I really like this show, I've been watching it every week
My question is..... How do they always find the people with the best stories, most drama, biggest need, etc. If they don't inform the supervisors & managers at that location - how do they end up with the right people. Can't be luck![]()
I was actually waiting for "Cold Case" to start, and watched the last 20 minutes.
I agree, the CEO, Joel Manby, seemed very touched and moved by some of the stories he heard.
And I got all misty when he told the woman who worked at the aquarium, who was formerly homeless that she was getting an immediate raise. And then the kid who was getting his tuition paid, well, that was when the waterworks started . . .
OK, watching the episode about the CEO from Roto Rooter, I can't help but feel annoyed by him.
I'm only halfway through the episode, but I noticed that the CEO was very buddy buddy with all of the male workers he was assigned to follow, but when he was in the call center with a female employee, his attitude seemed to do a 180. He would jump answers before she had a chance to tell him what he'd need to do, and when he spoke with a female customer he was the same way. Not to call him sexist outright, but he sure did seem to come off that way...
Well, you really didn't miss much. It really was a very plant-y looking episode. Every worker had some big bill they needed to pay, or some sob story that you know they'd selected those people for that specific purpose.
The female employee I was talking about had a huge mortgage to pay and an autistic son. In the end, she was entered into a program for families with autistic children that the company was paying for, and $5,000 for her mortgage. Overall, very bleh week.
Some of you watched the show for the first time this week; others here watch it (reasonably) faithfully. Part of the goal of the show IS to educate the CEO/COO how things work among, well, the workers. To the best of my knowledge, no boss so far has worked his way up through the organization. The RotoRooter boss came closest, in that he observed his dad working in the factory while growing up. So it's an education for them.I know obviously the company needs to make money and not everyone can get discounts, blah, blah, blah..but just his attitude sucked..
The call center thing was annoying, if I was on the other end of that call I'd have been like "thanks anyway, dude." Didn't seem like he knew anything about the company that he was running.
Having -and showing - emotions doesn't make one wussy.My gosh, cry much??? What a wussy CEO.
I guess I'm in the minority because I really liked last night's episode with the Roto-Rooter CEO. I thought he was very genuine in his feelings, and liked it that he was emotional. I felt bad for him, never making amends with his father, but it sounds like he had a pretty rotten childhood because of his alcoholic father.
Sorry to see next week's episode is the season finale.
I wonder how they can do another season of shows, I would think so many people have seen the shows this season and they couldn't go undercover as easily.
What bothers ME about the entire series is, and my memory may be faulty - for the most part, it seems only the individuals who appear on the episodes benefit from the CEOs' largesse - the $5,000 for the CSR's mortgage, the gym equipment and health food store account for one of the technicians, various assistance in earlier episodes. Again, if I'm forgetting, please correct me - but it seems the only CEO who made changes to COMPANY policy/benefits was last week, from Herschend? He started a scholarship program for employees (and gave the first one to the man who aspires after his job); he didn't just give tuition to one employee.
OK, watching the episode about the CEO from Roto Rooter, I can't help but feel annoyed by him.
I'm only halfway through the episode, but I noticed that the CEO was very buddy buddy with all of the male workers he was assigned to follow, but when he was in the call center with a female employee, his attitude seemed to do a 180. He would jump answers before she had a chance to tell him what he'd need to do, and when he spoke with a female customer he was the same way. Not to call him sexist outright, but he sure did seem to come off that way...
I wonder how they can do another season of shows, I would think so many people have seen the shows this season and they couldn't go undercover as easily.