Video yükleniyor...

Video Yüklenemedi

Ana Sayfaya Dön

Nick explains why the younger generations don't like BOOMERS, before he pulls himself up by his bootstraps and tells the zoomers to get a job. "Be a little bit smart, take the initiative, work your ass off. It's never been easier, you just have to put the work in."

173,388 görüntüleme • 1 ay önce •via X (Twitter)

0 Yorum

Yorum bulunmuyor

Orijinal gönderinin yorumları burada görünecek

Benzer Videolar

Geno Auriemma shares how he explains success to his players and why showing up isn't enough. "If you go to class and you do average work, you're gonna get a C. That's why it's called average." "If you want a B, you have to do more work. If you want an A, you have to do even more work and you have to give up stuff." You get what you earn in life. "You have to sacrifice. Maybe you can't do all the things that everybody else does." It means if you want more then you have to be willing to do more. "If you're just happy getting Bs all your life, there's nothing wrong with that either. But you're never gonna get the satisfaction of what it feels like to get an A." Then he connected it to basketball: "If you just wanna be average, then you do average work. If you wanna be a little bit above average then you do a little more work." "If you wanna get As in basketball, then you gotta do stuff that other people aren't willing to do - especially if you have the talent like we do. We have talent." It means bring a mindset of excellence to everything that you do. Excellence isn't the goal - it's the standard you set. Then he called out the entitlement problem: "Some of these younger guys coming out of high school, man, they wanna show up and go, 'I'm here. Where's my 3.7?'" "Like my father used to say, 'I got your 3.7 right here.'" Showing up doesn't earn you anything. Doing the work does. You get the grade you earn - in school, in basketball, and in life. It's easy to be average...successful people look to compete in everything they do. (🎥UCTV Sports )

Coach AJ 🎯 Mental Fitness

149,812 görüntüleme • 3 ay önce

Donald Trump on why "working at a relationship" is the wrong advice: Larry King asks Donald and Melania what makes their marriage work. Donald says he doesn't consider himself a workaholic because he genuinely loves what he does — and then explains why he refuses to apply that same effort to his marriage. "I work very hard from early in the morning till late in the evening," he says. "I don't want to go home and have to work at a relationship." It's his parents: "It's like my mother and father, they were married 63 years. I've always heard you have to work at a good relationship. My father didn't work at a good relationship. He went home, he had dinner, he went to bed, he took it easy, he watched television. My mother did the same thing. She cooked him dinner. And it was just one of those things. It wasn't work." He pushes back directly on the conventional wisdom: "I always heard, you have to work, work, work at a relationship… a relationship, we have to work at it. In my opinion, doesn't work. So maybe I'm wrong." Donald and Melania met at a New York Fashion Week party in September 1998. He was supposed to be meeting a different supermodel that night, but spotted Melania sitting next to her and told the introducer to forget it. They dated for five years before getting engaged. His pitch for why it worked: "We literally have never had an argument or forget about the word fight. We never even had an argument. We just are very compatible." Melania describes the same dynamic from her side. She doesn't try to pull him away from his work ("Saturdays, Sundays, he's playing golf, he's working all the time") and she doesn't see that as a problem. "It's his passion. He loves it. It doesn't bother me. I don't want to change him. I don't want to say, come home and be with me. I want to give him a space. And I think that's very important in the relationship."

History Nerd

110,443 görüntüleme • 5 gün önce