Working What We Do All Day Review: In this new limited series about jobs and employment, Barack Obama serves as the host taking us through the trenches of home care, service and tech industries to see how people function in those areas. All episodes are directed by Caroline Suh. They also join the crew as an executive producer along with former US President, Michelle Obama, Priya Swaminathan, Nicole Stott, Jonathan Silberberg, Tonia Davis, Davis Guggenheim, and Laurene Powell Jobs. Emelia Brown serves as the co-executive producer of this limited series.
There are four episodes, each discussing an echelon of the same company across the different industries mentioned above. Each episode ranges from 47 to 49 minutes and focuses on the fundamental question: What makes a job good?
– The Working What We Do All Day Review Does Not Contain Spoilers –
This limited docuseries is more of a vignette of what people in America look like than a concentration on what their job looks like. It is interesting to see someone like the former President come to terms with the privilege he embodies and use that as a tool to highlight what people are going through. This writer’s only problem, it didn’t include people from more industries like teaching and healthcare. They are also services that people have been providing and have to quit because the pay isn’t good.
Even though it is a limited series, it does a brilliant job of connecting employees from every level in the same organisation to show how differently they lead their lives. Hoping for a better outcome doesn’t generally mean that there will be a better outcome for people on the lower rung of the ladder. It is a sad look at how certain industries don’t have room for growth anymore. While it does focus on pay and parity, it also takes a good look at how our modern expectations from jobs have also changed.
While people may be thinking that 45 minutes over 4 episodes is not a good exploration, there is plenty of anecdotal and research-based evidence to suggest why things from the limited series make sense in the 21st century. In an algorithm surrounded by massive billboards of capitalism, this series provides a breath of fresh air to understand why to work, and jobs have changed so much and how it is worth defining by the kind of jobs people get.

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Moreover, this series doesn’t just stick to the normal descriptions of a job but also introduces how the tech and home care industries both give birth to new jobs by necessity. There are not many docuseries that keep the audience’s attention from start to finish, but this manages to peel back the curtain and still leave viewers in a state that conveys optimism and understanding. Adding to that, since most of the stories told in the series were from people of colour, it was made clear that they wanted to dig deep in the trenches, especially when it comes to race inequality working together with job insecurity.
Working What We Do All Day Review
This writer suggests anyone in the United States, whether studying or currently working, should at least take a glance at this. It does a great job of exploring motivation, humanity, skill, grit, opportunities and, most of all, real-life stories from people who could engage with this content. It is fascinating, insightful and downright rebellious in the face of capitalism because it tries to promise a future where polarity will hopefully not ruin the sanctity of the workplace.

Additionally, it is a great watch to understand how our understanding of the different kinds of opportunities and the long-term implication they have on our lives. Give it a shot if you enjoy a scintillating exploration of our current socio-economic system.
Working What We Do All Day is currently streaming on Netflix. What did you think of this exploration into the working lives of 21st-century Americans? Let us know in the comments below.

