It's one thing to post a job listing in New York City. It's another to offer $55,000 with no benefits for a position that sounds like three jobs in one—and runs well past the typical 9-to-5.
That's what sparked backlash when Recho Omondi, host of popular fashion podcast “The Cutting Room Floor,” shared a now-deleted TikTok announcing she was hiring a full-time, in-person “studio coordinator” based in the city.
One version of the clip—reposted on TikTok with mocking text overlaid—features Omondi speaking while a user-added caption reads:
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“Dreaming of making a cool $55k pre-tax in NYC while working junior level in fashion? ‘The Cutting Room Floor' is hiring, because who doesn't want to pay $3k a month to live in a closet and still say they work in fashion?”
In the original video, Omondi described the role as an in-person position based in NYCy, with duties ranging from studio coordination to handling bookings to “a little bit of a personal assistant.” She emphasized her distaste for applicants who can't follow instructions and framed the opportunity as ideal for someone ready to hustle. The job would be Monday through Friday, 9:00 a.m to 6:30 p.m. The salary? $55,000—before taxes. Benefits? None. Start date? Immediately.
The backlash was, in a word, brutal.
Once the clip started circulating, so did the outrage. TikTokers and Redditors pointed out that this wasn't just a lowball offer—it was economically unfeasible for the city it was in.
“$55K in New York City with no benefits is abuse and exploitation. Goodbye,” one TikToker commented, while another asked, “Why is she talking like she's doing us all a favor?”
The comments only got sharper. “This is at least an $80K position,” one person wrote. Another, who claimed to be a former HR professional, pointed out the red flags: “The ‘I can't hire someone who can't follow simple instructions' to ‘a little bit of a personal assistant' told me EVERYTHING I need to know about her work environment.”
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Then there were those who simply couldn't believe the math: “$55K was my fresh out of college creative job back in 2013,” one user commented, while another wrote, “55K isn't even what I paid my junior assistants in 2015—with health benefits.”