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Gen Z interviewer slams her generation’s ‘attitude’ after candidate dialled in from their phone



It’s no secret that Gen Z often gets slammed for, in the words of Sister Act star Whoopi Goldberg, not “busting their behinds” at work quite like previous generations did. Despite struggling to land entry-level roles, bosses have accused them of showing up late to the interview, refusing to put in any overtime for screening tests, and ghosting recruiters. Now, even a Gen Z hiring manager is backing the bosses slamming her generation.

“I fear that the people who say that Gen Z aren’t getting jobs because of their attitude are slightly accurate,” the 23-year-old who goes by @Sopharoch posted in a TikTok video that’s now gone viral. 

LA-based Sophie Rocha works in marketing for Gen Z career platform Home From College—and because of the nature of her employer, she’s regularly on the other side of the hiring table, interviewing candidates from her own generation.

But one recent interview pushed her over the edge.

“I interviewed a candidate last week, and they showed up on the call on their phone,” Rocha slammed, adding that their reasoning was “it’s not that serious” because it was a first-stage interview. 

The candidate then gushed about the job’s remote setup before openly admitting they had no intention of ever working from home—instead revealing they’d use the policy to work full-time while on vacation.

“I don’t know if that’s something that you want to say in an initial interview, like, hey, I’m actually going to be lollygagging in Europe, so I won’t be paying attention to this role,” Rocha added. 

To add further fuel to the fire, the candidate demanded more money and made clear they expected the role to simply be handed to them—a level of entitlement that left Rocha speechless.

“Then they complained about the compensation, and then said, I know that you’re probably not interviewing anybody else for this position, so I’ll just expect to hear back and start Monday,” Rocha concluded incredulously.  “I’m sorry, what?” 

Gen Z really are the hardest to work with—even managers of their own generation say they’re difficult

Rocha isn’t the first Gen Z-er to reach management ranks and then complain about her generation’s shortcomings.

Resume Genius asked hiring managers which generation is the most challenging to work with, and 45% pointed to Gen Z, the generation born between 1997 and 2012. Most shockingly, even 50% of Gen Zers admitted that their own generation is the most difficult to manage. 

Another study found that nearly three-fourths of managers consider Gen Z the most difficult to work with, and many bosses get frustrated with their new hires regularly. Only 4% of respondents said it was never difficult to manage Gen Z.

And they’re not just complaining about the latest generation of workers; 65% of the bosses surveyed have put Gen Z at the top of their firing list before any other generation. Over half of respondents had already sacked a Gen Zer, and 12% said they fired one less than one week after a start date. 

A separate study pointed to a lack of initiative, unprofessionalism, poor communication skills and general unreadiness for the workplace as top reasons for firing Gen Z grads just months after hiring them. 

Being late to work and meetings often, not wearing office-appropriate clothing, and not using language appropriate for the workspace were specific examples used of this.

In the end, it’s making hiring managers more reluctant to hire the next generation of workers. Instead, most studies concluded that bosses are hiring more millennials as a result.

Career advice from a Gen Z hiring manager: ‘You should be joining every interview from a computer’

In a series of follow-up videos, Rocha shared some tips for young job seekers on how to not “totally bomb” their shot at landing a role,“ since Gen Z apparently don’t know how to act in interviews”.

“Apparently, this is controversial, and the main reason why that video went viral, but you should be joining every interview from a computer, not your phone,” she stressed.

Failing that, for young people who don’t have a laptop or desktop, she recommended setting up your phone sideways so the video appears horizontal on the hiring manager’s screen—leaving them none the wiser.

“And do not touch it throughout the interview,” Rocha added. “I don’t want to be on FaceTime with you.”

Other tips included showing genuine interest in the company, making sure you take up no more than 50% of the conversation, and answering any questions in under 2 minutes. Essentially, an interview should be a back-and-forth, not a monologue.

“If you notice that you’re dominating the conversation, stop talking, because that means that you’re rambling,” Rocha said. 

“The tell me about yourself question is not an invitation for your life story,” she added.

The advice Rocha gave that got the most hate in the comments section was to thank the hiring manager for their time with a follow-up email.

Although the topic of thank-you notes is quite contentious (with some arguing that candidates shouldn’t have to do more free work, and it adds to a hiring manager’s already full plate), Rocha insisted it’s “just polite”—and even an ex-Meta recruiter agrees it’s a green flag. 

“It really takes two seconds, and clearly, according to my last couple of videos, people aren’t sending them, so you will stand out if you send a thank you to your interviewer after you get off the call,” Rocha concluded.

Chipotle: BOGO On 6/11 When You Wear Soccer Jersey (After 3PM)


The Offer

Direct link to offer

  • Chipotle is offering a buy one, get one free entree on 6/11 after 3PM if you’re wearing a Soccer Jersey

Our Verdict

These promotions are always crazy busy. Good deal I guess if you really like Chipotle. 

Trump steps up attacks on California’s election system




Trump steps up attacks on California’s election system

Anduril CEO Brian Schimpf says economic warfare is the ‘new normal’ for military conflicts



Brian Schimpf, CEO of defense tech company Anduril, says that the nature of modern armed conflict has fundamentally shifted—and that the U.S. military’s supply chain is dangerously unprepared for it.

“The U.S. and Israel did something like ten times as many strikes in the first month of the war as they did in the entire Gulf War,” Schimpf said at Fortune‘s Brainstorm Tech conference in Aspen on Monday. “This is the new normal of what these conflicts are going to look like.”

Schimpf’s remarks opened on a pointed note: back in March, when he was interviewed for a profile of Anduril in Fortune, he predicted that the Strait of Hormuz could still be blocked by the time the Brainstorm Tech conference rolled around. It was.  

For Schimpf, that’s not an anomaly, it’s the new blueprint. Modern conflicts, he argued, are no longer primarily about destroying military assets; they’re about strangling economies. Data centers, oil refineries, and shipping lanes are the targets now, and low-cost drones have made striking them cheaper than ever. “The economic warfare that is effectively the Strait of Hormuz, this is the new normal of what these conflicts are going to look like,” he said.


More from Fortune’s 25th Brainstorm Tech:

Anthropic’s Boris Cherny, creator of Claude Code, says there are days he manages tens of thousands of AI agents at once

Twitch CEO: Social media has become ‘anti-social’ and can’t match the shared, human connection of live streaming

Your career needs a ‘gym membership’ to keep up with continuous AI advancements, says Campus founder Tade Oyerinde


For the U.S. he said, the new reality is a particularly tricky problem. It’s “essentially impossible to inflict economic pain on China without catastrophic economic pain on the U.S.,” Schimpf said.

That logic flows directly into how he thinks about Anduril’s business. Schimpf was especially candid about supply chain fragility. He noted that the U.S. fired through roughly 850 Tomahawk missiles in four weeks of conflict with Iran—burning through a stockpile that the Pentagon had been replenishing at a rate of about 90 per year. 

His proposed solution is not just redesigning weapons to be more manufacturable—it’s moving upstream into raw materials. “We’re looking at how do we secure supply of germanium years out,” he said, pointing to China’s systematic acquisition of critical minerals, including rare earth magnets and copper film suppliers, as a strategic stranglehold the U.S. has been slow to counter.

The CEO was equally as candid speaking about the current defense tech valuation frenzy—where some companies are raising at 50x or even 100x forward revenue. “I do think there is a bit of a bubble.” He invoked the Uber-and-Lyft dynamic, arguing that in any hot category, roughly 90% of returns accrue to the top two players, and that companies chasing stratospheric valuations are setting themselves up for an impossible growth bar. Anduril has been deliberate about its own pricing, he said, but acknowledged the temptation is real.

An Anduril listing on the public markets is a long-running subject of speculation. Schimpf, when pressed on the IPO question, declined to give a timeline. In March, the company raised a $5 billion Series H raise at a $61 billion valuation, led by venture capital firms Thrive Capital and Andreessen Horowitz. Last week, Anduril cofounder Trae Stephens told Fortune he saw the company ideally going public in the next couple of years. 

Schimpf, however, made an argument for the advantage of remaining private. “Right now, we’re in a hype-y time. We’re growing like crazy. Why would we go out right now? We don’t need to, he said.” Schimpf laid out a simple 3-point framework for contemplating an IPO: If you go public in the middle of a “hype cycle,” when growth is slowing, or when you’re more than two years from profitability, and you’ll have a bad three-year stock return. Anduril checks at least one of those boxes, he said, citing the current industry-wide hype cycle, and therefore sees no rush.

Did Everyone Forget Mortgage Rates Were 2-3% Back in 2012 Too?


I was on LinkedIn the other day and came across a post featuring a mortgage rate history chart with rates for each year.

It started with 1975, when the 30-year fixed apparently averaged 9.0%, 1980 when it was supposedly 14.4%, and 2015 when it was 4.0%.

For whatever reason they skipped a lot of years in between, I suppose to make the chart more concise.

But what jumped out at me was the fact that mortgage rates were in the 2-3% range in 2012 and 2013 and didn’t make the chart.

It seems a lot of people either don’t know that or don’t remember.

You Could Get a 2-3% Mortgage Rate in 2012 and 2013!

Believe it or not, it wasn’t just 2020 and 2021 when mortgage rates were at their lowest.

Sure, the 30-year fixed technically hit its all-time low in January of 2021, per Freddie Mac data.

And the 15-year fixed hit its record low in July 2021.

But there were some incredibly good years for mortgage rates nearly a decade earlier.

Not only that, but home prices were about 50% off at the time as well!

So if you had purchased real estate in 2012-2013, you likely made out really, really, well.

Anyway, I saw the chart and commented that mortgage rates were also sub-3% in 2012 and 2013.

Most responded to be with doubt or snarky sarcasm, so I took the time to review some old Freddie Mac mortgage rate data.

Didn’t take long to find it. In the Primary Mortgage Market Survey (PMMS), I found that 30-year fixed rates were in the low 3s during 2013.

The lowest was 3.34% in January of 2013. And in 2012, spent nearly the entire second half of the year at 3.50% or lower, as seen above.

In case you’re unaware, Freddie Mac mortgage rates are mere averages and actual rates can be a lot lower (or higher).

But I fondly recall many people snagging rates in the 3s and even sub-3% rates back then.

My Friend Got a 2.75% Mortgage Rate Nearly 15 Years Ago!

A vividly remember a friend of mine got a 2.75% 30-year fixed way back then and a super low purchase price to boot!

If we turn our attention to 15-year fixed mortgages, they were even lower, averaging around 2.625% to 2.75% for a good chunk of the year.

So it wasn’t just pandemic-era mortgage rates that were sub-3%. A full decade earlier home buyers were snagging these low interest rates.

And they made out even better, as noted, because home prices were about 50% lower at the time as the market was still recovering from the early 2000s housing crash.

As for why mortgage rates were that low back then, it was the same story as 2020-2021.

The Federal Reserve was running Quantitative Easing (QE) at that time as well and buying billions in mortgage-backed securities (MBS) to push mortgage rates lower.

Whether they needed to do it again a decade later is a bigger question, as all that easy money led to another big wave of inflation and arguably wasn’t really necessary.

Read on: Try my mortgage rate calculator to quickly compare interest rates an .125% to 0.25% (or more) apart to determine the difference in payment and total interest expense.

(photo: Michael Coghlan)

Colin Robertson
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BUSINESS MANAGEMENT Q&A | all about my degree! AD



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This video is kindly sponsored by Squarespace 🙂

Updated second year Q&A:

Answering all your questions about my degree: BA Business Management!

TIMESTAMPS:
0:00 intro
1:13 what is Business Management? How is it different from other business degrees?
2:22 why did I choose Business Management?
3:50 entry requirements – do you need specific A levels or GCSEs?
5:18 modules and course structure
8:05 my favourite and least favourite modules
9:24 how much maths is involved?
10:29 contact hours and teaching styles
11:53 MY NEW BLOG!!
13:03 is it difficult?
13:47 what’s the workload like?
14:46 what are the assignments like?
15:57 am I doing a placement or study abroad year?
16:47 my career plans after graduation and career opportunities from Business Management
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Grubhub World Cup Deals: Taco Bell, Wingstop, Wendy’s, and More



Grubhub World Cup Deals

Grubhub World Cup Deals

Grubhub is celebrating the FIFA World Cup by offering several freebies, BOGOs, fan‑favorite deals, and $0 delivery and service fees on restaurant orders over $50. The promotion runs for three weeks, with over 10 separate deals. 

Week 1 (6/29–7/5) 

  • KFC — BOGO 2pc Chicken Combo ($15 min) 
  • Primo Hoagies — $15 off $50+ 
  • Burger King — BOGO Whopper Jr ($15 min) 
  • Shake Shack — Free Bacon Cheeseburger ($25 min) 

Week 2 (7/6–7/12) 

  • Popeyes — BOGO 4pc Signature Chicken or Chicken Sandwich ($15 min) 
  • Pizza Hut — BOGO Personal Pan Pizza ($35 min, up to $10) 
  • Wingstop — Free 10pc Wings ($30 min, up to $9.49) 
  • Wendy’s — BOGO Spicy Chicken Sandwich ($20 min) 
  • Tacombi — 30% off $40+ (up to $12) 

Week 3 (7/13–7/19) 

  • Taco Bell — BOGO Chicken or Cheese Quesadilla ($20 min) 
  • Wonder — 30% off at all Wonder restaurants (minimums vary by restaurant) 
  • Subway — Spend $20, get a free 6″ Tuna, Turkey, Spicy Italian, or Sweet Onion Teriyaki 

The post Grubhub World Cup Deals: Taco Bell, Wingstop, Wendy’s, and More appeared first on Danny the Deal Guru.

Best High-Yield Savings Rates for June 8, 2026: Up to 5%


High-yield savings account rates have held steady, with some banks even increasing their rates, to start June.

As of June 8, 2026, some online banks are still offering interest rates up to 5.00% APY, but these top APYs are usually limited by deposit size. This is still much better than the average of 0.38% APY, according to the FDIC.

Banks and credit unions are constantly adjusting their annual percentage yields (APYs) as markets react to Federal Reserve policy and inflation data, so staying up to date can make a real difference. Here’s where the best savings rates stand today — and what you should know before moving your money.

💰 Today’s Best Savings Rates At a Glance

Here are the best bank and credit union savings accounts rates today:

Bank or Credit Union

Top APY

Balance Requirement

Varo

5.00%

On the first $5,000

Consumers Credit Union

5.00%

On the first $10,000

Pibank

4.40%

$0

Everbank

4.10%

$0.01

CIT Bank

4.10%

$2,500

1. Varo – Varo is a bank that offers up to 5.00% APY on the first $5,000 with qualifying direct deposits. Read our full Varo review.

2. Consumers Credit Union – CCU offers up to 5.00% APY on your checking account for the first $10,000. The requirements to earn are tiered. Read our full Consumers Credit Union Review.

3. PiBank – PiBank is the online brand of Intercredit Bank, N.A and offers 4.40% APY with no monthly maintenance fees and no minimum balance requirements. However, lots of consumers complain about only being allow to withdraw via wire transfer. Read our full Pibank review.

4. Everbank – Everbank offers a boosted rate of 4.10% guaranteed for 90 days in partnership with Raisin. Plus, they’re currently offering a cash bonus of up to $1,200 for new deposits. Read our full Everbank review.

5. CIT Bank – CIT Platinum Savings a two-tiered savings account. 

Open an account with promo code CITBoost and you’ll earn 4.10% APY* on balances of $5,000 or more for the first six months* — that’s 10x the national average savings rate.

After 6 months, you’ll return to the regular rate of 3.75% APY* with a $5,000 minimum balance. Otherwise you’ll earn 0.25% APY. See website for full details. Read our full CIT Bank review.

You can find a full list of the best high yield savings accounts here >>

How High Yield Savings Accounts Work And Why Rates Matter?

High-yield savings accounts function just like traditional savings accounts, but they pay a much higher annual percentage yield (APY) — often 10 to 15 times more. You can see how these rates compare to the savings rates at the 10 largest banks in America – and these rates put them to shame.

“We’re seeing banks become increasingly competitive on both APY and bonus offers to start June.” – Robert Farrington

The banks and credit unions on this list typically always have above-average rates, so even if the Federal Reserve lowers rates and these accounts lower their rates, you’ll still be head. 

For example, a $10,000 balance earning 4.00% APY will generate about $400 in interest per year, compared with less than $20 at a big-bank rate of 0.20%. That gap makes it worth tracking rate changes regularly and switching institutions if your current bank stops staying competitive.

However, we expect more rates to dip below that 4.00% level in the coming weeks.

What To Know Before Opening An Account

Before opening a new account, review the key details that determine how much you’ll earn — and how easily you can access your funds.

  • Watch For Intro Or Promo Rates: APYs can rise or fall at any time. But a strong introductory rate doesn’t guarantee long-term performance. None of the rates listed here are introductory, but some referral codes may only be temporary rates.
  • Transfer Limits: Federal rules no longer cap savings withdrawals at six per month, but many banks still impose limits.
  • Safety: Confirm that the institution is FDIC- or NCUA-insured, which protects up to $250,000 per depositor, per bank or credit union.
  • Access: Many top-yield accounts are online-only. Make sure you can deposit via mobile app and link external accounts for easy transfers.

These details help you separate truly high-performing savings options from accounts that look appealing but may include hidden limitations or slower rate adjustments.

How We Track And Verify Rates

At The College Investor, our goal is to help you make smart, confident decisions about your money. To create this list, our editorial team reviews savings account rates daily across more than 50 banks, credit unions, and fintechs. We verify data using each institution’s official website, rate disclosures, and regulatory filings.

Only accounts available to U.S. consumers and insured by the FDIC or NCUA are included.

Our coverage is independent and editorially driven – we never rank accounts based on compensation. While we may earn a referral fee when you open an account through certain links, this does not influence our recommendations or reviews. Our opinions are our own, based on a consistent evaluation of usability, fees, yields, and customer experience.

FAQs

How often do savings account rates change?

Banks can adjust rates daily or weekly based on market conditions.

Are online banks safe?

Yes — as long as they’re FDIC-insured. Verify coverage on the FDIC’s BankFind site.

Is interest on savings accounts taxable?

Yes. You’ll receive a 1099-INT if you earn $10 or more in interest.

Should I move my money if rates drop?

It depends on the difference in APY and your transfer limits, and frequent rate chasing can reduce returns if transfers take time.

Disclosures

CIT Bank

For complete list of account details and fees, see our
Personal Account disclosures.

* Platinum Savings is a tiered interest rate account. Interest is paid on the entire account balance based on the interest rate and APY in effect that day for the balance tier associated with the end-of-day account balance. APYs — Annual Percentage Yields are accurate as of January 9, 2026: 0.25% APY on balances of $0.01 to $4,999.99; 3.75% APY on balances of $5,000.00 or more. Interest Rates for the Platinum Savings account are variable and may change at any time without notice. The minimum to open a Platinum Savings account is $100.

* Platinum Savings APY Boost Promotion Terms and Conditions

This is a limited time offer available to New and Existing customers who meet the Platinum Savings APY Boost promotion criteria.

Accounts enrolled in the Platinum Savings Annual Percentage Yield (APY) Boost promotion will receive a 0.35% APY boost on the Platinum Savings current standard APY tiers for 6 months following the opening of a new account or when an existing Platinum Savings account is enrolled in the promotion. The Platinum Savings APY boost will be applied on account balances up to $9,999,999.00. Account balances above $9,999,999.00 will earn the standard APY. If the standard-published APY should change during the promotion period, the APY boost will move with it, offering an account APY above the standard rate.

The Promotion begins on February 13, 2026, and ends June 30, 2026. Customers enrolled in the promotion prior to the end date will receive the APY boost for the 6-month period outlined in the terms and conditions.

The promotion can end at any time without notice.

 

Editor: Colin Graves

Reviewed by: Richelle Hawley

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