@umadomm_: indignadasss #humor

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Saturday 02 August 2025 19:01:56 GMT
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pedrocampp13
pedro :
Temon 😫
2025-09-17 05:11:33
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juanignamereless
juanignamerelesss :
uh pero mira lo que es la amiga re linda jajaja
2025-09-26 14:46:04
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anibalbogado46
Hannibale :
😂😂😂😂😂
2025-08-03 13:46:42
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maibicci
mai :
🙄
2025-08-02 19:08:08
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happyvspirit
Happy Spirit :
😂
2025-10-16 20:02:52
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A math tutor in South Korea reportedly makes around $8 million a year. He films his lessons wearing pharaoh headdresses, Batman masks, and animal hats. His name is Cha Kil-yong. He runs an online academy called SevenEdu. At any given time, around 300,000 students are paying $39 for one of his 20 hour courses. He's shot music videos with K-pop group Brown Eyed Girls. He's not an outlier in terms of the system. Another tutor, Yoo Su-yeon, who teaches English test prep, has done $1.5 million in a single year. These tutors have become genuine celebrities. There's a 2024 Korean drama set inside a Daechi-dong cram school the same way American shows set themselves inside hospitals. Why do they earn this much? Because the neighborhood they operate in, Daechi-dong, is where parents pay 4 to 5 million won a month per child on tutoring. That's roughly $2,800 to $3,500. One hagwon firm in the area grew its revenue from 64 billion won in 2018 to 331 billion won in 2023. The government made private tutoring outright illegal in 1980. The market went underground, prices rose, and enforcement collapsed. They introduced a 10pm curfew on hagwons. Government employees still drive around at night looking for classrooms with lights on. A bureaucrat once busted ten students hiding on a cram school roof at 11pm. A 2015 study found the curfew did not generate a significant reduction in tutoring hours. Lessons just moved to weekends, private apartments, and online. Forty years of regulation haven't slowed the system down. The tutors keep getting richer because the state can outlaw the building, but it cannot outlaw the reason parents show up.
A math tutor in South Korea reportedly makes around $8 million a year. He films his lessons wearing pharaoh headdresses, Batman masks, and animal hats. His name is Cha Kil-yong. He runs an online academy called SevenEdu. At any given time, around 300,000 students are paying $39 for one of his 20 hour courses. He's shot music videos with K-pop group Brown Eyed Girls. He's not an outlier in terms of the system. Another tutor, Yoo Su-yeon, who teaches English test prep, has done $1.5 million in a single year. These tutors have become genuine celebrities. There's a 2024 Korean drama set inside a Daechi-dong cram school the same way American shows set themselves inside hospitals. Why do they earn this much? Because the neighborhood they operate in, Daechi-dong, is where parents pay 4 to 5 million won a month per child on tutoring. That's roughly $2,800 to $3,500. One hagwon firm in the area grew its revenue from 64 billion won in 2018 to 331 billion won in 2023. The government made private tutoring outright illegal in 1980. The market went underground, prices rose, and enforcement collapsed. They introduced a 10pm curfew on hagwons. Government employees still drive around at night looking for classrooms with lights on. A bureaucrat once busted ten students hiding on a cram school roof at 11pm. A 2015 study found the curfew did not generate a significant reduction in tutoring hours. Lessons just moved to weekends, private apartments, and online. Forty years of regulation haven't slowed the system down. The tutors keep getting richer because the state can outlaw the building, but it cannot outlaw the reason parents show up.

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