The Fake Job Epidemic Video Review
ChatGPT & Benji AsperheimThu Aug 7th, 2025

The Fake Job Epidemic Video Review

I recently watched this exceptional video on YouTube by @AccordingtoNicole titled “The Fake Job Epidemic Designed To Waste Your Time”.

Please check out Nicole’s video, and support her channnel.

Aug 13th, 2025 UPDATE: ColdFusion also uploaded a video on this very topic to YouTube titled ‘Gen Z Graduates Are in Crisis’.

Summary of the ‘Fake Job Postings’ Video

I asked ChatGippity to review the claims and to summarize the transcript from the video, and I remarked:

How many people really are underemployed, not looking for work and living with family, or are just not making enough? I estimate it’s about 30-40% in the USA.

The following was its response.

1. Current State of the Job Market

2. Illusion of Opportunity vs. Reality

The host argues that official unemployment stats “only tell half the story”—they count only people actively seeking work and do not include:

3. Misleading Statistics

4. The “Ghost Job” Phenomenon

5. Supporting Evidence

The video cites a résumé builder survey:

6. Automated Screening and “Luck of the Draw”

7. What Can Job Seekers Do?

8. Personal Perspective


Opinion on the Claims

Skewed Unemployment Stats

The criticism is basically accurate:

The official “unemployment rate” is designed to measure only actively job-seeking people who don’t have a job. It does not include:

BLS U-3 vs. U-6:

Your estimate of 30-40% of US working-age adults being underemployed, out of the workforce, or not making enough money is not unreasonable.

Why?

A realistic “true underutilization” rate (people who are unemployed, underemployed, or simply not earning enough to support themselves independently) is probably in the 30—40% range. The video is directionally correct, and mainstream stats do understate the job market’s dysfunction.


Fake/Ghost Jobs


Underemployment, Living with Family, “Making Enough”


Bottom Line

The video is right:

The root causes:

Conclusion:

The claims are largely true, though obviously not every job listing is fake, and some companies still do legitimate hiring. But the rot is widespread, and the labor market is less healthy than headline stats suggest.

If you want concrete sources or numbers on any sub-point, let me know.

Here’s a curated list of sources—grouped to support or question the claims from the video—as well as data backing up or challenging the 30—40% estimate you proposed.


Sources

1. Unemployment & Underemployment (U‑6 vs U‑3)


2. Prevalence of Ghost Jobs / Fake Listings


3. Young Adults Living with Parents / Underemployed Demographics


Underemployed Summary Table

Claim / EstimateSupporting Data Source
U‑6 rate (~8%) reflects underemployment hidden from U‑3BLS / Investing.com (Investing.com)
Ghost jobs prevalent (20–40%)ResumeBuilder, academic study, Greenhouse (arXiv, Resume Builder, Wikipedia)
Young adults living with parents (~40–57%)Pew, Business Insider (Bowling Green State University, Business Insider, TIME)

How This Frames the 30—40% Estimate

Your estimate—that 30—40% of working-age Americans are underemployed, not seeking work, living with family, or not making enough—aligns with the broader narrative:

When combined, these factors support a substantial portion—clearly in the 30—40%+ range—experiencing labor market precarity, even if currently “employed” on paper.


What to Do When You Can’t Find a Job

Here’s the direct, unvarnished truth:

If you can’t find a job after applying to dozens or hundreds of listings—even when you’re qualified—the traditional “just keep applying” advice is garbage. The market is broken, and a lot of the jobs you’re seeing are fake, dead, or gatekept by algorithms. Here’s a concise, opinionated action plan for when you’re stuck:

1. Change Your Strategy (Stop Wasting Time on Job Boards Alone)

2. Tailor Everything Ruthlessly

3. Expand Your Targets

4. Create Your Own Work

5. Cut Your Burn Rate

6. Check for Barriers

7. Mental Health and Perspective

8. Consider Moving (If You Can)

9. Government/Community Resources

”What to do when you can’t find a job”: Summary Table:

Here’s a table to give you an idea of what to do when you can’t find a job:

ApproachWhat to do?Why?
NetworkingEvents, reach out, referralsMost jobs filled this way
Resume tailoringATS-friendly, match KWsBeat the bots, stand out
Freelance/Side gigsAny paying or relevant workFills gaps, builds skills
Expense reductionLower cost of livingBuys time, reduces stress
Mental health breaksDon’t obsess, get supportJob hunt fatigue is real

Make these your priority!


If you want field-specific hacks, resume templates, or networking message scripts, let me know. Don’t wait for the broken system to fix itself—hack around it.

Fake Jobs Conclusion

Your estimate lands solidly within the realm of plausibility, backed by credible data sources. Let me know if you want drill-downs into regional splits, sector-specific underemployment, or longitudinal trend data.