'Dirty Jobs' Star Mike Rowe Issues Alarming Warning
Mike Rowe, the host of the popular television show "Dirty Jobs" and CEO of the MikeRoweWorks Foundation, appeared on Fox News recently to sound the alarm about a concerning issue in the workforce.
In particular, Rowe is worried about the large portion of able-bodied, working-age men who are not only unemployed, they've given up looking for work.
"There are able-bodied men in their working ages not only not working, but not looking," Rowe said last week on "Varney & Co." "That, to me, is one of the greatest alarm bells going on in the country. We've never seen that before, not in peacetime anyway."
Rowe cited economist Nicholas Eberstadt's book "Men Without Work," which estimates that more than 7 million working-age men have left the workforce entirely.
The Discovery Channel star has been beating the drum on this matter for a while, including on Fox News in March and in an interview with Dr. Phil last fall.
Rowe told Varney the problem is exacerbated by what he feels is an overemphasis on higher education, which has an adverse effect on the skilled labor market.
"Compare that to the open positions, and then just sprinkle on $1.7 trillion of student loans that are still outstanding," Rowe said. "You can see we've still got our thumb on the scale."
"We're still pushing a lot of kids toward a very expensive path, while the skills gap widens," Rowe added. "The skills gap is real, but there's a will gap as well."
Rowe, 63, has long been an advocate for pushing trade careers as a viable alternative to four-year degrees, and says he is encouraged by the trends he's seeing in Gen Z, loosely referred to individuals born between 1997 and 2012.
"The four-year degrees are trending down in that cohort," Rowe said. "There's a lot more interest in electricians, and plumbers, and steamfitters, and welders and pipefitters."
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
"Wouldn't describe it as a fistfight": White House speaks on Musk, Bessent scrap
White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt disagreed with the characterization of a fight between former Trump adviser Elon Musk and Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent. During a stop by "Sunday Morning Futures" on Fox News, Leavitt pushed back against reports that Musk "body-checked" Bessent. Host Maria Bartiromo asked Leavitt "how rough this got," teeing up the presidential spox to hand-wave away a scrap just outside the Oval Office. "I certainly wouldn't describe it as a fistfight, Maria. It was definitely a disagreement," Leavitt said. "I was not there. I didn't witness it with my own eyes. I heard about it through secondhand reporting. But again, we've moved on from that. The president has moved on from that." Musk's rage at the Trump administration hasn't been contained to his Cabinet. Since leaving his post at the Department of Government Efficiency, the tech billionaire has railed against the president and Republicans in Congress over their support of a massive spending bill. The feud between Donald Trump and Musk escalated to the point that Trump is reportedly planning to sell a Tesla he purchased from the automaker earlier this year. That quick turnaround came after Musk accused Trump of being an associate of alleged sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein in a since-deleted post to social media. Musk's call-out was less a revelation and more of a reiteration of publicly known facts, but it was clearly enough to get the president's attention. The tiff with Trump has done severe damage to Musk's net worth, as the value of shares in Musk-owned companies has plummeted with each new volley of insults.


Tom's Guide
5 hours ago
- Tom's Guide
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman says AI could replace interns — but there's still hope for Gen Z
Entry-level jobs as we know them could soon be a thing of the past. OpenAI CEO Sam Altman says AI can now effectively do the same work as junior-level employees, and its skillset is only expected to get even better in the coming months. He predicted that AI will eventually rival the skills of even an experienced engineer, all while being uniquely capable of operating continuously for days on end without breaks. 'Today [AI] is like an intern that can work for a couple of hours but at some point it'll be like an experienced software engineer that can work for a couple of days,' Altman told a panel this week alongside Snowflake CEO Sridhar Ramaswamy at Snowflake Summit 2025. Altman added that in the next year, we could see AI solving complex business problems autonomously. 'I would bet next year that in some limited cases, at least in some small ways, we start to see agents that can help us discover new knowledge, or can figure out solutions to business problems that are very non-trivial," he said. It's a bold prediction we've heard echoed by other tech CEOs like Nvidia's Jensen Huang, who warned that those who hesitate to embrace AI may find themselves at the unemployment office. 'You're not going to lose your job to an AI, but you're going to lose your job to someone who uses AI," he said at last month's Milken Institute conference. Get instant access to breaking news, the hottest reviews, great deals and helpful tips. Generative AI stands poised to make entry-level jobs obsolete at a time when Generation Z is solidifying its place in the workforce, but that hasn't stopped Gen Z from embracing the technology. A recent Resume survey found that while one in 10 workers reported using ChatGPT regularly, Gen Z workers were twice as likely to use the tool. The same study found that the vast majority of workers at any age see ChatGPT as a helpful tool. But over half of Gen Z workers considered it the equivalent of another co-worker or assistant, compared to 40% of millennials and 35% of older generations. Altman has broken down the generational differences in AI usage before: '[It's a] gross oversimplification, but like older people use ChatGPT as a Google replacement. Maybe people in their twenties and thirties use it as like a life advisor, and then, like people in college use it as an operating system,' he said at Sequoia Capital's AI Ascent event in May. Even as Gen Z embraces AI, some tech leaders have been sounding the alarm bells about the economic fallout of an AI-driven job market. Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei recently told Axios that AI could wipe out half of all entry-level white collar jobs, causing unemployment to skyrocket by 10% to 20%. OpenAI owns ChatGPT, a revolutionary chatbot AI that, since its release in 2022, has quickly become one of the most advanced and widely used AI tools in the world. Powered by OpenAI's latest model, GPT-4o, ChatGPT can help you plan your weekend, write a term paper, or any number of other tasks. It supports everything from real-time speech interaction to multimodal content creation — and you can get many of its most powerful features for free. If you're curious, be sure to check out our guide on how to use ChatGPT, as well as these tips to get the most out of ChatGPT.


Fox News
7 hours ago
- Fox News
Jewish NY firefighter reflects on rescuing Torah from local synagogue fire
All times eastern Maria Bartiromo's Wall Street Maria Bartiromo's Wall Street FOX News Radio Live Channel Coverage