Mike Roe
Mike Rowe is a television host and narrator who started his career as a narrator and host for things like CD-ROM trivia before breaking into the TV game. He picked up some local TV gigs where he started narrating a segment called “Somebody’s Gotta Do It.” It was a popular concept, and Rowe would later turn the idea into the longer form series you may know as Dirty Jobs. While Rowe was proud of the show when it hit the TV schedule, he opened up about how it actually took quite a few years before the show blew up – and for his career to see an uptick in the process. In a wide-ranging interview, Mike Rowe got candid about the “prophetic” vision he had that led to a career in becoming an expert on the skills gap in the States. He said that he’d seen companies from the seventies on take hands-on work out of schools, creating what he calls a “giant gap in the workforce.” The popular interview host got right to the point about what he saw happening in the U.S. that led to the creation of his hit Discovery show, which began airing in 2003 and later become one of the best shows on Max and other streamers. We created a giant gap in the workforce between blue and white collar jobs. White were clearly ascendant. Blue was clearly subordinate. And the rift in our workforce and the labor shortage that we’re seeing today, in my estimation, can be walked right back to the moment we decided to take shop class out of high school. And so many things followed that as a result. In effect, he clarified to Reason Magazine he’d had the vision to land on the path he did. And when things started going south with the economy following the housing crisis in ‘Dirty Jobs was already there to show people that the “pr campaign” for college may have stretched us thin in other ways. Not that he seemingly didn’t enjoy crawling “through sewers” and teaching audiences about other interesting things many people in society might never have thought about otherwise. And it propelled his career forward in ways he himself may never have imagined. One of those things in a completely tertiary way was a show called Dirty Jobs, which basically gave me permission to crawl on the ankle of the States. White were clearly ascendant. Blue was clearly subordinate. And the rift in our workforce and the labor shortage that we’re seeing today, in my estimation, can be walked right back to the moment we decided to take shop class out of high school. In effect, he clarified to Reason Magazine he'd had the vision to land on the path he did. And when things started going south with the economy following the housing crisis in ‘Dirty Jobs was already there to show people that the “pr campaign” for college may have stretched us thin in other ways. We created a giant gap in the workforce between blue and white collar jobs. White were clearly ascendant. Blue was clearly subordinate. And the rift in our workforce and the labor shortage that we're seeing today, in my estimation, can be walked right back to the moment we decided to take shop class out of high school. In effect, he clarified to Reason Magazine he'd had the vision to land on the path he did. And when things started going south with the economy following the housing crisis in ‘Dirty Jobs was already there to show people that the “pr campaign” for college may have stretched us thin in other ways. We created a giant gap in the workforce between blue and white collar jobs. White were clearly ascendant. Blue was clearly subordinate. And the rift in our workforce and the labor shortage that we're seeing today, in my estimation, can be walked right back to the moment we decided to take shop class out of high school. In effect, he clarified to Reason Magazine he'd had the vision to land on the path he did. And when things started going south with the economy following the housing crisis in ‘Dirty Jobs was already there to show people that the “pr campaign” for college may have stretched us thin in other ways. I personally can remember the first Dirty Jobs episode I ever watched, in which Mike Rowe taught me that the job doesn't end when construction companies are finished working. In that episode, he shared how road crews pour concrete and over time that hardens in the drum. Then a “chipper” has to go in and clear the concrete out of that drum so work can begin anew. Call me naive, maybe, but I'd never even thought about that concept as a job before. I think there are a lot of people who saw an entirely different side of the world after Dirty Jobs broke big, and it's certainly a series that has had a lasting impact in a lot of ways, shapes and forms.
42%
The Daily's Verdict
This author has a poor reputation for journalistic standards and is not considered a reliable news source.
Bias
30%
Examples:
- One fan bid $9,000 in order to get his hands on an autographed pair of the sneakers
- The articles provided are mostly factual and unbiased, but they do contain some subtle biases in favor of Trump and his products. For example, the title of the first article implies that Trump was booed at Sneaker Con when he actually received a mixed response.
- The gold shoes are designed with an American flag around the ankle
- Trump spoke about how he wanted to do this for 12 years and that it would be a big success
Conflicts of Interest
50%
Examples:
- One fan bid $9,000 in order to get his hands on an autographed pair of the sneakers
- The gold shoes are designed with an American flag around the ankle
- Trump spoke about how he wanted to do this for 12 years and that it would be a big success
Contradictions
50%
Examples:
- One fan bid $9,000 in order to get his hands on an autographed pair of the sneakers
- The gold shoes are designed with an American flag around the ankle
- Trump spoke about how he wanted to do this for 12 years and that it would be a big success
Deceptions
40%
Examples:
- One fan bid $9,000 in order to get his hands on an autographed pair of the sneakers
- The gold shoes are designed with an American flag around the ankle
- The title implies that Trump was booed at Sneaker Con when he actually received a mixed response.
- Trump spoke about how he wanted to do this for 12 years and that it would be a big success
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