UcanUwill wrote:To me who lives in Lithuanian economy, 200-250k per year sounds absolutely insane.
It's pretty insane in the US too, but this is LA.
Moderators: Clav, bwgood77, bisme37, zimpy27, KingDavid, cupcakesnake, Dirk, Domejandro, ken6199, infinite11285
UcanUwill wrote:To me who lives in Lithuanian economy, 200-250k per year sounds absolutely insane.
UcanUwill wrote:CIN-C-STAR wrote:UcanUwill wrote:To me who lives in Lithuanian economy, 200-250k per year sounds absolutely insane.
For Los Angeles, considering they want an individual plan for everyone on a 15-team roster, this actually sounds like a low-ball offer to me lol
Well, it is Lakers organization, and economy in LA is way different, but over here, a lot of people make like 10k a year and their jobs are also hard. Managing 16 athletes does not seem that terribly hard, of course there is accountability and all, these are not random dudes from a GYM, but, you could buy a low tier Euroleague player with 250k.
scrabbarista wrote:sikma42 wrote:Assumed they’d be paid a lot more tbh. Maybe there are bonus incentives? And maybe can still work with outside clients
Sent from my iPhone using RealGM Forums
One obvious incentive is you get to work for the Lakers. That's probably worth 50-100k a year for the right applicant. I would hope there are also lots of expenses paid for all the travel; per diem and stuff. It does sound low. I dunno.
scrabbarista wrote:scrabbarista wrote:UcanUwill wrote:
Well, it is Lakers organization, and economy in LA is way different, but over here, a lot of people make like 10k a year and their jobs are also hard. Managing 16 athletes does not seem that terribly hard, of course there is accountability and all, these are not random dudes from a GYM, but, you could buy a low tier Euroleague player with 250k.
No comment on who has hard jobs, but...
Cost of living, my man. Living 6.5 years in Asia taught me that exchange rates tell you nothing about how far money goes in a given economy. There are some places where you can live like a prince on "$2,000" a month, and others where'd you'd probably be homeless and hungry on "$2,000" a month.
I used to hear "people in Africa live on a dollar a day" and think "so they're lucky to eat once a month?" No, meals cost less than 50 cents where they live.
I'm no economist, but like I said, I have a lot of firsthand experience with this phenomenon. You feel it differently when you live somewhere and have to pay for everything (rent, phone bill, insurance, etc.) at local rates, as opposed to when you travel.
Sorry if I come off harsh. Just got back from the grocery store. Spent $142 and probably didn't get enough food for one day.
$45 (nearly $49 after tax) on shaving blades...
KyRo23 wrote:Did they not have one of these before
UcanUwill wrote:To me who lives in Lithuanian economy, 200-250k per year sounds absolutely insane.

dhsilv2 wrote:scrabbarista wrote:scrabbarista wrote:
No comment on who has hard jobs, but...
Cost of living, my man. Living 6.5 years in Asia taught me that exchange rates tell you nothing about how far money goes in a given economy. There are some places where you can live like a prince on "$2,000" a month, and others where'd you'd probably be homeless and hungry on "$2,000" a month.
I used to hear "people in Africa live on a dollar a day" and think "so they're lucky to eat once a month?" No, meals cost less than 50 cents where they live.
I'm no economist, but like I said, I have a lot of firsthand experience with this phenomenon. You feel it differently when you live somewhere and have to pay for everything (rent, phone bill, insurance, etc.) at local rates, as opposed to when you travel.
Sorry if I come off harsh. Just got back from the grocery store. Spent $142 and probably didn't get enough food for one day.
$45 (nearly $49 after tax) on shaving blades...
How many blades did you get?
https://www.amazon.com/Harrys-Razor-Blades-Refills-Razors/dp/B09SGK9FWZ
Get something genetic...
dhsilv2 wrote:scrabbarista wrote:scrabbarista wrote:
No comment on who has hard jobs, but...
Cost of living, my man. Living 6.5 years in Asia taught me that exchange rates tell you nothing about how far money goes in a given economy. There are some places where you can live like a prince on "$2,000" a month, and others where'd you'd probably be homeless and hungry on "$2,000" a month.
I used to hear "people in Africa live on a dollar a day" and think "so they're lucky to eat once a month?" No, meals cost less than 50 cents where they live.
I'm no economist, but like I said, I have a lot of firsthand experience with this phenomenon. You feel it differently when you live somewhere and have to pay for everything (rent, phone bill, insurance, etc.) at local rates, as opposed to when you travel.
Sorry if I come off harsh. Just got back from the grocery store. Spent $142 and probably didn't get enough food for one day.
$45 (nearly $49 after tax) on shaving blades...
How many blades did you get?
https://www.amazon.com/Harrys-Razor-Blades-Refills-Razors/dp/B09SGK9FWZ
Get something genetic...
zimpy27 wrote:dhsilv2 wrote:scrabbarista wrote:
Sorry if I come off harsh. Just got back from the grocery store. Spent $142 and probably didn't get enough food for one day.
$45 (nearly $49 after tax) on shaving blades...
How many blades did you get?
https://www.amazon.com/Harrys-Razor-Blades-Refills-Razors/dp/B09SGK9FWZ
Get something genetic...
Like alopecia?
zimpy27 wrote:dhsilv2 wrote:scrabbarista wrote:
Sorry if I come off harsh. Just got back from the grocery store. Spent $142 and probably didn't get enough food for one day.
$45 (nearly $49 after tax) on shaving blades...
How many blades did you get?
https://www.amazon.com/Harrys-Razor-Blades-Refills-Razors/dp/B09SGK9FWZ
Get something genetic...
Like alopecia?
scrabbarista wrote:dhsilv2 wrote:scrabbarista wrote:
Sorry if I come off harsh. Just got back from the grocery store. Spent $142 and probably didn't get enough food for one day.
$45 (nearly $49 after tax) on shaving blades...
How many blades did you get?
https://www.amazon.com/Harrys-Razor-Blades-Refills-Razors/dp/B09SGK9FWZ
Get something genetic...
12. And I try to make them last as long as I can.