But there is a lot less of people on "Love Island" (72 people total in 4 years) than Oxford or Cambridge graduates; so its not particularly a viable route to success.
There are probably > 208 lottery winners in the same period; no one would suggest that as a lucrative approach to life.
> Frontier also calculated how contestants can best extend their stays: being part of the “original crew” increases your chances of staying for the duration over those who join the cast later.
Also being on 44 episodes of one of the country's most popular TV shows; you'd hope would bring some measure of success...
What I've realized over the past couple years while working on my own projects is that I always could use a 'platform'. I wrote a new article? Would be nice to get it to an audience. A social media campaign? Would be nice to get followers. An app? Would be great to have users. And for all the negativity you can aim at reality show celebs, that's what they have to offer. An audience.
Do we need another app or another disruption to a market without alternatives, driving more disdain for tech and liberalism in America? Not everyone needs to be an entrepreneur. The best that come out of school and get high paying jobs will also continue to get raises and make more money just like everyone else. No industry starts you off at your end game salary at 25. Engineering, business, finance/accoubtibg, law etc will all have people making more and more money throughout their career as they gain experience, specialize, and change positions and ranks.
But we are not feeding the next generation around the clock the illusion that they can realistically win the lottery, like with the reality shows.