I don’t know. If I were young and single and fresh out of college with a six figure job offer at a San Francisco company, I would consider this, at least until I got my footing.
Sure, it might suck, but I could put up with a lot of suck in order to be able to pocket that much spare cash.
I’m very far away from “young,” but I was once. Even in my early 20s, this would have seemed terrible. Sure, you have access to an interesting city, but you have no space for anything you can call your own. Even a rented studio anywhere else gives you somewhere to have a home you can call yours.
Six figures only sound good if you don’t know what the costs of living are.
Essentially, you don’t have much buying power so you could move somewhere else, earn less and still have a higher standard of living.
Unless you’re one of the income millionaires or old money, the Valley is not a fun place. It’s fueled by the ambition of young people who throw a few years away hoping for their gold rush.
It also depends on what you like to do for fun. It’s cheaper for me to go to Universal every weekend with my pass than to fly to Universal every weekend.
All the hate LA gets is warranted but I can also just do whatever I want whenever I want without much planning and I don’t make that much money, yet at least. Lots of opportunities here, some of which have gotten me to where I am and I only have a HS degree making a smidge less than someone with a bachelor’s.
Most of the people living in these pods are startup founders, so it makes sense for them to live in shitty pods next to their potential clients and investors.
If you’re living in a place where renting a pod with less space than a prison cell costs nearly as much as a studio somewhere else… move.
I don’t know. If I were young and single and fresh out of college with a six figure job offer at a San Francisco company, I would consider this, at least until I got my footing.
Sure, it might suck, but I could put up with a lot of suck in order to be able to pocket that much spare cash.
I’m very far away from “young,” but I was once. Even in my early 20s, this would have seemed terrible. Sure, you have access to an interesting city, but you have no space for anything you can call your own. Even a rented studio anywhere else gives you somewhere to have a home you can call yours.
The post you are responding to is not judging the people that resort to this, but the housing market that leads to this. At least, I hope.
The final word of their post was move.
My response addresses a reason why you would choose not to move.
Besides, I have family that live in a low cost of living area and the downside of living in a low cost of living area is that the jobs aren’t there.
Sure, a family of three can live on 45,000 a year in rural Alabama, with a stay-at-home parent, but it’s not going to be a fun time.
Six figures only sound good if you don’t know what the costs of living are.
Essentially, you don’t have much buying power so you could move somewhere else, earn less and still have a higher standard of living.
Unless you’re one of the income millionaires or old money, the Valley is not a fun place. It’s fueled by the ambition of young people who throw a few years away hoping for their gold rush.
It also depends on what you like to do for fun. It’s cheaper for me to go to Universal every weekend with my pass than to fly to Universal every weekend.
All the hate LA gets is warranted but I can also just do whatever I want whenever I want without much planning and I don’t make that much money, yet at least. Lots of opportunities here, some of which have gotten me to where I am and I only have a HS degree making a smidge less than someone with a bachelor’s.
Weirdly these people are probably making 100-300k salaries.
I feel like the main draw is location.
Most of the people living in these pods are startup founders, so it makes sense for them to live in shitty pods next to their potential clients and investors.