1142 Жыл бұрын
Oh my lort!!!! What!?!
@RachaelTheRed Жыл бұрын
$200 a day is still over $70k a year! What the heck! I would take that in a heartbeat!
@poeticangelartbyangelabass3798 Жыл бұрын
Dang... I'd be thrilled with that $200/day
@k-aw-teksleepysageuni8181 Жыл бұрын
I'da 'accidentally' thrown all those clothes into a fire and said IDK what happonnnnd????
@katiemcwrath Жыл бұрын
I just debated purchasing a $5 drink for twenty minutes, I cannot with these people.
@SarutaValentine Жыл бұрын
I know, I can hardly pay more than ten dollars on any one thing
@roll3886 Жыл бұрын
Yep that's me. Don't like spending on myself really except for groceries and things I need, getting upset at having to spend $10 for medicine. I can't imagine having that much money and still having that level of entitlement and audacity
@mortimerbrewster3671 Жыл бұрын
If you have to debate whether or not to purchase a $5 drink, you should not be debating it in the first place. I saved so much money when I stopped buying fast food or drive through drinks (I don't buy at Starbucks but most people waste a utility bill worth of money on Starbucks every month). Drink at home and put that $5 in a savings account - watch it grow.
@LazyIRanch Жыл бұрын
@@mortimerbrewster3671 I shop at a family-owned store that sells discontinued and overstocked items for cheap. That's where I buy my $4 bags of whole bean Starbucks (slightly past exp. date). I've known the owners for almost 20 years, from back when they had a stall at the local swapmeet. They are a lovely couple from Pakistan who have been very kind to me. I have an off-grid 19.4 acre property in the mountains, and I raise goats to keep my land cleared of brush because of wildfires. These kind people give me any damaged or expired food for free to feed my goats which really helped this Winter. They gave me 12 cases of expired cereal (144 boxes of Quaker Oat Squares!), 20 bags of lentils, and about 60 cans of diced tomatoes (no salt) for my chickens! I buy as much of my groceries from them as possible. They sell bags of slightly expired whole coffee beans from Starbucks which are perfectly good, and for $4 a bag, so I can make my own fancy coffee drinks at home, cheap! I'm poor, but I sew. I have gifted them with handmade quilted bowl cosies, and I gave her some handmade silk, beaded butterfly hair clips I make. I brought them some fresh farm eggs, but they are vegan (Sikh) so they gave them to a person who needed them. I only go to town about 3 times a month because it's a trip, and right now my dirt road hasn't been passable for 2 weeks because of heavy snow and rain here in California. That store will be my first stop, as I've missed my friends and love going there to find new interesting goodies! This is how I feel rich.
@kudzu_ Жыл бұрын
I put off getting glasses for years because I didn't want to spend that kind of money on myself, to the point where they told me if I waited any longer I would have needed surgery to fix my eyesight. Then I got pissed when I found out I could have taken the prescription and gotten glasses online for a fraction of the cost. Never buy your frames from the optometrist unless you really want to support them.
@No-sv6mu Жыл бұрын
We had a kid at school throw milk on the floor and tell the custodian to clean it. I saw red. Brought him to the office and told the custodian do not clean anything. Principal called home and mom said punish him anyway you want. So I pulled up a chair, got an ice cold lemonade from our staff lounge, and parked our custodian like a king in that seat. He got to sit there and watch that little a$$ scrub the floor. Afterwards many of the other students were disgusted with him for treating the custodian like that in the first place. I loathe people who act like they are better than others.
@rociotorres65868 ай бұрын
ppp😊😊😊
@gaillynn12807 ай бұрын
The custodian at my HS was one of the nicest & most giving person on staff. Definitely one of the best people in my life through those years. Thanks, Merle!!!
@zephirinedrouhin37357 ай бұрын
That was awesome, I wish I could have seen that!
@wonderwend6 ай бұрын
Things the parent should have done at home
@alexia35525 ай бұрын
That is the best possible consequence, I LOVE that
@MommaOsoIrish67 Жыл бұрын
When my sons were in high school, they had a young man with special needs on their football team. I almost cried at the start of every half when, prearranged with opposing team, this young man was handed the play, and allowed to score. The absolute joy he got from that was infectious. And it was even more impressive when the two teams would really sell it, not just stand and let him score.
@blissfullycat02 Жыл бұрын
Thing about these kids though... The parents let them get away with it and then suddenly decide to hold the accountable... You can't expect that out of someone you never taught accountability.
@AngryCandy89 Жыл бұрын
Agree. If these aren't the consecuences of their own actions
@melchiorlise2466 Жыл бұрын
It's like letting your toddler slap you 19 times and then getting angry at the 20th time. The message you send isn't "don't slap your parents" but rather "I am allowed to do whatever I want, but my parent flip out sometimes for no reason "
@fatimahmakgatho8968 Жыл бұрын
Oh my gosh yes!!!
@SuperDrLisa Жыл бұрын
4.0 that's pushing it 3.8 is better. She might have had to take organic chemistry or calculus....
@luzvazquez4189 Жыл бұрын
Most of these kids are decently young too. Like, your brain stops developing at 24. If these parents took the time to actually parent, their children wouldn't be spoiled brats. The solution is definitely not to cut them off unexpectedly, especially when so many of them tend to get agressive when things don't go their way and could end up hurting someone. Why put a little underdeveloped psychopath in the real world when you can, idk, educate them from the beginning.
@marie-franceFortin Жыл бұрын
The problem with the guy giving money to skip the line in the video is that he should pay every person behind him that now have to wait longer because of him.
@lizardog Жыл бұрын
Exactly right!
@fabygoo Жыл бұрын
The problem is that it isn’t right
@starlingswallow Жыл бұрын
That's what I was gonna say!!! 😂
@andersonbarnett4245 Жыл бұрын
I thought that at first but if one person was willing to sell him their place in line and go to the back themselves, that would work too. You're right though, he can't just pay to cut in without paying everyone behind him.
@deemariedubois4916 Жыл бұрын
I would have been so ticked off watching him cut in the line. In my wheelchair there have been occasions where people have offered for me to move to the front of the line with my husband. This offer is so kind, sweet, but I always thank everyone as I turn down the offer. I tell them I’m the lucky one. I get to sit waiting in line while they all have to stand.
@necromorphous Жыл бұрын
I went to school with someone who would constantly complain that people didn't understand how awful her wealthy lifestyle was, she was sick of eating pheasant, money didn't make her happy yada yada fair enough. But then after hearing me talk about whether I should buy shoes or trousers (couldn't afford both but needed both) she started saying how she didn't know whether to buy a new car or *another* plane. We don't talk any more 😁
@victoriaeloiseperes3673 Жыл бұрын
$ u get 2 vo5 bottles a week one shampoo 1 conditioner 1.60 each. Pour it in ur hand put it on your head twice...$3.00 u get 6 tacos at jack in the box every Saturday for dinner 15.00 a month you get to save 2 quarters a week. Go ahead buy underwear tank tops and toothbrush mommy.
@serahloeffelroberts990110 ай бұрын
The part about the pheasant made me laugh out loud. My mother grew up in South Dakota during the depression. Her uncle's were skilled hunters and they brought home pheasant which were plentiful. So pheasant was a frequent dish on the dinner table.
@anadubar48197 ай бұрын
@@serahloeffelroberts9901 I would be sick of eating pheasant, too, because it is very dry meat. Sounds exquisite, but isn't.
@michellem9444 Жыл бұрын
LOL I remember when a high school teacher was discussing socioeconomics, and had us guess what the ranges for upper, middle, and lower class incomes were. This rich girl raised her hand and proclaimed middle class to be $100-150k. This was in the late 1980s. LOL Most the rest of us just stared at her, and the teacher nearly choked trying not to die of laughter.
@leeshaolivier929810 ай бұрын
I am a Special Education teacher in TX. My students think I make $180K. 😂😂😂😂😂😂
@kayodea.80248 ай бұрын
That's the thing, everyone thinks they're middle class. Only the extremely poor are aware of their situation. Because what we live, we think it is the "norm". (OK, maybe Bill Gates, Elon Musk &co are aware they're not middle class ...)
@thecamillarose98067 ай бұрын
Omg what the heck 😂
@GOGOSLIFE3 ай бұрын
@@leeshaolivier9298 🤣🤣🤣🤣Teachers and medical personnel should be making the same money as the celebrities make! They have your future in their hands, and they are the ones to shape you!
@offsdexter2 Жыл бұрын
remember guys, when you let the person get ahead of you in a queue, you are not the only one losing a position... everyone behind you is also getting +1 in queue. Fair thing to is, if you really want to let the people there, you exchange positions with them - which often means putting yourself dead last.
@karenmitchell6814 Жыл бұрын
Looking for this comment. Was he going to pay everyone in line behind him? I’d have told him “back of the queue!”, no matter where I was in line!
@Kelli-ru7yy5 ай бұрын
During Covid, I lied and said this old man was my father so he could get his meds without waiting 4 hours in a line. I don't think anyone behind me hated me for that.
@alexia35525 ай бұрын
Good point, gotta remember that
@rosaotterstetter7282 Жыл бұрын
I think there’s a huge difference between rich&well-educated people and just rich people. I come from a pretty affluent family. We used to have a personal driver, my grandma had a few Nannie’s for my mom and my aunt, I also had a nanny. But my family always spent time with me and never acted in a rude way. They always treated everyone with kindness. Also, my family said I was going to pay for my college. I had 4-5 different jobs while being a full-time student and helping my mom with her business at the same time. We all know my grandma is really well off, but she’s never been a flashy person. One time she told me “You don’t want to brag about how wealthy you are. There are bad people out there who can actually kidnap you and hurt you.” I mean, she wasn’t wrong. I have a very normal job, married to a high school teacher, and we have not asked or touched my grandma’s money at all.
@dragonfly9821 Жыл бұрын
There's also a difference between people who actually earned their money and those who inherited it. Tbh. the most obnoxious rich person I've met was a surgeon, he was definitely very well-educated, but still a massive dick.
@jiggyprawn Жыл бұрын
@user-oy3yo7qe6o they didn't actually state they were all at the same time, though. Could be interpreted as over the entire course of three or four years, whatever it is there, which would make sense. But even if they were all at the same time, you don't know what the jobs were and how many hours/days they covered.
@jocypare6019 Жыл бұрын
Well done.
@spac18 Жыл бұрын
Good for you
@emimimimimimimi Жыл бұрын
@d thats not bs actually; some jobs could be like for one or two hours a week (think TA jobs). My father had 4 jobs in uni too, and it was doable because 2 of them were only for a few hours on one day of the week.
@ashcaston2490 Жыл бұрын
The conversation I’ll never forget is a rich girl in HS asking me what I was doing that weekend. I told her laundry and going to a cafe, and she goes “You do laundry? I just throw mine away and buy more.” …I’d never felt so poor in my life 😂
@michelledawn7446 Жыл бұрын
Well that’s just wasteful. If she didn’t want the clothes, she needs to wash and donate them. Or you know, wash the clothes and keep them and save money.
@Amazekeen Жыл бұрын
You could have told her to give them to you instead and either wear or sell them
@ashcaston2490 Жыл бұрын
@@Amazekeen Yeah, no. lol Her and I weren’t friends, so I didn’t even think to ask something like that.
@hey_kudisco_podcast Жыл бұрын
Yeah throwing clothes away when their dirty isn’t a flex so don’t worry, you’re probably a better person
@katrinschirmer8018 Жыл бұрын
meanwhile im over here holding onto clothes until they have holes in them.
@blu_otaku7063 Жыл бұрын
That garage doesnt even look like a garage, its like a repurposed ballroom, that level of extravagance is ridiculous
@EleanorofAquitaine425 ай бұрын
That’s not a garage, it’s a climate-controlled showroom. It’s so sterile and kind of creepy.
@laninomi1699 Жыл бұрын
I’m convinced the kid who couldn’t pay for the pizza was the same kid who cussed out his parents for getting cut off 🤣
@Ladida555 Жыл бұрын
I was thinking the same thing lol
@discardeddede Жыл бұрын
And also the guy with the sun bed?!
@Thehouseoffail Жыл бұрын
I was thinking the spoiled brother and the fashion week kid was the same guy. Just on different ends of the phone call
@jessicas1195 Жыл бұрын
Haha I probably would’ve sat on the kid who stole my reserved seat! (Maybe even fart on him , heh heh I come from a big family! I will fart on you!) But that’ll never happen cause I ain’t got money to reserve anything! 🥲 And if he is taking something you have paid for with your hard earned money, isn’t that stealing? 😑 These “parents” (not really parents cause they are setting them up for failure as a basic human) need to stop “protecting” their children from the consequences of their own bad choices. At that point you are not a parent but rather a walking skin-bag with money to your child. Don’t be a walking skin-bag.
@JutaLovelace Жыл бұрын
Look at the tags in the lower left corner during each vid and you'll see they're from the same account, there's 4 videos in total from @/theeuropeankid
@britnicox3929 Жыл бұрын
The face of that dad after he hung up on his son for asking for 20 K is the face of a man who’s regretting all of his life choices up until this point
@Roses_777 Жыл бұрын
He's so stunned. He looks like a defeated man.
@Roses_777 Жыл бұрын
He's so stunned. He looks like a defeated man.
@eleanorcooke7136 Жыл бұрын
You would if you realised that you made that thing.
@parajerry Жыл бұрын
Well, his son did spend $1500 on a pizza. (Sounded like the other side of the earlier video.)
@morgan_baldwin Жыл бұрын
He looks so disappointed and tired of the sh//s, that might be not the first time his son do that..poor dad
@DemonSkunk0408 Жыл бұрын
As a parent, I want to spoil my child and have them grow up with more than I had, but I'll be DAMNED if my child becomes spoiled enough to walk over me and demand that I give her things I can't afford. She's gonna get a real reality check. (She's only 7 months so it's a long way lol) I love your long, luscious hair, Charlotte. Keep up the good work you're doing and hope you're getting as much sleep as possible while uploading videos and working on the pilot.
@zulie9378 Жыл бұрын
👆👆👆
@tiffbeevachou108 Жыл бұрын
There is definitely a balance. I have to do the same thing.
@moonhunter9993 Жыл бұрын
Don't spoil her too much. Sorry, it just doesn't work. Pay for an excellent education and lots of extramurals, yes, but NOT a crazy clothing allowance and mad expensive brands.
@DemonSkunk0408 Жыл бұрын
@@moonhunter9993 oh of course. I'm a new parent and like I said, I want her to have a good childhood. I just know when she starts going to school and being a little more mature, she's going to understand the value of hard work so she won't end up being spoiled and rotten
@janebaker4912 Жыл бұрын
Sounds like the child will still be materialistic. Love, attention is what the need.
@mattmink933 Жыл бұрын
Had a rich friend in college. His dad gave him $800 a week spending money and paid his bills and rent. After graduation (in 1989) he turned down a $50,000 job (good money at the time) because he could make more from is dad by not working. Dad, the entitler, said he understood. Last I heard the kid, now 55 yrs old, STILL lives off rich dad.
@LiseWrigley Жыл бұрын
Yuk. A disability really.
@PAVLlNA Жыл бұрын
Dream life
@vulpixfairy1985 Жыл бұрын
I could literally do that if I wanted to and my dad said so. My parents worked hard to give my brother and I a good life without financial difficulty and they are really well off. But I won’t because I have my own family to look after and experience became my best teacher where knowledge alone failed. How can I teach my son the value of a dollar in this day and age how if I live off my well to do parents?
@StephanieCarter-kx1zk Жыл бұрын
So what I know people on DIsability that do nothing and play videogames and smokes weed! I used to have a trust fund and my life sucked I was abused abused abused so bad in every way possible I had to go get checked for HIV at 16.....😢😢😢😢😢😢😢
@THOMMGB Жыл бұрын
Can you imagine what kind of employee the rich friend would have been? I don’t think he would have lasted a week.
@HolsteinDevil Жыл бұрын
One of my closest friends is filthy rich. His parents are billionaires and his entire family basically owns a car dealership empire in my country. That being said, the guy is probably the nicest, kindest person I know. He carries the weight of the world since his family wanted an heir to their empire and his twin didn’t want anything to do with all the stress that “duty” would bring. He told me he tried to become a bartender once and his parents made him go back to school to get a degree in management so he could carry on the legacy they made for him. Dude’s super intelligent as well. He went to the most renowned uni in my country and graduated with honor. I’ve known him for 10+ years since uni and never once did we get in a fight cause he would always apologize first. I adore him so much and he’s one of my best friends. I was so happy and excited when he finally found his current bf who isn’t really interested in him only for his money. I just wish his parents wouldn’t pressure him so much that he can’t even live his own life the way he wants.
@boogermaiden Жыл бұрын
Poor guy! Hope he can be free.
@xWingzTV Жыл бұрын
@@boogermaidendefinitely not poor lol
@HolsteinDevil Жыл бұрын
@@essiggurke7276 While I do understand your point, let me just say it’s not as simple as walking away for someone like him. He most definitely CAN walk away if he wants with all the money he has now, but he will probably have to move to a different country to say the least. His family is one of the most powerful elite families in my country and with that being said, in this corrupted country, I’m not sure just cutting ties is enough for him. The last time he tried to run away, he was on a cruise ship for some kind of bartending apprenticeship and they still managed to track him down. It’s also worth mentioning that being Asian doesn’t help much since children are sort of expected to be there for parents and take care of their seniors when they’re older. My family is nowhere as wealthy and I’m still expected to take care of the elders in the future. (I mean, sometimes part of that culture is to guilt trip your children into feeling they have to repay the parents/grandparents for the lives they have and etc.)
@lv67890 Жыл бұрын
The poor little Prince. SPARE ME. He doesn’t have the nerve to go out in to the world without money, like the rest of us. He has money and social standing and his passivity doesn’t make him any less culpable for every underpaid employee his family exploits.
@StephanieCarter-kx1zk Жыл бұрын
Poor little prince? Ever heard of the Inman twins there family was/is worth billions and they were starved beaten and abused in every way possible....
@IndiGeaux Жыл бұрын
As an Uber driver in a wealthy college town, they talk about their money and their parent’s money all the time yet never tip. They sit and beg for stories about my poor lifestyle and ask how much I make. I think hearing about me being an extremely hardworking widow makes them feel better or something. Psychos.
@Memealicous Жыл бұрын
They don’t know what it’s like Probaly and neither do I because I’m a kid but if I ever get rich I’ll make sure my kids are not like this
@raychambers3646 Жыл бұрын
My son was on the zip wire at whistler , the clients would sit in the truck taking them up ,I earn 75 ,I earn 100 etc not one tight sob tipped .!
@mikelemoine4267 Жыл бұрын
I have an 03 F150 Harley Davidson sport truck and had driven it to a conference at a high end hotel in S. Florida. The valet guys were very interested in it so we chatted a lot every time I pulled in or was leaving. I found it amusing since they often parked Lambos and Bentleys on a daily basis, but they were more excited about my old pickup truck. It's a special edition but affordable, so I can see their interest in something they could actually afford if they wanted one. In talking with them they mentioned that the people driving the most expensive cars tend to be the worst tippers while people who drive more working class vehicles like mine tend to tip the best. I of course had already been tipping them well so I guess they were right! I doubt the ultra wealthy would stand around and talk with them casually like I did as well.
@taralynnhoffmann5831 Жыл бұрын
I used to be a cleaning lady in very rich neighborhoods and it's true. They go out of their way to impress you, to demean you or to get a reaction from you. I never understood that and it made me realize they were actually envious of something I posessed that money couldn't buy them. I never bit the bate, I just got turned off by them. And they have no taste, most of their homes are eyesores with god awful decorating. I literally do not want to be like them. There are some nice rich people but they are the self-made ones.
@taralynnhoffmann5831 Жыл бұрын
@@raychambers3646 ''If you are cold, don't expect sympathy from someone who is warm''. I tell that to my kids all the time. We go to the working class area for Halloween and if I worked in a restaurant, I'd work in a working area. You'd make more money on tips than at the Hilton.
@Rachelief Жыл бұрын
Struggling to put my baby down for an early nap and all I can think is that he’ll never be a spoiled rich kid 😂😂
@L.L.Shamma Жыл бұрын
😂 litterally right there with ya sis, this is what I watch while feeding my baby/ trying to put him down at nught
@Rachelief Жыл бұрын
@@L.L.Shamma omg same!!
@midnightshadow2400 Жыл бұрын
I'm not alone thank goodness 😅
@ahhwe-any74348 ай бұрын
My kid would prob," smack the sh outta someone tho 🤗." She's American... She's got her junk food. Her rice. Her good healthy baby stuff. She's good, periodt
@SparklesWithStyle4 ай бұрын
So glad we have a mommy group in the chat 😂
@shannonomalley9584 Жыл бұрын
13:44 Ooooooh not a rich kid story but this brings back a memory. I used to be a summer camp counselor. One week I had about 8 kids around 12 years old, both boys and girls. At this camp, we're encouraged to do at least 2 cookouts a week with our own groups. After the cookout, we're supposed to go to this spot outside next to the kitchen to put leftover food away and rinse off the dishes so the kitchen staff just have to sanitize them. We were also about to meet the rest of the camp to do a bunch of field games, which the kids were looking forward to. A couple of the girls started off rinsing the dishes, and after a bit I asked the boys to switch with them. I turned away and heard "ugh, but that's a GIRL'S job." I immediately spun around and asked "who said that?!" I knew exactly who it was, but naturally he stayed quiet. After a moment, I said "girls let's go, the boys can finish up." We left and the boys had to show up a bit late to play field games. I felt bad for the other boys and my male co-counselor, but my co-counselor completely supported me and this boy needed that lesson.
@KarolinaPietryka7 ай бұрын
Aww I’m so so happy you did this. Seriously ❤
@KarolinaPietryka7 ай бұрын
Thank you
@darleneengebretsen1468 Жыл бұрын
I mostly worked my way through college by doing residential housecleaning jobs, although I also had a few grants and loans, which I repaid in full, on time. Anyway, when I was cleaning houses, I worked for a well to do family who were very nice to me. The parents were not born into money, and had worked their way into wealth. They had a teenage daughter who had many privileges, but was a nice kid. However, to keep her from being a snob and looking down on others, the parents made the girl do certain parts of cleaning the giant house, keep her room clean, and keep up her grades. I especially loved that as the housekeeper, I did NOT have to clean the giant sunken bathtubs in the house. They made the teenager do it! She also had to keep at least one bathroom spotlessly clean. That was one less bathroom I had to clean. Although the girl wasn't thrilled with her chores, she buckled under and did them well, knowing that her many privileges would be gone if she didn't contribute to the upkeep of the house. Although she was certainly not her parents' slave, she did learn a certain appreciation for what it was like to be a working class person. and that girl was always polite and pleasant to me.
@isabelmariaguzmanmiranda706 Жыл бұрын
I've always believed all politicians should be forced to clean the bathrooms of the buildings they work at, by turns. It gives you a very needed perspective of life.
@Dbb27 Жыл бұрын
Smart parents. I had a friend who’s teenage daughter at 15 would throw her clothes on the floor and didn’t know how to use the laundry. That was a mother that would clean the whole house and start dinner before her working mother came home yet she allowed her daughter to be spoiled. Certainly doesn’t do a kid any favors.
@royaldragon543 Жыл бұрын
I have worked in housecleaning too. I understand how bad bathtubs and showers can be. I feel your relief that you didn't have to do those.
@favoloso_mama1790 Жыл бұрын
I remember my mama and her best friend talking about how much more they loved Princess Diana when they found out she made her kids stand in the lines at Disneyland like everyone else instead of skipping to the front. I was little so I didn't get it but of course now I do.
@amberr6 Жыл бұрын
Princess Di has my heart forever. Class in dimensions, and full of love and light.
@Inkytoon677 Жыл бұрын
Yes but only one of her sons succeed **looks at Prince Harry** (In the UK, no one likes him at the moment, everyone here is still salty for what he and his wife said about the family, this is just some context)
@777SO Жыл бұрын
I love it, because one of my close friends is a real billionaire. Let me tell you she is so down on earth because her parents never ever “spoil”her,in a outrageous way. Because they worked for their wealth. Her mums used to say”honey we worked for this wealth we ain’t letting no frivolous “needs” ruins the generational wealth we’ve build” . So inspiring and refreshing. Not all rich kinds are spoiled brats.
@the11382 Жыл бұрын
Do they consider stealth money important?
@LA_HA Жыл бұрын
True. A Lot of wealthy people are self-made and don't want their kids to be spoiled idiots. But, even families that have been wealthy for generations have a history of teaching their children to be responsible because they'll one day be in charge of a great deal of money. So, they're taught how to invest it, earn by focusing on their talents and opportunities and also connections. People who don't know anything about money think wealthy people and kids are the same. But, it's often new money families that spoil their kids because the parents are often busy working, they were poor once and want their kids to have everything they never had, and they don't understand how giving kids too much sets them up for a bad future. Also, wealthy kids are often really lonely because they don't know if the people around them are true friends, just using them, or secretly harbor envy and insecurity of them and what they have. It's not always what people think
@bethewalt7385 Жыл бұрын
Your friend is NOT a billionaire, her parents are, duh
@alonglostmemory1908 Жыл бұрын
Again, not a billionaire. Don't dint say that.
@mudderjen Жыл бұрын
Key words….her parents are billionaires. she is the child of rich parents. good grief. She may not act spoiled but she clearly is if she isn’t working and mom and dad are the rich ones. If she truly was classy, she would be independent and work for a living and stop mooching off the parents
@vulpixfairy1985 Жыл бұрын
I come from a very privileged background so I never had to worry about financial difficulties, went to a good school and had domestic help. But when I travelled overseas to join my friends for university, I had a huge culture shock and had to learn my independence. Experience turned out to be a great teacher to me and I found out I was more resilient than I give myself credit for. I’m now married having met my husband in Australia, working full time as an early childhood educator, have a beautiful son and living the best I can with gratitude and love. Money is necessary for security but it doesn’t always equate true happiness.
@alexia35525 ай бұрын
I love that you acknowledged that money is required for securing safe housing, medical care, food, etc. Too many times I’ve seen multi-millionaires throw the “money doesn’t buy happiness” at the masses when they don’t understand we can’t afford our medications, a safe place to stay, quality food…
@lkayh Жыл бұрын
One of my brothers was bellyaching to me about how the government was taking all his money. He said “I paid over $100k in taxes last year.” I said, “I didn’t even make that much-I wish I had your problem.” He hung up on me. 😂
@YeshuaKingMessiah Жыл бұрын
He needs an accountant to learn how to keep more of his income He’s kind of dumb actually
@lkayh Жыл бұрын
@@YeshuaKingMessiah He can pay me. I’ll take $100k to help him.
@Cheshirestog Жыл бұрын
He can join Rush Limbaugh when he was mad single mothers got free cheese and he didn't. Apparently that made him mad they got social services like that. Somenot those women worked several jobs and needed help. Meanwhile Rush spouts garbage while sitting on his butt. I' don't want to say I'm glad someone is dead but.. I'm not sad. 🤷🏼♀️
@oyaoyaoya7753 Жыл бұрын
Is your brother a millionaire or something😭
@lkayh Жыл бұрын
@@oyaoyaoya7753 He owns a construction company, so business taxes as well as personal.
@grammasscotsgirl Жыл бұрын
I have friends who were raised "rich" and hard working people who will give you the shirt off their back - and had friends who were raised on minimum wage or welfare who are the most entitled people I've ever met who will throw their drinks at the Starbuck's baristas because their name was written wrong. I've seen children have tantrums at food banks and throw items at the volunteers because they want KD and not generic. Just today I saw a teenager throw their food on the floor and stomp on it when mom brought them their food - because they wanted their burger "with bacon AND cheese". Mom was in tears as she cleaned it up and told him "I couldn't afford the extras today." A friend of ours said our son was "spoiled" because he got his own PS3 one year for Christmas and "didn't have to share". He's an only child. Meanwhile, our son got that $500 PS3 - her 2 children were "forced to share" a $9500 snowmobile. Being spoiled is not something that happens just amongst the rich. It happens among the poor and middle class, as well. We just don't notice because "it is just KD" or "it is just a bit of bacon and cheese" rather than $75 000 cars - but spoiled is still spoiled. Income level only = bigger items.
@Olivia-bl8ez Жыл бұрын
I had a friend that was super rich growing up and we’d all make jokes about it (in a loving way as friends do) and he’d always say “yeah my parents are rich but I’m not. I’m broke”. And he meant it. He had been mowing lawns since he was 12 to buy his first car since his parents always told him he would have to. He paid his own insurance, gas, and everything else at 16 years old. His parents would be there to really help him out if needed, especially since he proved he wasn’t a brat. I think like this is a good way to be raised. He’s an awesome guy and treats everyone with respect despite coming from a lot of money.
@PapaEli-pz8ff Жыл бұрын
Thank you for sharing the broader picture
@ydmo9tt6w7 ай бұрын
@grammasscotsgirl- the part about that snotty teenager(??!) throwing the food on the floor that his mother brought him- and stomped on it(?!!) . First off, if I somehow managed not to cuff the little prick upside the head, the rotten little prick would’ve been the one cleaning up the mess. Second off, looks like he/she will have to do without untill the next meal. Such appalling behavior happens because it is tolerated by society. When I was a teenager, I would’ve been in a world of shit for pulling a stunt like that & likely would’ve been made to apologize to the staff & manager of the restaurant after Mom or Dad adjusted my attitude. I do not condone child abuse, but I believe if children are allowed to act like savages & treat others disrespectfully because they don’t get their way or get what they want, they’ll act like boors,brutes & over-grown spoiled brats their entire lives untill they get themselves beaten, killed or thrown in prison. And the kicker is they will never understand how/why either or all of it could’ve happened to them. My dad never hit me. He did say “yeah, you can throw a fit. You can talk all tough & make threats, but you’ll have to face the consequences.” My mom would warm my bottom when I pushed her past the limit. I deserved every swat she administered. It sure fixed my wagon for the next several months. Otherwise, I would’ve been that snotty little shit who would throw my burger on the floor & stomp on it because it didn’t have bacon & cheese on it, then graduating to being that cretin who throws my Starbuck’s coffee at the barista because he/she misspelled my name. WTH is wrong with people ?
@c0p0n Жыл бұрын
The problem about paying to jump the queue is that you're not just jumping the person you pay. You're jumping everyone else after them too.
@LilaCreates Жыл бұрын
Would be interesting seeing how far ahead he could skip of he offered like 5 dollars to everyone starting from the back
@lizardog Жыл бұрын
Spot on! I should have read your comment before I posted mine.
@availanila Жыл бұрын
He should have started paying from the back then got as far as the money and bribable people were ahead.
@hannahs.5595 Жыл бұрын
I think he was trying to pay her to go to the back of the line for him. So just a switch.
@beewest5704 Жыл бұрын
Had a friend who won in 800k lottery. He used to pay ppl $200 to skip the line at liquorstores & grocery stores. Blew through the money in 7 months.
@artcafe2684 Жыл бұрын
What gets me is that these rich kids could do anything. Literally anything they wanted. They could go to Art School and learn to paint, or get a degree, or start a business but all they want to do is party and do nothing all day. I realize it's not all rich kids, some actually want to do stuff and help society, it's people like the dude upset over his allowance.
@Ash.Crow.Goddess Жыл бұрын
I had to move back in with my mom for about 2 years after I had already been out of the house. She knew I was saving up money for my wedding and so she said I could only pay $200 to her, for rent. I was like HELL YEAH, MOM! Then, closer to the time of the wedding she surprised me with every bit of it back, as one of many of the gifts they gave us, and then she helped to pay for that, too. I grew up with a construction working dad and a mom who actually worked for the organization Head Start when I was younger. Then she went back to school and became an RN.
@Sooz007-l3b Жыл бұрын
All of our kids paid board when they got jobs. It teaches them to take care of the essentials first - a roof over your head, food in your belly and clothes on your back. When their pay increased, so did their board. Also, they had chores to do for pocket money. The middle one chose not to do chores, so he got no pocket money. Life lessons!
@marilyn124411 ай бұрын
My mother did the same thing, charged me rent when I got my first job, and saved it to pay for my wedding.
@poeticangelartbyangelabass3798 Жыл бұрын
The entitled rich kids need the reality check that the 10 year old in the last story got. I raised 2 boys, who started doing their own laundry at 10, they did the dishes when asked (no dishwasher either).. they never complained. My eldest cooks and cleans at home, his wife fixes things and changes the oil in the car. The only gender-specific role is... she has to give birth lol
@moonhunter9993 Жыл бұрын
Well-done for raising your children (especially boys) right.
@Lyshee09 Жыл бұрын
Congrats! Your hard work has payed off! Your prize, not spoiled kids!
@danaidavou6162 Жыл бұрын
Well done. Not only they are responsible adults, but they also learned how to respect the other gender.
@mhskingtanner6310 Жыл бұрын
When I was in college, I paid my own rent and bills for my apartment. As a result, I almost never went out to eat. There was someone i worked with that went drinking every weekend, and even weekdays. One day I asked "how can you afford that? I barely make enough money to pay rent and groceries." His response "you actually pay rent? You're a loser!!!!!!! My parents pay all of my bills!!!!!!" 2 weeks later, he asked to borrow money for alcohol. I responded "I'm sorry, but unlike your spoiled ass, my parents don't pay my rent. I pay it myself. You want money? Pick up extra hours!" He quit about a month later.
@svnnahtafireyi Жыл бұрын
the amount of entitlement I see on a daily basis from rich girls in my area is crazy. they are literally fully convinced the whole world revolves around them. I have witnessed a girl cry over not getting her luxury takeout. the most aggravating thing is that people think it’s “cute” or “funny.” but it’s not, it’s incredible annoying and embarrassing.
@jamezkpal2361 Жыл бұрын
Our family was wealthy but you'd never know it by me. I got an allowance of $0. If I wanted a car I had to buy it myself. I had to spend my summers on a fishing boat to pay my way to college. I always resented my father for being stingy. Looking back I'm glad he was. I learned the value of a dollar and the rewards of hard work and setting goals.
@katrags3603 Жыл бұрын
Same here. I hated it growing up because I wanted to fit in. My dad grew up poor and you only spend what you need to, not to impress the neighbors. However, in 2008, a bunch of my friends found out their parents were living beyond their means and the inheritance they though was coming was actually going to be a lot of debt. My dad taught be to be smart about money and put most of it in savings, which means the inheritance I will be getting is unnecessary, if a nice cushion for my old age.
@lovelymill Жыл бұрын
well there is the difference between low allowance and no allowance at all... like not even 100$ a month? no pocket money at all??
@kammie225 Жыл бұрын
eh i mean good for you but i find it weird when rich people just don't give their kids ANYTHING. Giving your kids money doesnt make them spoiled, bad parenting does.
@mayawhitten-desroches9800 Жыл бұрын
I would definitely be salty, I don't believe in allowances but not even pocket money on occasion? Your dad teaching you value of money or not he's still definety being stingy
@VenusLM Жыл бұрын
Had a friend who went to Harvard for Grad School, not because she had any interest in going for more school or because she needed the degree, but because her parents threatened to cut her off if she didn't get a Masters. They paid for everything, apartment, car, phone, etc. So she spent two years getting a Masters in Education. From Harvard! Only for her dad to look at her on graduation day and ask her when she was going to get a "real degree." That's when she realized nothing she did would be good enough and she cut herself loose.
@thamertanner5448 Жыл бұрын
If they didn't see education as a real degree/career then why did they let her waste all that time and money pursuing it? They sound awful, I'm glad she got away from them. No amount of money is worth putting up with disrespect and toxicity.
@cheriekat Жыл бұрын
These parents suck!! Lol at least she’s got great education to get a good job and survive without them.
@luketimewalker Жыл бұрын
brave
@llb1127 Жыл бұрын
🖤🖤🖤🖤🖤🖤
@alicel3992 Жыл бұрын
Smart cookie
@I_LUH_uve_strawBERry Жыл бұрын
I used to work as head teller of an international bank in Times Square for a few years, and I can absolutely confirm that it’s almost always the fake-rich or barely-rich people who are entitled and rude, while legitimately RICH-rich people are typically chill and down to earth. If they have to wait, the only people who threaten to close accounts/scream “don’t you know who I am?!” are those with less than $100k in their combined accounts. People with millions of dollars just wait their turn and are super pleasant. …Probably a result of all the relaxing massages they can afford 🤣
@AmazonAllie73 Жыл бұрын
Old money is also like this. New money tends to be crass and entitled.
@johnmccracken5465 Жыл бұрын
This holds true when working at peoples homes. The ultra wealthy people are laid back normal acting people. The ones that live beyond their means for show are terrible to work for. They’re so entitled angry and unpleasant.
@handmaidmd Жыл бұрын
I am a massage therapist. I have a client (a wealthy client) that said once, “After a good massage no one can piss you off for 2 weeks.” I need that!
@randomstuff-qu7sh Жыл бұрын
I suspect part of it is just that they have nothing to prove. The people who are most likely to be jerks are those who are insecure, such as the new rich or the people who want you to think they're rich, but aren't.
@Palitato Жыл бұрын
Incredibly wealthy people often have their money making more money for them... they don't mind waiting around for a little while. Ten minutes? No problem, they just made another million by breathing. Truly wealthy people also know the value of things that are made with the quality in mind. It's a far better investment to purchase something that can be maintained and kept in good condition, than something that may cost more and is flashy and nicer 'looking', but needs constant upkeep and more money poured into it. It's why people who win the lottery almost always end up broke again. They spend all their money on these flashy things they've been dreaming of, or a big house somewhere, without thinking about the future and the fact they have to pay to maintain all this expensive stuff.
@WaningGibbous Жыл бұрын
Best thing in the world is raising two fine kids that can support themselves entirely, and value everything they attain.
@christineboos64356 ай бұрын
My husband once remarked to someone that he didnt know how our three kids turned out so well. I quietly responded, "I do." It's hard work and there are no guarantees, but, when they become good adults who contribute to society all the "I dont care if John's mom lets him, I say 'No's" and "if your room isnt clean, you will not go"s, and "you will speak to me with respect"s all the while enduring their glaring death rays become worth it. My grown children seek me out continuously just to hang out. WE WIN. (To be fair, my husband immediately realized his gaff and we all had a good laugh.)
@ChelseaAnderson Жыл бұрын
Am I spoiled for having a rich friend who DOESN'T act like this? She's genuinely a hard worker and her parents actually raised her right
@Aries73 Жыл бұрын
Treasure her friendship. It's rare among rich kids.
@HatsByALeapOfFaith Жыл бұрын
Yes, you are the spoiled friend but in a good way! Good for your friend and you!
@thatgardeninggirl2864 Жыл бұрын
No you are very lucky and you treasure that friend because like you said her parents raised her right
@ChelseaAnderson Жыл бұрын
@@HatsByALeapOfFaith when I saw this comment all I saw was you are spoiled and I was like what did I do until I read the whole comment
@christinetheweird6923 Жыл бұрын
Girlll enjoy the time with your friend because you definitely got a rare one
@miriamvesela8461 Жыл бұрын
Anyone else loves when Charlotte starts shouting- Je téléphone à la police!!! 🤣🤣🤣
@nad0862 Жыл бұрын
Why all the worst spoiled kids have to be French tho lol....(signed a broke French girl )
@familymoviesbytammy Жыл бұрын
Yes, the words used in French however. If I called my maman that, I would now be but a distant memory.
@AdenaKaiba4 ай бұрын
I love when she speaks French 😂 It's adorable (and perfect too) Signed : a poor French girl
@linabasilisk1955 Жыл бұрын
Kudos to the family that stepped on the concept of "I don't have to do that; it's women's work". The kid absolutely got what was coming to him. Hopefully the kid learned his lesson. He undoubtedly heard that somewhere, but 10 year-olds pick up far more than many adults think they do. Judging from the families response, he may not have picked it up from a family member. I've known of cases where a kid saw some behavior on TV and tried it on at home...and it didn't end the way it did on TV. Remember, kids, just because you see it on TV or see another family tolerating a certain behavior doesn't mean that your parents will tolerate it. Also remember, if mama ain't happy, ain't nobody happy.
@Carey86 Жыл бұрын
I’m disabled & rely on my parents still. I had cancer as a kid & was paralyzed from the waist down & told I’d never walk again. 20 years later and I have severe nerve pain and walk with a cane and I get so embarrassed when people ask what I do now. “I’m on disability & living with my parents”. 🤦🏼♀️ If I were well enough, I’d be working & can’t understand how these spoiled brats don’t feel bad, taking advantage of their parents. What lowlives. Having parents with money doesn’t make you rich or classy. These parents did this to them though & should’ve stopped spoiling the kids a long time ago. Maybe spoil me instead?!😂 Medication isn’t cheap & I take 30+ pills a day!💊
@alekxanderlightwing96638 ай бұрын
I feel you, thankfully no cancer but several severe autoimmune conditons that had me on chemo for over half my life. I am off it right now but based on tests I may have to go back to it as the alternative medications are not doing a great job. I am also on disability and feel so guilty about it even though I am disabled. I live with my grandpa so I have someone to make sure I am okay and vice-versa my family say but he is in way better shape and health then I am. Currently I have to have someone with me to go anywhere and even at home too as I almost died in March, my funky heart and the new medications my doctor had put me on tanked my BP and HR so low they were unreadable on machine or even manually for BP. It is apparently a miracle I was still alive. I got to/had to stay in the new ICU for a bit, very fancy but hoping not to have to go there again ever or at least a long time. I have new medications now but doctors are still worried about my heart and it acting up again, as it was not the first time my heart landed me in the hospital, unfortunately. I tried to go to college but health had other plans. I definitely understand the medications not being cheap. Just one of my several time everyday meds is $16+ dollars a dose, so almost $2000 a month as I take 3 to 4 a day or I can not eat or drink anything without vomiting it up minutes later or during the eating or drinking part. Even with it I still vomit a lot but without it there is nothing but vomiting all day long wether I eat or drink anything or nothing at all, as even stomach acid is rejected by my stomach. This turned out longer then expected and kind of ranty, sorry. I hope you are feeling the best you can be and having a good day.
@Carey868 ай бұрын
@@alekxanderlightwing9663 sorry you have to deal with all that. People who are healthy don’t realize how lucky they are, meanwhile people like us would give almost anything to be “normal” & have a normal everyday job that we hate & bitch about. Being unwell sucks and gets really lonely. If I’m not in pain, I’m sore from being in pain. I try to make the best of it though & I hope you have things that make you happy too. I’ll pray for you. If you ever want to rant or bitch, I’m here.
@NanaVonn3 Жыл бұрын
This reminds me of a convo I had with a friend in college. He was complaining that he didn’t have enough money for the summer, so I told him to get a job somewhere (he was getting a creative writing degree) and he said he’d been applying for jobs with publishing companies, but no one wanted to hire for summer. So I told him to go work for Panera or something, and he refused because he thought no one would hire him for a publishing job if he’d worked at a Panera. I explained that it showed job experience and that he was hireable, but he refused to hear it. I still shake my head when I think about it
@Moonbovine Жыл бұрын
If he likes to write you can tell him to search writing jobs online that pay good money rather than working at a bread company.
@meganroberts8721 Жыл бұрын
Some people have to learn the hard way
@NanaVonn3 Жыл бұрын
@@MoonbovineI recommended looking for anything. Panera was just an example, “bread company” or not. There’s no shame in working to earn money, regardless of what it is. And he refused to get any job that wasn’t going to be his career. In reality, he really just wanted to whine about how him parents weren’t giving him as much money as he wanted. This was also 11 years ago, and he can pound sand for all I care.
@Moonbovine Жыл бұрын
@@NanaVonn3 idk his situation but I do know that when it comes to specific careers, if you want it in the future companies won’t hire you because you worked in other places that don’t have the level of experience they want for their company. That’s why I suggested writing jobs online. It wasn’t to insult people who work at Panera, but also noting how the American system works.
@NanaVonn3 Жыл бұрын
@@Moonbovine fair enough. Ironically, I’ve worked for a few publishing companies and none of them have been like that (but I obviously can’t speak for all of them). It is also worth noting, however, that there is nothing that says you have to include every piece of employment one has had on their resume. Mine would be 5 pages long if that were the case. Excluding experience is ok, whereas lying about it is not.
@sunniegb Жыл бұрын
When I was a freshman in college (back in ‘05 because I’m an old) my mom told me they would give me $200 a month because I had a scholarship that required mandatory attendance at multiple events, plus lived in an academic dorm that required the same so even a part time job was nearly impossible, and I was so grateful I cried. I remember telling her it was too much 😂
@jworth7203 Жыл бұрын
My senior year, my best friend and I got an off campus apartment because we were sure we could live less expensively. Our parents had been paying our room and board and agreed to give us each a monthly allowance instead that was equal to the total they would have spent otherwise. We worked our butts off to keep our expenses low. Shopped sales for food, ate many very budget meals, were careful about electric use, everything. At the end of the school year we both gave our parents back several hundred dollars. Might not sound like a lot but this was 1992 and our tuition AND room and board was “only” $10k a year at a private college. My parents were so proud of me, they put it in a savings account and gave it back to me when I got married.
@stevedavis5704 Жыл бұрын
Back in the eighties I worked for a family business. The grandfather was retired but would come around a couple of times a week just to stay in touch with the business. He would talk to the older people about the old days and share experiences. One older gentleman was talking about the depression of the 1930’s and said that you could buy a loaf of bread for a nickel and a pound of hamburger for ten cents but the problem was getting fifteen cents together. The grandpa said “Oh, the 30’s weren’t that bad.” Later after he left, his grandkid said they probably weren’t for him because for most of them he was going to school with housing paid for by his parents and a five hundred dollar a month allowance. I was amazed by that but had to agree that they probably did get along okay. This was the same guy who was adamant that there was no excuse for not banking half of every paycheck you got.
@jillm25803 ай бұрын
When in college I took a full load and waitressed four nights a week. Had a toddler so childcare was mixed in. Challenging at times. Many of my classmates worked. This girl I had classes with had school paid for, a beautifully furnished apartment, utilities paid and a new car with an allowance of 1,200 a month (around 2,250 today) and didn’t work. She did nothing but complain how hard her life was with three classes and homework. One classmate finally told her off. She was beyond clueless how other people lived.
@anastasiawolfeheart468 Жыл бұрын
When I was living in Florida my half sister came down to visit me during her spring break (she's 8 years younger than me). We were looking to buy a house and told her that we were in the process of trying to get a mortgage first. She dead ass looked me in the eyes and asked why I just didn't save up the money and pay for the house with cash ... This is also the same sister that "borrowed" some of my stuff (at the behest of my mother and step-dad - she's his daughter) to help her out with her first place. I said sure but it's only borrowing, never saw the items, never saw a penny for them. Also the same person that cried to our aunt and uncle about having to fly coach with her two kids to visit her husband's family in Egypt so she got first class tickets from them. Also the same person that had her full college tuition and sorority paid for, parents said they'd take the difference between what they paid for her college and mine (I put myself through college except for 3 semesters) and they'd put the money aside for my son's college tuition. When he got old enough to go to college I asked them about it and surprise surprise they didn't have any idea what I was talking about ... But I'm considered to be the one only after the money, yeah right.
@lacylane7505 Жыл бұрын
My brother’s elementary/middle school friend was a rich kid, his family owned a big farm(blueberries, onions and stuff I think). But other rich parents should learn from his, he EARNED the money his parent gave him by taking summer jobs, working in their fields, using the tractors and stuff, and he was one of the nicest, non-entitled kids
@Jmmmmama Жыл бұрын
Charlotte no joke babe you may have narrowly avoided being trafficked. If you had “come down to the police station” to pay for Gerald you may never have been seen again 👀
@nicoleperson9427 Жыл бұрын
I was thinking the same thing!!
@PunguinYoga Жыл бұрын
@@nicoleperson9427 Wow! Never thought of that!
@codarus Жыл бұрын
There's a Netflix documentary on how women get scammed to go into debt by fake rich men using scenarios just like this!
@lokicooper4690 Жыл бұрын
Good point! I usually think of that kind of stuff, but totally didn’t this time. I wouldn’t have gone anyway, because if you did something to het put in jail, you deserve to stay there.
@livvehult8119 Жыл бұрын
How??
@moth2daflame566 Жыл бұрын
I get called spoiled by my sister all the time but she lost my birth certificate when I was a child. Now I’m 20 needing mommy’s help to get it back. And seeing kids complain about money makes me scream because I would give ANYTHING to have my first job
@tats763 Жыл бұрын
The "garage" for the Hummer limo is nicer than my house. 🤣 That's okay, I have my family, my kitties, and Charlotte's videos. I'm very happy. 😃
@tamarak9393 Жыл бұрын
Me too.
@QueenMFLaurie Жыл бұрын
This is a vibe
@sarahdavies9698 Жыл бұрын
A couple of my friends are from wealth families, one in particular is legacy wealth and had millions heading good way from a trust fund. However, he was not allowed to touch it until he worked and bought his own place. He did that, he worked at a Wimpy, other retail stores, saved like mad and bought his own flat in South West London. At 30 he got his trust fund, paid off his mortgage and still works like a dog. Stayed humble.
@sarahdavies9698 Жыл бұрын
@@essiggurke7276 we worked at the Wimpy and he rented a room in a shared house. This was in the 90s when a one bedroomed place in Kingston upon Thames cost 69 k. I know that because that is how much mine cost. Not all rich people are arseholes.
@marina216rebel Жыл бұрын
I love the dad's reaction. He's having none of it. Good for him. He can tell how his son is spoiled and all he wants is just money
@thed165 Жыл бұрын
😆😆😆 Telling them to get a job is like kryptonite to Superman….only it’s way more hilarious.
@tyler4378 Жыл бұрын
I had these friends when I was in middle school. They were horse people and the daughter always dressed really pretty and fancy with makeup and stuff, they had high end trailers, always getting new expensive horses. Well, I was invited over to her house for her graduation party and it barely had any furniture in it. The walls were very bare, they didn't really have any food in their kitchen besides what they catered in for the party. Basically, my point is, some people are so desperate to look wealthy that they'll completely disregard necessities in exchange for things they probably can't afford.
@Kat-queenofnerds Жыл бұрын
There was an episode of a real life bayliff (repo guy) show where they went into the home of a 'rich' family who owed hundreds of thousands in debt and thier place was same. Literally mattress on the floor levels of broke inside the home to appear rich to the outside world
@gloomykml6396 Жыл бұрын
Where I'm from in Australia, I've heard these kinds of people called 'postcode povos'. Exactly how you describe - giving up basic comfort to appear rich. Absolute nonsense, but I think it might actually be pretty common (don't quote me on that though)
@uninvincibleete Жыл бұрын
3:20 I grew up with a bunnnnch of rich kids/trust fund kids and I can absolutely tell you: the kids who had huge allowances didn't have the way wealthier parents, they had the parents who didn't want to deal with them so they gave their kids money to basically make them go away. Some of the people I went to school with who had the wealthiest parents (like owned international banks and stuff) were still expected to work part time or volunteer. They were bought cars when they went to college but they weren't just given blank checks. There's definitely a higher standard of living for the children of wealthy parents, but parents who gaf about their kids don't just throw endless money at them to shut them up lol
@kosmickobb8570 Жыл бұрын
One morning after Christmas break a kid at the bus stop asked my kids what they got for Christmas. My son immediately said it was the best Christmas EVER and both my kids listed off a few items they'd received. Then this kid tells them that he got a hover board and a carriage to go with it, "see I got nice expensive gifts not just ordinary cheap gifts." My kids didn't really say anything but I reminded them that part of their Christmas is that we've got a Disney vacation planned for the spring. This kid started whining about how he's never been and he wants to go and how it's not fair. All I said is that my kids earned this vacation by showing gratitude and being kind to others. Ugh. Some people.
@fairlyn Жыл бұрын
The sad thing is, that spoiled richt kid probably doesn't go on vacations with his parents because they have no time for him and that's why he's never been to Disney
@phillyphan1225 Жыл бұрын
So you had a teaching moment and had to tell you kids “remember we are going to Disney”..making it all about what you get. Great job there👏
@kosmickobb8570 Жыл бұрын
Maybe it wasn't the right thing to do. I was definitely feeling defensive! As a widow I've had to make some really tough choices and I'm not perfect. My kids know that I'm Santa and that I work really hard to make our Christmas magical rather than about the gifts. This particular year I let my kids choose toys for Christmas or a family vacation in spring. I was really proud of them for picking family time rather than stuff. I know it's extravagant for a family trip but It will be our first vacation since their dad passed.. about five years. Idk I just wanted to remind them that even though they only got one or two gifts, that we were going to get the opportunity to make memories together!
@sarahfuller5482 Жыл бұрын
Yeah I feel like you didn’t prove the point you think you did
@jacklow9611 Жыл бұрын
I sincerely hope you and your kids have a great time on your vacation, and make some wonderful memories for them.
@Musicislife477 Жыл бұрын
I’m watching this as I’m making a list for what I need to buy at the Dollar Tree for my son’s birthday. Rich kids have no clue what’s it’s like to live in the normal world.
@astrologia9266 Жыл бұрын
honestly if someone told me "DO YOU KNOW WHO I AM??? I COULD BUY THE PLACE!!" I'd just stare them right in the eye and said "Then buy it, coward."
@justaguy_yt1240 Жыл бұрын
"Buy it then, I'll wait. Make sure I get a receipt and I'll happily move my ass out your "highness"😂"
@bunzeebear2973 Жыл бұрын
Respond..."what makes you think I am selling? peasant".
@fdm2155 Жыл бұрын
Years ago my brother worked at a liquor store near a college campus. Students would come in buying a TON of booze on a credit card from the parents. All the while whining that their daddy was 'cutting them off' by reigning in their outrageous spending. It was like... oh, now I can't got to the Bahamas for spring break... I'll have to go to Miami for the week. I had to wait until this month to buy another designer handbag. 😆😆 Meanwhile, my US navy vet brother was working his butt off supporting a wife and two young kids on less than $30K at the time.
@jacklow9611 Жыл бұрын
My dad supported a wife and 3 kids on much less than that when I was growing up.
@pragueexpat5106 Жыл бұрын
As a guy who grew up poor, raised by a single mother during a decade long economic depression caused by the fall of the Soviet Union, never had any allowance, never thought to even ask for allowance, I gotta say to these kids: "Oh you sweet summer child.."
@neacienation7 ай бұрын
I love when parents wait till their kids are almost grown to start parenting. 👌 awesome !
@SaidiLouise Жыл бұрын
Daughter is 20 and lives with us. She pays a low monthly rent, pays her own car insurance and car payment. If there's something outside of necessities she'd like, she pays for it herself. At 20 she is already ahead of her peers when it comes to money and responsibilities. She thinks it's unfair that she has to do these things and her friend doesn't...but when her friends mom and dad are no longer there to foot the bill, her friend is gonna be up sh*t creek w/o a paddle.
@abbyyellowdb Жыл бұрын
Ahh im doing the same thing with my parents, except for the fact that I won a bet with my mom so now she's paying for my driving lessons and drivers license. The bet was no drinking and smoking till 18(and yes I actually kept to that). Honestly I think this prepares people way better for the real world than what most parents do here. I legit had a girl at my college that ordered a certain magazine seperate every time new ones came out, it is useful for our studies, those this loose are something like 20/30 a pop, and per course there is atleast 1 most of the time 2 and we have like 8 seperate courses for which you have separate magazine additions coming out. With the subscription you get a years worth, plus some extra stuff. I paid 170 or something once for the full year round subscription
@SaidiLouise Жыл бұрын
@@abbyyellowdb I'm proud of you!! Really I am!!! Keep up the good work :)
@thatgardeninggirl2864 Жыл бұрын
Same with my 19 year old he gives me $50 a month and that's all I ask for towards all of the bills Bc he's saving up to get his own place he works a job with his dad I believe he makes $14 an hour
@Amanda-0987 Жыл бұрын
Mate, I started paying board, and for my own incidentals at 16, because my mum was a single parent and that was when government support moved from her to me. Your kiddo should feel privileged to have the support she does. I sure as shit did, at least my mum didn’t need me to hold a job to contribute to our family and I never went without anything I needed and most of what I wanted.
@SaidiLouise Жыл бұрын
@@Amanda-0987 you certainly sound like a wonderful child to your mother! You recognized and understood the situation. Sixteen year olds typically don't think about how everything cost something. I'm proud of you and your mom.
@isabelaandzico Жыл бұрын
The one about the summer job and the migrants bus really got to me. I immigrated to the US when I was 17 to go to college on a full academic scholarship. I left not just my family but also our maid, cleaning lady, waxing lady behind (we’re not rich and this is not a flex; it’s just the reality of a middle class family from a country with cheap labor). When I got here on a student visa, I could only work under the table and cleaned houses, babysat to make extra money. Once in a while, I’d tell my mom: until you clean someone else’s toilet and wipe a kid’s bottom that you didn’t gave birth to, I don’t wanna hear about it. I’m now a proud Brazilian Portuguese and American citizen. 🇧🇷🇵🇹🇺🇸✊🏻
@BrookeDoesScience Жыл бұрын
In college, there was a guy who had a $10k a month allowance. All the girls wanted to hang out with him. One of my friends got a new laptop from the guy and I did not understand the interest. He wasn’t very kind, was stupid with his money, never went to class, and ended up getting busted for having an insane amount of drugs. I don’t care how much money the guy had, that’s NOT attractive
@magdemighty83692 ай бұрын
He needs to pay everyone he cuts in line, not just the one person who might let him in, because everyone from that point back now has to wait longer.
@mbourque Жыл бұрын
I grew up in a well off area. My family wasn't 'rich' but we paid our bills and has some left over for the occasionally fun thing. There were families in the area that were "rich" and there were families that were "wealthy". I never knew the difference, because to me they both had money that my family didn't have. I learned over the years growing up that there was a big difference. "Rich" families had money to burn and would give their kids money from time to time, especially when the kids asked for it. The kids usually just spent like it was water and never actually learned how to control their spending or the value of money, until they were cut off, because the parents got tired of supporting their adult kids, or the family started losing their "rich" status... They (the family) also were almost entirely obsessed with appearance and their "image" of being "rich". These were the kids that were always out partying and blowing money like it was air. While "wealthy" families had accounts set up for the kids to be able to use and made sure that the account was always flush with cash. that way the kids never had to ask and the parents never had to put out or tell them "no"... Also, they parents made sure that the kids were taught finances and how to manage their money and investments. They also were more concerned about quality rather than quantity. And there were more worried about safeguarding their wealth than their social image, though they were careful about that as well, just the safety of their wealth came first. It seemed that they were more pragmatic about their money and how it was spent, then being 'flashy' to make other people jealous. These kids were usually the ones that were reserved and though they had stuff, they weren't going around "making it rain" everywhere they went... Though the occasion "wealthy" kid (usually the youngest or only kid) did start to act like the "rich" kids acted, but they were also usually cut off pretty quick when it was exposed.. I had several "friends" from each camp throughout middle and highschool, so I got to see both the inside and outside of their lives. And I can tell you that the "rich" kids would make fun of me being the "poor" kid in their group. while the "wealthy" kids were usually (though they pitied me) more respectful and polite towards me when I was in their company. I never heard about them talking about me or referring about me when I wasn't around them. They probably never even thought about me when I wasn't around them. Being "wealthy" was a whole 'nother level of being "rich".
@endless_song Жыл бұрын
What you're describing is what in my area is referred to as the difference between "old money" and "new money.". Old money families have been wealthy for generations and understand how to maintain generational wealth. It doesn't mean they're always humble and respectful about it, but in general they tend to flaunt less, and be focused on staying wealthy rather than proving to the world that they're wealthy (everyone already knows). People who suddenly come into tons of money may be more tempted to go wild, and also may not have been exposed to the financial skills needed to preserve the funds in the family moving forward. We all tend to bash rich people for being born into their money and not having to work. That's true, but it does take a fair amount of discipline to stay rich over generations, especially in large families where everyone wants a piece of the pie.
@KingDuumb Жыл бұрын
I went to college with a foreign exchange student from Taiwan. His father owned oil tankers. Each month he would get his allowance. It was 20 dollar bills in the shape of a brick. He had everything he wanted and became bored so started doing B+E's. He got caught and sent home.
@erikarussell1142 Жыл бұрын
Oh boy.
@destinymcintire2188 Жыл бұрын
Wow doing crime for cheap thrills. That’s a new one. Welp hope he likes having that on his Permanent Record.
@pablodelsegundo9502 Жыл бұрын
Good riddance.
@marinettemasyrenaud8742 Жыл бұрын
What's B+E's?
@KayLuckyKay1212 Жыл бұрын
@@marinettemasyrenaud8742 Breaking and entering, I think
@katerinadobiasova8201 Жыл бұрын
I remember this one time, when my university classmates were disgusted, because their parent told them, they will give them only half of the money they want for vacation, and they should get job for the other half. These girl were absolutely angry about that. I was also shocked when I heard them. I was planning my 3rd job only to have money for rent and food.
@katherinechavez78468 ай бұрын
Honestly I cannot stop laughing at Charlottes face on Stormi and Kylie😂 ❤❤❤
@TheBrokeCyberWanderer Жыл бұрын
Almost a year ago, after moving from Ft Lauderdale to rural New Mexico. I was watching on of Charlotte's video "things only rich people do." Everything was dandy until the "ability to tell a fake designer bag by sight." I apparently was raised wealthy and thought I was middle class. I was only "middle class" in my hometown (for context- same town that produced Ariana Grande) in my wealthy town. It was only when I saw that video, did it really hit me that most kids didn't have Aupairs and maybe I wasn't middle class. Then I had an extensial crisis but got over it because now I'm broke and happy.
@annm3064 Жыл бұрын
I'm glad you're happy now. Sometimes the best way to know how much value things are is to hit the bottom first.
@TheBrokeCyberWanderer Жыл бұрын
@@annm3064 Thank you
@gloriaalex11 Жыл бұрын
I can understand wanting your child to have a good life and not struggle, but parents really do their kids a disservice by not teaching humility, gratitude, work ethic, and the value of a dollar.
@samanthacox7457 Жыл бұрын
I used to send my grandbabies $10 (I'm on disability) for their birthdays. However with inflation they couldn't even by a toy from Walmart. So, I send them $25 now and adjust my bills to do so. They are VERY! VERY thankful for what they get! They are 5, 3, & 2. I'm thankful that my son, & DIL have taught them to be APPRECIATIVE of what they get. 😊
@YummerzCentral Жыл бұрын
Were you by any chance a teacher or had a relative who was a teacher? If so I wanna explain to you or whoever may have been my teacher "Mrs. Cox" why I freaked out as a child when people were getting loud, I had horrible sensory issues and needed headphones at the time but two teachers yelled at me for wearing them once (Social Studies Teacher and Math Teacher) Math teacher slammed a textbook next to my head on the desk and didn't think about the fact it would send me into a sensory overload and I hope she is failing in her career and realizes I could have seriously ruined her career at that time but I knew she needed money to survive in this world and decided to not report it, I wasn't dumb but I also needed extra help in school yet every teacher conveniently forgot my IEP including you or said teacher and I hope you or said teacher are happy about scolding me for a perfectly natural response to someone who is autistic.
@Merip1214 Жыл бұрын
@@YummerzCentral surely you replied to the wrong person
@Merip1214 Жыл бұрын
❤ I have a grandmother like that - and like them, I'm so happy for what I get. Also she was supposed to stop when I turned 20, but she just kept sending those £20s every year. (25 now)
@danilsmith7292 Жыл бұрын
The french kid freakout.... that is HALARIOUS!
@thejenmath Жыл бұрын
A friend of mine in high school dated a senator’s son and anytime he hung out with our group he always said a few things that made us look at him like, Rich kids really are different. I once complained to him my brother was having a lot of his friends sleepover and they were really loud and he told me to just go rent a hotel room downtown for the weekend. We were 15.
@theGreta Жыл бұрын
"Our tax dollars hard at work," LOL
@luketimewalker Жыл бұрын
"ain't no senator's son" staple song from the Vietnam war era kzbin.info/www/bejne/amGtnnigZcSUjK8
@timefoolery Жыл бұрын
This is how my parents did it - when they paid me an allowance, they had veto say over anything I wanted to spend it on. They informed me that when I got a job, I’d be able to choose what I spent it on without getting crap from them. So, what did I do? You damn right I got a job! Started working as a babysitter at the age of 13 and didn’t stop till I retired recently. And €1,000 for a pizza??? I better be pooping gold the next day. 😂
@rosanneclouston9847 Жыл бұрын
I had to laugh at the last one about the kid on vacation. My youngest son was about 12 or 13 at time, I can not remember what we were talking about around the dinner table but he made the comment that something was "skirt work" meaning women's work. I got all of my kitchen cupboards scrubbed down to my standards by him for that remark. Also when my oldest was visiting colleges, one woman we talked to for some special program seemed amazed that there were 18 year olds who had never been to Europe. Hello!, we were doing good saving for his and his brothers' college funds.
@moonhunter9993 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for teaching your son a lesson When my daughter gets an entitled attitude, especially re helping others or doing regular chores, I say the (pick a room) floor really needs scrubbing... She knows I'm serious. If I hear any more entitled complaining after that, I just keep adding another room...
@fdm2155 Жыл бұрын
When I was in grad school at an Ivy League school one of my much younger classmates asked me if I considered the program at Harvard! Uh, no. I worked for the university so my tuition was FREE ($55K at the time). I lived in a small house not far from campus - mortgage was (~$300/mo). There was no way I was moving to Boston and taking out $100K in loans for that program and living expenses. And living in a house share with 10 people. To be fair, she was genuinely asking. She was in her early 20s and parents were paying most of her costs.
@lokicooper4690 Жыл бұрын
Good on you for teaching him that was not only inappropriate, but wrong.
@dawnc14199 ай бұрын
The funniest I've heard was when prince harry told oprah that his family cut him off... he was 38 years old, married, had a kid, and that if it hadn't been for the £30m his mom left him he wouldn't have been able to live...THEN...it turned out that his dad funded him for the first year and gave him £4m to buy and set up his new life in America 🇺🇸 what a first class entitled dough bag... 😂😂😂
@gladlock7 ай бұрын
i understand Prince Harry because he is never going to be a normal person. He was born with a job he never asked for. he can’t go anywhere without being followed and spoken to. He deserves a pension
@Shaheeda-fn2pr6 ай бұрын
Leave Harry and his family alone!!!
@cathrynhesketh57033 ай бұрын
Yeeah.i know.sugar melts so easily 😂😂😂@Shaheeda-fn2pr
@yin-sin Жыл бұрын
Love how spoiled rich kids are like “I’ll inherit my parent’s company” but puts in zero effort to show that they can work for said company. I’m not wealthy by any standards but even I know what you are going to need to work for a company that your parents created, like a degree.
@briannakelly26 Жыл бұрын
Worked as a nanny for two lawyers and their kids.. legit the parents tried to tell me I had to come in early and wake THEM up. 🤣🤣🤣 needless to say I sat both their asses down after refusing lectured them for over an hour about how THEY are the reason their kids are out of control & if they wanted MY help, they better follow my guidance because I'm not about to be fighting with no goddamn grade school kids over getting up, washing their asses, cleaning their rooms and doing their homework. What's crazier is I wasn't even surprised they had these astronomical expectations. They were more surprised that I was laughing at their college educated, titled asses that they were grown ass adults who didn't want to use their alarm clock. 🤣🤣🤣
@annaifos Жыл бұрын
how'd they react to your lecture?👀
@briannakelly26 Жыл бұрын
@@annaifos they were shook as all shit, agreed to my terms ( though they dropped the ball on no tv until homework was finished multiple times because of their workaholic guilt & needed repeated lectures) and paid me the increase in wages I asked for because they already knew they were asking too much and their children were incorageable. I still whipped their asses into shape though. The little princess swore she was going to run all over me and that she was going to argue me down everyday about the homework, playing outside and online. I started making her do pushups & told her " your parents said I can't beat you like you should be beaten but they didn't say I couldn't hang you upside down from your ankles until you pass out so you better take your cute little self over to that table, sit down & do your homework" 🤣🤣🤣
@briannakelly26 Жыл бұрын
@@annaifos it was so bad their kids were teens and didn't even know how to properly brush their teeth because mom & dad kept hitting the snooze button their whole life.
@joyloft7418 Жыл бұрын
Yellow Hummer . Too busy looking at the chandelier in the mirror in the garage 😂😂
@elizabethlovett4318 Жыл бұрын
Love the rich dad's response to his spoiled son 'asking' for money. If I were rich and I had a child that acted that way I would... 1. Also hang up without a word and not answer further calls for the day. 2. Think over all my poor choices in raising them. 3. Be thoroughly embarrassed and disappointed in my child's behavior & their misplaced priorities. 4. Have a long discussion about money & work with my children and the changes I will be forcing on them to make them be humble for what they have no matter how little they think it is and understand that what I have worked for and earned doesn't make it their birthright. 5. Tell them and actually arrange for my money to go to charity instead of them and they will get nothing except what they work for and earn themselves in their own jobs. This way I won't worry about their survival in the world if they learn the hard way while I still draw breath. Though as their parent it's my fault of they turn out that way, it's hopefully not too late to right the mistakes I made that while in the beginning made it easy on me, have very likely handicapped my child's emotional growth & independence as a result. Fingers crossed. Love the very last one and the response was BRILLIANT! He didn't even say servant's work, he said women's work! 🤣
@spac18 Жыл бұрын
Giving money to charity is absolute waste, it's better the spend it all if you ain't gonna give it to your family.
@venusbby Жыл бұрын
Or maybe he hung up to call the assistant and let them deal with it
@AmandaVieiraMamaesouCult Жыл бұрын
That was a skit
@hildaelson4203 Жыл бұрын
I have disabilities and while I’ve been undergoing treatments for the past few years, I’ve been pretty much living off my parents and living at home (we have quite a lot of space so makes sense to live at home), and we’re relatively comfortable. I’ve always felt a huge sense of shame that I’m not working, despite everyone else telling me they currently I’m not being able to. I always try to hide our financial status and mention that I work part-time as a tutor, which I do but it doesn’t pay enough.
@amberr6 Жыл бұрын
There is never any shame to be had from accepting help from your loved ones ❤ try to remember that. You’re worth it
@baby.nay. Жыл бұрын
Don’t ever be ashamed to be disabled . I’m really glad you have a comfortable place and I hope a good support system with your parents . American capitalist culture tells us we’re not worth anything if we’re not a capable working body . Fuck that . Most disabled people on the official disabled assistance can’t even afford rent with the monthly payments
@Carey86 Жыл бұрын
I’m disabled too & rely on my parents. I had cancer as a kid & was paralyzed from the waist down & told I’d never walk again. 20 years later and I have severe nerve pain and walk with a cane and I get so embarrassed when people ask what I do now. “I’m on disability & living with my parents”. 🤦🏼♀️ I understand where you’re coming from but we don’t have a choice. If we were well enough, we’d be working & the fact that we feel bad about relying on our parents says a lot. Hope you get well!😘💋
@stefaniejohnson29 Жыл бұрын
"On disability and living with my parents." I've been there,and I am so sorry you are feeling shame, I did too. The first question anyone ever asks is "what do you do?" it sucks. I always tried to focus on how blessed I was/am to have that support and love from my family. Maybe remembering your family loves you will help keep things in perspective.i hope you know that when videos like this are spotlighted, they are not about you or your situation.
@LavendelFeder Жыл бұрын
I had a friend, who wasn't like filthy rich, but she was definitely very well off thanks to her dad's company. She went to collage and all of a sudden said, she didn't want to go anymore and stayed at home for 1 and a half years, just living off of what her dad/her parents gave her. And when we had a girls weekend, we agreed to cook something together (a dish which included potatoes) and when I began chopping up a bell pepper, she asked me 'how do you cook potatoes?'. I stood there and looked at her for a moment, like a third arm grew out of her head, bc I thought she was joking. 😐
@jenniferholland3421 Жыл бұрын
The pizza had caviar, truffles and gold flakes. Only the best for him 🤣😌🤣
@Koremansjes Жыл бұрын
Can i just say, my youngest is 10. At that age they know exactly what they're saying. Good for them for teaching him that lesson this way 🥰
@racheljenkins_04 Жыл бұрын
As someone who is and has always been quite poor, rich people like this disgust me. They and their actions are revolting.
@TwiggyHetfield27 Жыл бұрын
"It's not a bus, it's a Hummer limo. I don't know why my parents have it." Her parents must really hate the environment 🤣
@BeckBeckGo Жыл бұрын
I’m confused. She’s more embarrassed if people think her family owns a bus than she is about them owning that tacky monstrosity?
@emilyr9247 Жыл бұрын
Then she goes on to describe the exact reason her parents have it (for parties) (the same reason everyone who has a hummer limo has a hummer limo)
@kikobugs7443 Жыл бұрын
The sunbed theif, is the same guy raging at a Bar Bouncer because he was not let in.
@TheKatie287 Жыл бұрын
I was a leasing agent with a rich college community and this was every single resident.. one of them threw a literal tantrum when we towed her car because, not only was it in the wrong spot, it wasn’t even the same vehicle she registered. She cried, screamed, stomped her feet, cussed.. just the whole 9 yards. When we met mom, we finally figured out where she learned her communication skills. Worst part? These kids will do well after college.. because of mom and dad.
@UsandEveryoneWeKnow Жыл бұрын
I was a scholarship kid, so people around me used to get thousands in allowance a month. Some kids parents were funny about their kids being at my mum's non-mansion. Still beat their kids in exams though, however some not very bright kids got set up with amazing jobs because of their parents connections, and they are now also earning shit tons 😂
@TevelDrinkwater Жыл бұрын
Best way to get ahead in life is to start ahead.
@magicmiya7545 Жыл бұрын
I feel this. I’m not sure how I wandered into corporate America but every person I work with has deep family connections and PhDs but they are constantly in awe of the work I do compared to their own. 😂
@boogermaiden Жыл бұрын
That happens in the Philippines! And they are Liberals. 👀
@Roses_777 Жыл бұрын
@@magicmiya7545 keep thriving and shining girl💫💫💥🎀
@Tatkitten Жыл бұрын
Love the last one. My bils cousin is a rich guy too. His catch phrase is always “I just can’t…. We’ll buy a new one”. This is regardless of it’s his or someone else’s property. He once lost all of his families luggage on the freeway and rather than stopping to secure or retrieve anything he just went “eff it, we’ll buy new clothes and shoes when we get there”
@houseofoddity9 ай бұрын
Being with you from the I.O. Days it’s wonderful to see you thriving. You are such a wonderful role model. Keep growing and know people are rooting for you! ❤