The girl boss cant come to the phone right now why?
Because shes dead and in her place the Gen Z Lazy Girl Worker has been born.
The early 2000s were all about female hustle culture.
Women were ambitious, unapologetic and dedicated to their work at any cost.
Millennials were obsessed by titles, status and racing to the top.
Things were so intense that a book titled #GirlBoss by business woman Sophia Amoruso became a bestseller.
It was a time of uncomfortable high heels, very tight skinny jeans and owning three phones or whatever the metaphorical equivalent of that was.
Hustling was the other main feature non-stop hustle until youre burnt out and begging to book into a Bryon Bay retreat culture.
Thanks to Gen Z the culture has shifted and the Lazy Girl trend has emerged as an antidote to girl boss hustle culture.
Young women dont want to smash the glass ceiling.
They want to be happy and wear baggy jeans while doing less.
Lazy is a confronting term but at its core the Lazy Girl work trend just means that some young women have traded in ambition for work/life balance.
They arent staying back to meet impossible deadlines, instead they are going for walks for their mental health.
Gen Z women have chosen balance over career progression.
They arent interested in going above and beyond for their employers but they are prepared to do exactly what they were hired for.
They meet expectations but they dont exceed them.
#stitch with @coolseandotcom the traditional way of describing a good job is not actually how you get a raise in 2023. The top performing coworker may not always get the biggest raise out of the group. Relationships with your boss and office politics is very nuanced.here is the best way to survive your job and not get fired #toxicworkplace #9to5 #badboss
Gabrielle Judge, 26, is an American that credits herself with starting the Lazy Girl Job trend on TikTok.
The hashtag has over 14 million views now and Judge encourages women to find jobs that work for them.
I started the trend Lazy Girl Jobs, which is just a way to describe jobs with work-life balance, she told news.com.au.
So why the word lazy? Wouldnt the Bare Minimum work trend make employers less anxious?
I added lazy into the term because Lazy Girl Jobs offer so much work-life balance it should feel as if you are almost operating at a lazy state when compared to the American Hustle culture, she explained.
Its a concept that has caught on and young women are creating content on TikTok to brag about doing less at work.
I was born for a Lazy Girl office job. I get paid a bomb salary to talk to no one, take breaks whenever I want and be the office baddie, one creator shared.
This is your sign to get you a Lazy Girl job where 90 per cent of it is just copying and pasting stuff, a TikToker shared.
Another revealed the benefits of getting a Lazy Girl job and youll be relieved to know it doesnt involve you working yourself to the bone just so you have something to brag about on LinkedIn to a bunch of people you dont even know.
I have a Lazy Girl job where I sit at my desk 9-4 and post invoices in my own time and can read or watch Netflix or TikTok and get paid decently an hour, she bragged.
While another young woman mentioned that her job is basically just copy and paste and all she has to do is take five calls a day and she still earns a nice salary.
Somewhere a girl boss pioneer like Ita Buttrose is rolling her eyes.
Gen Z women arent just rejecting girl boss culture they are rallying against it.
Angelica Hunt, senior marketing lead at diversity, equity, and inclusion consultancy, The Dream Collective, explained that the trend shouldnt surprise to anyone that is paying attention to what young women want.
The Lazy Girl trend addresses an ever-growing misalignment between companies and individuals, where non-inclusive workplace cultures are no longer being accepted.
Hunt stresses that Gen Z are designing a working life that works for them and it is because theyve witnessed Millennial and Boomer burnout.
Theyve learned from their parents generation that pouring your whole life into work at the expense of all else may not be paying off as much as they once thought.
Interestingly, Hunter doesnt think the younger generation should change their thinking and start working harder.
Instead she said that pinning Gen Z as the generation that doesnt want to work is missing opportunity to understand where they are coming from, and the trend should be addressed head on.
If we address it, we create better, more inclusive, and happier workplaces where people genuinely want to be is that not beneficial for everyone?
Dr Lade Smith, president of the RCP, said: “The RCP has reached the conclusion that we are not confident in the Terminally Ill Adults Bill in its current form, and we therefore cannot support the Bill as it stands.”
The move is significant because, under the bill’s current stipulations, a panel including a psychiatrist would oversee assisted dying cases.
The RCP outlined a number of issues it had with the current bill, including: the bill not making provision for unmet needs, whether assisted suicide is classed as a treatment or not, what the psychiatrists’ specific role on the panel would be, and the increased demand the bill puts on psychiatrists.
If the college support remains withdrawn, and the bill passes, it isn’t clear what effects it may have.
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Kim Leadbeater, the MP behind the bill, has confirmed it will include a clause that means anyone who does not want to be involved in the process will not have to do so.
Supporters of the bill argue it would ease the suffering of dying people, while opponents argue it would fail to safeguard some of the most vulnerable people in society.
Image: MP Kim Leadbeater talking to Sky News
Questions over the bill
The more prominent role of a psychiatrist in the bill came about after a previous amendment.
Initially, the bill said that after two independent doctors approved an assisted dying case, it would then need to be further approved by a High Court judge.
Instead, Ms Leadbeater proposed a voluntary assisted dying commissioner that included an expert panel with a psychiatrist.
She said this was a “strength, not a weakness,” but opponents of the bill disagreed, saying removing the High Court judge “fundamentally weakens protections for the vulnerable”.
Friday’s debate was already delayed from 25 April, to give MPs more time to consider amendments.
If the bill passes on Friday, it will move to the House of Lords, where it will undergo similar legislative stages, and if it passes that too, it won’t come into effect until at least 2029, after its implementation was delayed.
A Samsung Group flag flutters in front of the company’s Seocho building in Seoul.
Sopa Images | Lightrocket | Getty Images
Samsung Electronics on Wednesday announced that it would acquire all shares of German-based FläktGroup, a leading heating and cooling solutions provider, for 1.5 billion euros ($1.68 billion) from European investment firm Triton.
Samsung said the acquisition would help it expand in the heating, ventilation and air conditioning business as the market experiences rapid growth.
“Our commitment is to continue investing in and developing the high-growth HVAC business as a key future growth engine,” said TM Roh, Acting Head of the Device eXperience (DX) Division at Samsung Electronics.
The acquisition of FläktGroup stands to bolster Samsung’s position in the HVAC market against rivals such as LG Electronics.
FläktGroup supplies heating, HVAC solutions to a wide range of buildings and facilities, notably data centers which require a high degree of stable cooling. Samsung said it anticipates sustained growth in data center demand due to the proliferation of generative AI, robotics, autonomous driving and other technologies.
FläktGroup has more 60 major customers, including leading pharmaceutical companies, biotech and food and beverage firms, and gigafactories, according to Samsung’s statement.
Samsung said in March that its HVAC solutions had achieved double-digit annual revenue growth over the past five years, and that the company aimed to boost revenue by more than 30% in 2025.
Sean “Diddy” Combs’s former girlfriend Cassie has told his sex-trafficking trial that “freak offs” with male escorts became like a job, as the music mogul allegedly abused and sexually exploited her for years.
The musician and model, whose full name is Casandra Ventura, did not look at Combs as she took to the witness stand in court in Manhattan, New York.
Over about six hours, the 38-year-old, who is eight months pregnant with her third child with husband Alex Fine, at times became emotional as she alleged she was degraded by her former partner during their 10-year on-off relationship.
Image: Combs made a heart gesture to family members in court. Pic: Reuters/Jane Rosenberg
Image: Ms Ventura became emotional at times. Pic: Reuters/Jane Rosenberg
Combs, 55, has pleaded not guilty and strenuously denied allegations of sexual abuse. His lawyers argue that although he could be violent, he never veered into sex trafficking and racketeering, and that all sexual encounters were consensual.
Ms Ventura, who is the central witness in the prosecutors’ case, began by telling the jury how Combs was violent to her over the course of their relationship, giving her black eyes and bruises.
The hip-hop star became increasingly controlling, she said, and was allegedly abusive over the smallest perceived slights. “You make the wrong face, and the next thing I knew I was getting hit in the face,” she said.
Ms Ventura was 19 when she signed to his label, Bad Boy, she said, and 22 when, during the first year of their relationship, Combs first proposed a “freak off” – a sexual encounter with a third party. Her “stomach churned”, she said, and she was “confused, nervous, but also loved him very much” and wanted to please him. She described him as “charming” but “polarising”.
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Combs’s family arrive for Day 2
‘There was no space to do anything else’
Throughout her time on the stand, she gave graphic details of these drug and drink-fuelled encounters with male escorts, saying Combs would watch and masturbate, and often record the encounters and watch the videos back.
They could last for hours or even days, she said – telling the court the longest went on for four days. They ended up becoming weekly events and took priority over her music career, jurors heard. While she had hits with singles Me & U and Long Way 2 Go in 2006, and signed a 10-album deal with Bad Boy, jurors heard she only released one album.
“Freak-offs became a job where there was no space to do anything else but to recover and just try to feel normal again,” Ms Ventura said. Each time, she added, she had to recuperate from lack of sleep, alcohol, drugs “and other substances”, and “having sex with a stranger for days”.
Image: Combs and Cassie pictured in 2017. Pic: zz/XPX/STAR MAX/IPx 2017/AP
Alleged violence detailed in court
Ms Ventura told the court she began feeling as if she could not say no to Combs’s demands because “there were blackmail materials to make me feel like if I didn’t do it, it would be held over my head in that way or these things would become public”.
She was also worried about potential violence, she told the court. When asked in court how frequently Combs became violent with her, Ms Ventura responded: “Too frequently.”
The rapper “would mash me in the head, knock me over, drag me, kick me”, she said. “Stomp me in the head if I was down”.
Ms Ventura also told the court that Combs kept cash, jewellery, guns and “sometimes tapes from cameras” in safes at several properties in New York, Los Angeles, Miami and Alpine, New Jersey.
“The guns came out here and there. I always felt it was a little bit of a scare tactic,” she told the court.
Image: This footage from 2016 was made public in 2024. Pic: CNN via AP
Towards the end of her first day of evidence, a surveillance video made public last year, which showed Combs allegedly beating Ms Ventura at a Los Angeles hotel in 2016, was played to jurors in court for a second time.
“How many times has he thrown you like that before?” prosecutor Emily Johnson asked her.
“Too many to count,” Ms Ventura replied.
On Monday, prosecutors in their opening statement told the court that while Combs’s public persona was that of a “charismatic” hip-hop mogul, behind the scenes he was violent and abusive.
His defence lawyers argued that the case is really about nothing more than the rapper’s sexual preferences, which they said should remain private, and do not make him a sex trafficker.
The trial is to last about eight weeks.
Ms Ventura is set to continue giving evidence on Wednesday.