College student blames parents after she blows her $90k college fund
A 22-year-old woman talked about her financial woes on an Atlanta FM-radio show whose wisecracking hosts made fun of her spend thrift
ways and whose listeners talked about and belittled her on Twitter as the millennial who was giving millennials a bad name. Kim, who did not mention her last name or her
school, said she spent her college fund of $90k on expensive clothes, jewelry and trips to Europe and told
“The Bert Show” that it was all her
parents fault for not showing her how to manage her money. *Sigh*
“Maybe they should have taught me how to budget a little better, a little more carefully,” she told the show the other day.
“They never sat me down and had a real serious talk about it. They
said, ‘Here’s your college fund, it’s for classes only.’”
Kim said her grandparents set up the college fund for her years ago. She contacted “The Bert Show” after the school had just mailed her the
tuition bill for her senior year. She explained that she was short about $20,000 for her final two
semesters.
“I just wasn’t very good with my budget,” she said. “I also used it to budget for school clothes, stuff like that. My college break money… Maybe I should have not
done that.”
Kim said she also used her college tuition money on a European vacation. “The Europe thing I
thought was part of my education and that’s how I tried to justify that,” she said. She said her parents told her there was nothing they could do for her because they didn’t have
any money. She accused her father of being a
“little bit of a jerk about it” after she told him she was broke.
“They’re not being honest with me, saying they don’t have it because my father has worked for like a million years and they have a retirement account,” Kim said.
She said her parents suggested she take out a loan with the credit union.
“And I’m like, 'How am
I supposed to do that?'” she said.
The next day Kim told the show she went down to the credit union after all to apply for a loan. She said the loan officer told her she would need
her parents as co-signers because she didn’t work and didn’t have collateral. Kim told the show her parents wouldn’t co-sign unless she got a part-time job.
“I don’t know. Maybe I’ll tell my parents I’ll be a stripper if they don’t co-sign,” the woman said.
In a fourth call to the station, Kim said her situation had improved. Her loan had been approved and she was looking for a job, as much
as that pained her. She was also still blaming her parents.
“I know they’re trying to teach me a lesson blah, blah, blah and character building, but like I hope they realize that this can have such a negative effect on my grades and as a person,” Kim said on the air.
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