Gen Z Plumbers and Construction Workers Are Making #BlueCollar Cool

cawacko

Well-known member
Social media is a different world. On one hand we mock these folks for not going to college but at today's price points it's not surprising that it's less enticing for some kids. Everyone has their own path so kudos for those kids who choose to go this route if they feel it best for them.



Gen Z Plumbers and Construction Workers Are Making #BlueCollar Cool

Young social-media stars earn more from TikTok than from their day jobs; ‘You don’t have to get your bachelor’s to be happy.’


Most of the time, when Lexis Czumak-Abreu is stripping cables in a ditch or troubleshooting a sparking outlet, the size of her fan base doesn’t mean too much to her.

But then she’ll be strolling through the airport in Las Vegas, and a stranger will call her name.

Some 2.2 million people on TikTok, Instagram and Facebook watch Czumak-Abreu do her work as an electrician in Cornwall, N.Y. Maybe you are one of them. Did you see her recently atop a bucket truck, adding utility outlets to power poles? Or fixing an electric panel in a water-damaged basement?

“You feel just like a normal person, until you actually get confronted by people and you’re like, oh, my goodness, this is real, people know who I am,” says Czumak-Abreu, the 27-year-old daughter and granddaughter of electricians. Since she began posting videos from her job in 2022, she’s gotten thousands of messages from viewers saying she sparked their interest in trade work.

Czumak-Abreu’s path is one that more young Americans are considering. Skepticism about the cost and value of four-year degrees is growing, and enrollment in vocational programs has risen as young people pursue well-paying jobs that don’t require desks or so much debt, and come with the potential to be your own boss.

The number of students enrolled in vocational-focused community colleges rose 16% last year to its highest level since the National Student Clearinghouse began tracking such data in 2018.

Fostering that appeal are workers like Czumak-Abreu, whose short videos have racked up millions of views. Some skilled-trades influencers are so popular, they’re making more money as influencers than they do plumbing or wiring. Homeowners who’ve taken to watching do-it-yourself YouTube tutorials and attempting their own sink or ceiling-fan installations are also tuning in.

Czumak-Abreu makes $200,000 a year from clicks and brand deals with companies like Klein Tools and Carhartt, though she continues to work, often seven days a week.

“I want my company to understand I’m a reliable employee,” she says, adding that if she cut her hours, she’d miss out on the commercial jobs that form the dramatic backbone of her feed, with their oversize coils of cable, outdoor trenches and heavy machinery.

Gen Z career aspirations​

In 2021, Sacramento, Calif.-based plumber Evan Berns, 23, posted a video to TikTok of himself removing a water heater with a dolly. By the time he woke the next morning, it had 470,000 views, spurring him to do more.

Berns, who works for Motherflushers, a plumbing company, says he’s found ways to make plumbing more visually appealing: “I speed it up, I cut out all the boring parts so it’s real exciting and fast-paced, and add cool music.”

Simple curiosity about other peoples’ work lives drives lots of clicks, especially when videos feature things viewers ordinarily don’t see—the inside of a house’s walls, say—or satisfy curiosity about how the world works, says Jim Louderback, until recently CEO of VidCon, an annual conference for influencers.

On TikTok, the hashtag #bluecollar drew 500k posts in the first four months of this year, up 64% over the same period in 2023. Posts hashtagged #electrician increased 77% over the same time, with #constructionworker and #mechanic posting similar jumps, TikTok says.

Blowing up stereotypes​

Many posts tout the wages blue-collar workers can make. Pay for new hires in construction now outstrips pay for new hires in professional services like accounting, according to ADP data. Skilled-trade influencers say they’re also trying to combat decades of stereotypes in which practitioners were seen as grease monkeys or stuck in low-end careers.

“There’s this idea that most welders are kinda dirty, like at a muffler shop,” says Chloe Hudson, 31, who welds for Joe Gibbs Manufacturing Solutions in Huntersville, N.C. Welding delicate skeins of metal into airships, as she does, bears no relation to the stereotypes, she adds.

Hudson, whose Instagram posts show her welding with full makeup and mascara, describes her workplace as “the Taj Mahal of welding.” Her goal: Show women it’s OK to be feminine in a male-dominated industry.

“We’ve made it more appealing. We have nice vehicles. We own homes, we are successful,” says Matt Panella, 27, a carpenter who drives a Tesla, and whose detailed how-to videos and time-lapses of him erecting house frames in central California have earned him a strong YouTube following, along with more than $200,000 in annual sponsor income from companies such as 3M.

Projects hit snags, including poor weather or permitting delays, slowing down work and making it harder to film the videos they’ve promised their sponsors, influencers say.

“I can’t just go film content if nothing’s happening,” Panella says.

New recruits take note​

When it works, social media can drive business, and even inspire new recruits. In Parker, Colo., John Coffman has owned a construction company for decades. After his son Jarod, 22, partly inspired by Panella, began working as a framer and posting videos on social media, prospective workers started approaching the Coffmans out of the blue—even from other states.

“Kids aren’t going to job sites saying, hey, man, can you hire me? They’re getting to know it on social media, giving them the idea that this is a legit possibility,” says the elder Coffman.

Pfister Faucets spent $2 million to produce a YouTube documentary series, now in its fifth season, highlighting the lives of plumbers around the country.

It boasts its own theme song by country singer Craig Morgan. (“Some days I’m working before the sun kisses the sky/Watch the world wake up from the seat of my truck/I’m out here earning my piece of the pie/A good honest buck/No, it ain’t luck.”) The shows, aimed at getting people interested in plumbing as a career, have racked up 13 million views, with half coming from people ages 34 and younger.

“Without plumbers, our product doesn’t get installed,” says Spencer Brown, Pfister’s senior director of sales.

Those voices matter, says Madison Conrad, 26, a technician at manufacturer Roush Yates Engines. As a teenager, Conrad recalls watching YouTube videos featuring female Nascar mechanics and showing them to her mom as proof her career goals were possible.

Every job has downsides​

Work in the trades isn’t easy on the body, says David Coleman, 34, a handyman specializing in mechanical work who underwent back surgery after years of crawling under sinks and into crawl spaces. Social media, he adds, is harder in other ways.

During the pandemic, he made training videos to help co-workers who were new on the job, then posted some online at a colleague’s suggestion. Four years later, he says he earns around $500,000 in annual income from social media, including an Amazon marketing program for influencers who make videos for the retailer’s platform.

The life sounds glamorous, but he grew addicted to refreshing his feed. His fixation on going viral took him away from the things he loved, he says, like fishing and time with family.

“I didn’t have any motivation to do anything that wouldn’t generate likes, follows and dollar signs. There was an emptiness to it,” he says.

Coleman still posts but less frequently than before, and says he expects his income to take a hit. He’s found respite in church—and a renewed focus on why he started posting in the first place.

“You don’t have to get your bachelor’s to be happy or successful,” he says. “Social media is not something I’d recommend to a lot of people, but there are definitely a lot of advantages to being in the trades.”

 
For the most part, it is how much you hustle that decides how well you do in life. Education certainly helps, whether that education is at a university, a trade school, or even self education. There are very few educations that will give you a guaranteed good income.
 
For the most part, it is how much you hustle that decides how well you do in life. Education certainly helps, whether that education is at a university, a trade school, or even self education. There are very few educations that will give you a guaranteed good income.
Perhaps you should try a trade school, Walter.

This would allow you to move from your double wide trailer, Walter.

Poor, poor Walter.
 
There’s an element of generalization here but yes, hustling does play a big role. As we hear in my business if you’re sitting around waiting for the phone to ring you’re not going to make it. Be out there aggressive, hustling and making things happen.

Fancy degrees and elite school do benefit people in terms of relationships they make and the doors it opens. But at the end of the day if you don’t work your *ss off (and grind or hustle) then it only takes you so far. And that grind/hustle is why we see people coming from non privileged backgrounds doing amazing things.
 
Perhaps you should try a trade school, Walter.
I doubt a trade school would get me more money than I have now. Honestly, I have more than enough to stop working and make it to 59.5. That is the point the Roth kicks in and I do not need to work another day in my life.
 
I doubt a trade school would get me more money than I have now. Honestly, I have more than enough to stop working and make it to 59.5. That is the point the Roth kicks in and I do not need to work another day in my life.
Retired at 58, Walter…my double “E” from Vandy and the investment in my son’s business were the enablers.

Were you a plumber, truck driver…all work is inspirational but not aspirational, Walter.
 
For the most part, it is how much you hustle that decides how well you do in life. Education certainly helps, whether that education is at a university, a trade school, or even self education. There are very few educations that will give you a guaranteed good income.
Bullshit.
 
Retired at 58, Walter…my double “E” from Vandy and the investment in my son’s business were the enablers.

Were you a plumber, truck driver…all work is inspirational but not aspirational, Walter.
I could retire now, but at 59.5 the tax free retirement funds start coming.

I am a Computer Engineer, which is a subset of Electrical Engineering. I work with FPGA's at the moment.

Hey, a word to the wise, that you will ignore: diversify your retirement investments. If it is invested in your son's business, and it goes belly up, you are in trouble. You might consider a broad indexed fund.
 
If you sit at home, waiting for work to come your way, that is unlikely to be successful.... Unless you are a nepo baby.
 
I could retire now, but at 59.5 the tax free retirement funds start coming.

I am a Computer Engineer, which is a subset of Electrical Engineering. I work with FPGA's at the moment.

Hey, a word to the wise, that you will ignore: diversify your retirement investments. If it is invested in your son's business, and it goes belly up, you are in trouble. You might consider a broad indexed fund.
The business was sold for 27.5 million dollars, Walter. I have an investment guru that I pay 10K per year. He guarantees a minimum of 10% and has not missed that mark. We are invested about 60-40 in stocks and the bond market. Some in real estate.

My son retired at 42, became bored and started another company…he provided his own seed money this time.

Education and contacts, Walter. Long hours for a while, then leisure.
 
So you think working hard and smart has no part in success? Wow, I thought saying you have to hustle to be successful as a tradesperson would be uncontroversial. I did not realize you were so pro-laziness.
yeah, blame the victims of Biden's bad economy for not "hustling". the boomers raped the world, and now you blame the victims. your own grandchildren.
 
So you think working hard and smart has no part in success? Wow, I thought saying you have to hustle to be successful as a tradesperson would be uncontroversial. I did not realize you were so pro-laziness.
Well, lets take a look at the current state of affairs with Brandon's government in charge.
I can get six year degree with a major in gender studies a minor in unicorn farts, get all my six figure loans forgiven, dye my hair red and purple and call myself LGBTQIA+XYZ LMNOP and guarantee myself a DEI job with a WOKE corporation, and according to Heels Up Harris, pick up a $25, 000 bonus from the government so I can buy a house.
OR,
Head to Minnesota, join a clan of Somalis and steal upwards of $150,000,000 in a daycare scandal, followed by a $250,000,000 Feeding Our Future theft, and then the China Virus critical worker scam netting millions, all while the government in Minnesota has their collective heads up their ass and just keeps writing checks.
OR,
Just fly to a city in Mexico, walk back into this country, be given a cell phone, put on a plane to a major city where I will be housed in a hotel, be fed three meals per day, have the right to steal and rob, and then complain about my treatment.
OR,
Just wait for another cop to shoot a black person with a half dozen warrants who refuses to get the fuck out of his car when an officer of the law tries to get him to do so for a full 15 minutes and drives away with the officer hanging out the window.
Then it becomes full on riot and loot season and everything is free.

Who says this ain't a great country?
 
FFS, not everything in this country revolves around the President. The rise in the cost of college has been happening for decades. Kids seeing that taking on large sums of debt and getting jobs that don't pay enough to get them out of debt for (sometimes) decades and going other routes didn't just start yesterday.

And the fundamentals of what makes people successful or allow them to live comfortably aren't based on who is President. This article isn't about Trump or Biden.
 
Well, lets take a look at the current state of affairs with Brandon's government in charge.
I can get six year degree with a major in gender studies a minor in unicorn farts, get all my six figure loans forgiven, dye my hair red and purple and call myself LGBTQIA+XYZ LMNOP and guarantee myself a DEI job with a WOKE corporation, and according to Heels Up Harris, pick up a $25, 000 bonus from the government so I can buy a house.
OR,
Head to Minnesota, join a clan of Somalis and steal upwards of $150,000,000 in a daycare scandal, followed by a $250,000,000 Feeding Our Future theft, and then the China Virus critical worker scam netting millions, all while the government in Minnesota has their collective heads up their ass and just keeps writing checks.
OR,
Just fly to a city in Mexico, walk back into this country, be given a cell phone, put on a plane to a major city where I will be housed in a hotel, be fed three meals per day, have the right to steal and rob, and then complain about my treatment.
OR,
Just wait for another cop to shoot a black person with a half dozen warrants who refuses to get the fuck out of his car when an officer of the law tries to get him to do so for a full 15 minutes and drives away with the officer hanging out the window.
Then it becomes full on riot and loot season and everything is free.

Who says this ain't a great country?
A great synopsis of what the left has done to America.

Retribution…Trump says his success will be his retribution but his success may mean a success at retribution.
 
The business was sold for 27.5 million dollars, Walter. I have an investment guru that I pay 10K per year. He guarantees a minimum of 10% and has not missed that mark. We are invested about 60-40 in stocks and the bond market. Some in real estate.

My son retired at 42, became bored and started another company…he provided his own seed money this time.

Education and contacts, Walter. Long hours for a while, then leisure.
You do what you want.
 
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