Becoming a young Wall Street banker is like pledging the world's most lucrative and soul-crushing fraternity. Every year, thousands of eager college graduates are hired by the world's financial giants, where they're taught the secrets of making obscene amounts of money-- as well as how to dress, talk, date, drink, and schmooze like real financiers. YOUNG MONEY is the inside story of this well-guarded world. Kevin Roose, New York magazine business writer and author of the critically acclaimed The Unlikely Disciple, spent more than three years shadowing eight entry-level workers at Goldman Sachs, Bank of America Merrill Lynch, and other leading investment firms. Roose chronicled their triumphs and disappointments, their million-dollar trades and runaway Excel spreadsheets, and got an unprecedented (and unauthorized) glimpse of the financial world's initiation process. Roose's young bankers are exposed to the exhausting workloads, huge bonuses, and recreational drugs that have always characterized Wall Street life. But they experience something new, too: an industry forever changed by the massive financial collapse of 2008. And as they get their Wall Street educations, they face hard questions about morality, prestige, and the value of their work. YOUNG MONEY is more than an exposé of excess; it's the story of how the financial crisis changed a generation-and remade Wall Street from the bottom up.
Kevin Roose Knihy
Kevin Roose se ve své publicistice zaměřuje na střet mezi vírou a moderním životem. Prostřednictvím osobní zkušenosti zkoumá hluboké přesvědčení a životní styly jiných, aby odhalil univerzální pravdy o hledání smyslu. Jeho práce vyniká upřímností a ochotou ponořit se do neznámých kultur, čímž čtenářům nabízí pronikavý pohled na různé aspekty lidské existence.



You are being automated. Artificial intelligence is moving from research labs into our daily lives, influencing everything from the media we consume to our beliefs and relationships. While the debate over job loss due to automation continues, a more pressing question arises: How can we find happiness and success in a world increasingly shaped by machines? In "Futureproof: 9 Rules for Humans in the Age of Automation," New York Times technology columnist Kevin Roose presents a hopeful vision for thriving alongside AI. He reveals insights from individuals and organizations that have navigated past technological shifts, outlining essential skills to stay ahead of intelligent machines. Key lessons include being surprising, social, and scarce; resisting machine drift; leaving handprints; demoting devices; and treating AI like a chimp army. Roose challenges the notion that success in the AI era requires us to become more machine-like—hyper-efficient and data-driven. Instead, he advocates for embracing our humanity and engaging in creative, inspiring, and meaningful activities that even the most advanced robots cannot replicate.
As a sophomore at Brown University, Kevin Roose didn't have much contact with the Religious Right. Raised in a secular home by staunchly liberal parents, he fit right in with Brown's sweatshop-protesting, fair-trade coffee-drinking, God-ambivalent student body. So when he had a chance encounter with a group of students from Liberty University, a conservative Baptist university in Lynchburg, Virginia, he found himself staring across a massive culture gap. But rather than brush the Liberty students off, Roose decided to do something much bolder: he became one of them.Liberty University is the late Rev. Jerry Falwell's proudest accomplishment - a 10,000-student conservative Christian training ground. At Liberty, students (who call themselves "Champions for Christ") take classes like Introduction to Youth Ministry and Evangelism 101. They hear from guest speakers like Mike Huckabee and Karl Rove, they pray before every class, and they follow a 46-page code of conduct called "The Liberty Way" that prohibits drinking, smoking, R-rated movies, contact with the opposite sex, and witchcraft. Armed with an open mind and a reporter's notebook, Roose dives into life at Bible Boot Camp with the goal of connecting with his evangelical peers by experiencing their world first-hand.Roose's semester at Liberty takes him to church, class, and choir practice at Rev. Falwell's Thomas Road Baptist Church. He visits a support group for recovering masturbation addicts, goes to an evangelical hip-hop concert, and participates in a spring break mission trip to Daytona Beach, where he learns how to convert bar-hopping co-eds to Christianity. Roose struggles with his own faith throughout, and in a twist that could only have been engineered by a higher power, he conducts what would turn out to be the last in-depth interview of Rev. Falwell's life. Hilarious and heartwarming, respectful and thought-provoking, Roose's embedded report from the front lines of the culture war will inspire and entertain believers and non-believers alike.