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It’s never enjoyable to be rejected from a job. But, for one Reddit user, a possible employer has rubbed salt in the wound ...
A job candidate says she briefly turned a rejection around when she sent over a meme in place of a standard “thank you” email. Carly Swanson, a resident of Virginia, claims she applied to a ...
This isn’t the first time that this specific meme has been sent to hiring teams in an attempt to nab a job. In March, @samantha_jane_ shared a TikTok video of an email that her sister Hannah ...
A viral rejection email accidentally included AI instructions—revealing how some companies really reject job seekers.
A woman on TikTok secured a job interview after sending a meme to her initial rejection email out of desperation.
In a now-viral video on TikTok, a woman said she landed a job interview by sending a meme as her response to the initial rejection email.
A woman went viral on TikTok after sharing how she landed a job interview after sending a meme to the company in response to her rejection letter.
But regardless of whether or not John’s Cornell rejection was deserved (let’s be real, it probably was), we can only hope the teen managed to get over it. To paraphrase @asherw01fe, getting ...
Woman got inspired by Gen Z and sent a popular meme as a follow up to a job rejection mail. Here's what happened with her.
A job applicant who had nothing else to lose responded to a rejection letter with a hilarious meme — and ended up scoring an interview with the company. TikTok user @swedishswan shared her story ...
Job applicant Carly Swanson replied to an application rejection she received with the popular "Y tho" meme, and it reportedly prompted an invitation for an interview.
A woman revealed how she landed a job interview by sending a meme to the hiring manager, who had initially rejected her from the position.