How tf can media as in shows and movies, if I dare define them as art, not be political? Lol. Finance bros like this is exactly why the entertainment industry is in shambles. This is fascinating to listen to 😂
@chronicledbyclaire23 күн бұрын
Can’t wait to follow along!
@webdecoded23 күн бұрын
I can relate to so many things in this video! Happy you are chasing your dreams and excited to follow along your journey!!
@user-ec7cm6ro5o23 күн бұрын
I’m so impressed that you believe in yourself. That’s a victory in itself. My parents and teachers instilled that into me. My mom was a high school graduate and she believed in me. That’s how I got into Harvard.
@user-ec7cm6ro5o24 күн бұрын
I wish you the best. Attractive Asian women are at the top of the pyramid in the Ivy League. I don’t know if anyone ever explained that to you. It comes down to who you want your lifelong friends and associates to be. Years after graduation I took a job at a software startup. In less than ten years with fewer than 100 employees the company went public. I had a free apartment with all utilities paid, stock and excellent pay. I had zero software experience, but my Ivy League connections got me the job. Over half of the professional positions were filled with Ivy League and Rice graduates who learned quickly and were goal focused. Our clients were large, successful Fortune 500 corporations who were ecstatic about our products and our work ethic. Jeff Bezos, Warren Buffet, Bill Gates, Robert F Smith and the list goes on and on. If you want “The Sky Is the Limit” then go Ivy. If you can only think a couple steps ahead and you operate out of fear such as what if I run out of money ? then definitely take the short term solution. It just depends how you want to live your own life. Once again best wishes and of course there’s always graduate school.
@karthikudt_202424 күн бұрын
If I were a founder of a sportswear startup, I will not be busy making youtube videos to be honest but focus on the business instead! Its no joke to build a company. These people are crazy!
@Sam-vy5tc25 күн бұрын
I'm so excited for you. I hope that one day Court & Crew does become synonymous with pickleball just as the other companies are in their field. Best of Luck! :)
@yugiringus463025 күн бұрын
this video is beautiful. wishing you all the best in your future endeavours and i hope you reach all your goals!!
@moon-yu1bn25 күн бұрын
❤❤❤❤❤
@mdrahmanlutfar25 күн бұрын
Congrats
@KeianaByfield25 күн бұрын
Very excited to follow along your journey!!
@arshadhassen493226 күн бұрын
I'm overjoyed that I came across this as I'm at a similar point in my life too. Really looking forward to this journey!
@heytheretre26 күн бұрын
Congrats on being official! Excited to see your journey and hope it goes as smoothly as possible!
@jesstr26 күн бұрын
related so much to your video. going through something similar myself. can't wait to watch you bring your ideas to life. thanks for sharing ♡
@maggizine26 күн бұрын
thank you! Excited for you too
@CyberMew26 күн бұрын
Good luck!!!!
@emmmila26 күн бұрын
Wow I resonated so much with the beginning of this video
@kevinrotich348728 күн бұрын
Am really glad this popped on my recommendation, Am thrilled to see you through your new journey. Keep innovating, keep pushing through.
@maggizine28 күн бұрын
thank you!
@thumai7621Ай бұрын
Thank you for your deep insight!
@miyakegaijinАй бұрын
My daughter’s friend is at ASU. My daughter considered her to be one of the smartest students in her college prep private school but her college prospects got derailed because during HS, she took a year off to travel around the US in an RV with her family. Colleges were not thrilled with her RV camping HS gap year. She is a Physics major at ASU and from my understanding, ASU has an extreme kick ass Physics program. I bet most of her high school classmates that went to name brand schools would crumble if they tried studying physics at ASU. I would not be surprised that when she graduates and applies for jobs she will be on an even playing field with her peers who attended name brand universities.
@millerfamilytrees2 ай бұрын
Honestly, I know someone who went to Harvard and us regulars are always pointing it out and I think she just gets embarrassed.
@bodhi83462 ай бұрын
"promo sm" 🌈
@manuelsteele77552 ай бұрын
This is an excellent video. I wish someone had made a video like this long ago in 1986 when I was a HS senior. At the time, I was obsessed with my dream school, the U. of Notre Dame. The problem was that I was from rural AZ on an Indian Reservation. The public schools in rural areas are often of low quality with little or no exposure to AP courses. I was lucky to have had AP calculus but was far behind other students in chemistry, physics, and programming. I also missed out on many courses in history and theology taught at elite prep schools like Brophy or Xavier or a good public school system in Phoenix. I burned out at Notre Dame as a sophomore and almost left. I eventually graduated and went on to earn an MS in Bioengineering at ASU. Now, in hindsight, I need to point out a common problem that occurred among hypercompetitive HS seniors of the 1980s during that "Me" decade of the Reagan Era. I attended AZ Boys State the summer of 1986 at Flagstaff. The girls went to Girls State at U of A that summer. A common theme at AZ Boys State was that many students preferred to go to an elite Ivy League school or private school out-of-state or a public university considered more "prestigious" than U of A or ASU. For example, I had one guy tell me "Screw the in-state universities, I'm going to Stanford". Others went to Harvard, Princeton, Georgetown, Northwestern, Cal Tech, West Point, etc. ASU and U of A were considered "safety" schools if one at Boys State could not get financial aid or wound up on the waiting-list or rejected at the Ivy League. To me, that was all wrong in hindsight. I think students from rural AZ or low quality school districts should stay in-state and ideally start with a community college and get some work experience. Rather than going to Notre Dame in 1987, I wish I had gone to a community college and gotten two associate's degrees - the first to "catch" up to HS students from the high-quality high schools and the other to find an area of "interest". Looking back, I wish I had gotten an AA in X-Ray tech and another AA in computer science. Then I should have transferred in-state to ASU, U of A or NAU as a junior in electrical and computer engineering. Then, after about 5-6 years of undergraduate studies with some work experience, I could have gotten a more realistic view of the career for me at the time. In hindsight, I think a JD/PhD would have been a great path - a preparation for the upcoming patent wars of the 2000s for computer engineering like mobile apps, AI, etc. As for prestige, an MS or PhD from an expensive out-of-state school is much more realistic at age 23 or so after a carefully cultivated set of undergraduate years in-state. Graduate students can also get much better financial aid. Going back to Notre Dame, if I had gone in-state for 5-6 years I would have been much more prepared for a rigorous STEM graduate program at schools like Notre Dame at age 23 or 24 compared to age 18. As an older graduate student, there would have been less of a culture shock thousands of miles from home in AZ. I think a PhD at ASU in ECE then a law degree at Notre Dame would have been ideal (or vice versa). But my youth is gone. I have to make the best of it. I am now old from Generation X. The 1980s and 1990s have long ended. I am a professional software test architect. Due to rapidly changing technology, I returned to ASU in 2021 as a PhD student in Data Science which focuses on AI and ML. I am about halfway through the PhD program at ASU. I also work full-time as a software engineer. I now have six master's degrees. Here in AZ, I went to both U of A and ASU for an MS. Over in FL, I have three master's degrees from FSU, UF and UWF. I also earned my most recent MS in Data Science at St. Mary's College in Indiana which is part of the Notre Dame campus network. However, it really would have been best to stay in-state long ago back in the 1980s. At modern ASU, I feel like Rodney Dangerfield in that classic 80s college film "Back to School" - lol. In the film, he returns to college after his marriage fails and his son is about to drop out. So, he enrolls to help. But he also has work experience he sometimes shares in class that isn't taught but must be gained from real jobs. I find myself doing that sometimes - in particular for communication and technical writing or software testing. I have seen young STEM students with communication issues that would get them in trouble with HR out in the industry. Despite my very advanced age, I still want to play rec center basketball one last time before I graduate. I have been running half marathons and 10ks to get fast enough to do it. I often hike from my apartment north of 202 down Mill Ave. to the Brickyard Building or STEM buildings near Noble Science Library. I came in 2nd in my age group for a 10k last weekend near ASU West. It went along the canal on a path I had run many times back in 1993-1997. I am probably one of the last 1980s teens in graduate school at ASU - lol. I'll be the last 80s teen on the ASU Rec Center basketball court. Despite my age, ASU is big enough that no one seems to care. I still have dark hair and walk around with a backpack and iPad, so I just blend in much of the time. Thank you again for the excellent video. I wish YT had existed with this type of channel in 1986. Your type of video should have been shown to that summer program of 1986 for "Boys State" and "Girls State".
@ericcarson3422 ай бұрын
If you're considering grad school, yeah, full ride all the way (right choice). Where you go for grad school matters much more than where you went for undergrad.
@jacobtheanalyst2 ай бұрын
It depends on your major.
@angelinasvlogsrecipes2 ай бұрын
Your story your simplicity your authenticity your honesty helped me tremendously. My son yesterday got rejected from all the Ivy leagues you can imagine how he felt . And me as his mom . But he got into Notre dame full ride and Georgetown. Now he will have to decide between those two . It was a hard day for us yesterday but we still very lucky 🍀 I wish you all the best you are an admirable beautiful young woman !! Congratulations 🎊
@maggizine2 ай бұрын
Totally understand his disappointment, but he’s got two great options and ultimately it’s the person not the school that shapes your future. Wishing him all the best!
@angelinasvlogsrecipes2 ай бұрын
@@maggizine thank you 🙏 good luck to you too 🍀❤️
@ShyamKumar-zb2mw2 ай бұрын
@@angelinasvlogsrecipes - What Maggie said!!! @maggizine
@volvol12 ай бұрын
Malcolm Gladwell has pointed out that a top student going to a real competitive undergraduate college can sometime kill the ambitions of many top student when they find themselves no longer at the top of the class. I think this was in his book on David and Goliath and was called something like the big fish little pond issue. Do a Google search on this.
@fanboy13982 ай бұрын
Arizona State is basically the Yale of the West anyway. Dont @ me
@putnaik91442 ай бұрын
This statement makes absolutely no sense. They are different schools with different strenghts
@enrichedtalks2 ай бұрын
Full ride every time.
@user-xg2vy3ri6r3 ай бұрын
Excellent. Agree. Well said. Also half of many ivys including Harvard are legacy and DEI. Most know big name institutions are diluted today as indoctrination centers more than historically places of excellence. Many employees today complain about entitlement of people in your generation esp coming from bigger new places.
@user-og2bl5cq6f3 ай бұрын
You look beautiful in any dress. ❤❤❤
@alaynacannady15043 ай бұрын
Story??? And those are so beautiful ❤❤
@lepomjames3 ай бұрын
I GOT A CALL OUT BABY
@tutujohnson73563 ай бұрын
Its better flex to be debt free than going to IVY with debt thats all I have to say
@sandychen42763 ай бұрын
Really enjoy this episode and the guest. Love that the conversation is just so chill but get to the point! Would love to see more of these content ❤
@maggizine3 ай бұрын
Thanks a ton! Will be releasing more episodes soon!
@MihirShah-ke9gt3 ай бұрын
Damn, felt like he called me out when he mentioned the backpacking gap-year just to realize you gotta work on yourself
@maggizine3 ай бұрын
Oop
@tinytina84513 ай бұрын
I really liked this conversation! The both of you seem so personable :) Great work!
@maggizine3 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it!
@INTJ_Fund3 ай бұрын
Great video Maggie! Looking forward to watching more of these!
@maggizine3 ай бұрын
Thanks Kenneth!
@RandySchoonover-fs3ug6 ай бұрын
Hi
@MrBjorn66 ай бұрын
This was very interesting and very enlightening!
@MarcoPolo-hn8or7 ай бұрын
You made a wise decision in my opinion.
@earb42497 ай бұрын
Awesome interview, can relate to so many points. Great to hear people going through all this deep reasoning, across the globe! Keep this up!
@gavinrau68747 ай бұрын
Great interview! Kunal had an interesting perspective.
@maggizine7 ай бұрын
Yes 100%. He’s super thoughtful about everything he’s done
@confuzedperson88387 ай бұрын
this video is incredibly helpful as i’m in the same position right now in highschool! i think we have a very similar mindset and perspective, especially with the making friends part. you’re so smart. definitely taking this into consideration. thanks!
@edhcb93597 ай бұрын
Faced the same decision with my son about six years ago. We took the free ride and he still got into a T10 medical school. We are using the money we saved from his undergrad to fund his medical school debt free.
@maggizine7 ай бұрын
That's incredible! Congratulations!
@holzfallen3 ай бұрын
Please talk more about this! I'm a parent in a similar position.
@edhcb93593 ай бұрын
@@holzfallen What would you like to know?
@nightsky7332 ай бұрын
I wish ur son all the best
@ShyamKumar-zb2mw2 ай бұрын
Bravo!!! The way to go. My cousin took a similar route to medical school. My niece made a similar choice in favor of a full ride at an in-state school and an expensive out of state option.
@malialmaooo7 ай бұрын
this is really inspiring honestly. i am a california native and a junior in high school but i am concurrently enrolled in community college to cut costs of my undergrad. i am also planning on applying to all csu’s because the in state tuition is very cheap in comparison to out of state. like you, i also plan on continuing to a doctorate program. i think there is a large stigma against state schools, which in my opinion is stupid. i feel like a degree is a degree; yes, there is prestige behind some school names, but at the end of the day if i do not have the financial resources to go to certain schools, then it’s not in the books for me.
@ShyamKumar-zb2mw2 ай бұрын
With that kind of maturity, pragmatism and financial prudence as such a young age - I'll bet that you will go very far. Bravo!!! And I encourage you to keep it up. You will do fine. And as a hiring manager - I will hire a pragmatist like you in a heartbeat. ♥
@StorytellingHeadshots7 ай бұрын
Wow! This girl’s logic is off the charts! I can see why she was accepted to Yale. And she seems even smarter for not going. I am floored and inspired by her self-possession and self-awareness. Frankly, because this mental fortitude is very very rare… She is right: if it’s gold; it will shine. She doesn’t need the ‘shine’ of a name school… her personal strength and intelligence absolutely shines its on its own!
@korswe8 ай бұрын
Full ride all the way cos an undergraduate degree is just a base camp to get to where you want to get to. Graduate school is where you get to spread your wings.
@noahpierre-louis4937 ай бұрын
depends highly on your major tho
@ShyamKumar-zb2mw2 ай бұрын
Totally agree @korswe.
@ShyamKumar-zb2mw2 ай бұрын
@@noahpierre-louis493 - No!! There is no "it depends" or other such equivocation of this front - at least from my POV. I am curious about the case where it may be so, and I am all ears for that. Thanks!!!
@user-sn2ob7ms9lАй бұрын
@@ShyamKumar-zb2mw yea it does depend? not every major requires or needs a master. for me personally i want to go to law school so "grad school" is more important for me then undergrad, but for majors such as comp sci, finance, maths, etc, you don't really need to do a masters...
@qazmko228 ай бұрын
In terms of 'A' students, when they go to college it doesn’t matter where they go... some studies have shown that they go further then Ivy League students.. I would speculate its their drive and prospective that helps them along. As long as you are studying something worthwhile (medicine, engineering, accounting) it doesn't matter where you go.