When I was in New York I went to my Columbia friend’s birthday party, where everyone I met seemed to be doing summers at prestigious firms: BCG, Bain, MS, OC&C, JPM, GS, you name it. But I didn’t know that until my friend told me the day after the party.
What surprised me about this? That grouping all these banker and consultant-to-bes did not result in any work talk whatsoever and I presumed half of them were in the arts.
[Talking to my friend]:
“I loved your friend X, he’s SO cool! Great music taste.”
“Oh yeah, he’s a DJ… but he’s also doing sales and trading hahaha”
Of course, I don’t know if this is typical of NYC students and my friend just attracts a niche, but he did say that it’s sort of expected that if you’re at an Ivy League in NYC, you spend your summer in a big bank/consultancy. It’s old news here. Now as I understand it, LSE is a London equivalent that churns out ambitious students like those doing finance/management NYC majors, but different to Columbia, they will TALK about it and not much else.
If anything, they’re dumbing it down over there. Take asking my friend about his day for example:
“Ohhhh you know, it was meetings all day. So boring. I got to sneak out at 4 though, we loooove that” - said no MS intern in the UK ever, but NYC? Different story.
I wonder if this is a symptom of American colleges, whose tuition fees are so extortionate that they pool a very skewed cohort of students with very successful (and rich) parents and the normalised expectation to follow suit. While I don’t love this potential reason as to why Wall Street internships are treated like any other work experience, I do love that people aren’t putting Wall Street internships on a pedestal.
I guess it must feel a shame for the people who have come from nothing and worked really hard to get to where they are to not get to show off a bit about their internships, but if that’s the biggest problem about this hustle culture, it could be a lot worse!
Any Americans reading, please tell me if you found this to be the case at your college, or if it was completely different!
What surprised me about this? That grouping all these banker and consultant-to-bes did not result in any work talk whatsoever and I presumed half of them were in the arts.
[Talking to my friend]:
“I loved your friend X, he’s SO cool! Great music taste.”
“Oh yeah, he’s a DJ… but he’s also doing sales and trading hahaha”
Of course, I don’t know if this is typical of NYC students and my friend just attracts a niche, but he did say that it’s sort of expected that if you’re at an Ivy League in NYC, you spend your summer in a big bank/consultancy. It’s old news here. Now as I understand it, LSE is a London equivalent that churns out ambitious students like those doing finance/management NYC majors, but different to Columbia, they will TALK about it and not much else.
If anything, they’re dumbing it down over there. Take asking my friend about his day for example:
“Ohhhh you know, it was meetings all day. So boring. I got to sneak out at 4 though, we loooove that” - said no MS intern in the UK ever, but NYC? Different story.
I wonder if this is a symptom of American colleges, whose tuition fees are so extortionate that they pool a very skewed cohort of students with very successful (and rich) parents and the normalised expectation to follow suit. While I don’t love this potential reason as to why Wall Street internships are treated like any other work experience, I do love that people aren’t putting Wall Street internships on a pedestal.
I guess it must feel a shame for the people who have come from nothing and worked really hard to get to where they are to not get to show off a bit about their internships, but if that’s the biggest problem about this hustle culture, it could be a lot worse!
Any Americans reading, please tell me if you found this to be the case at your college, or if it was completely different!