The days of spending decades at one company are long gone. The average worker will change jobs four times by the age of 32. In fact, 60 percent of professionals ages 20 to 37 say they are open to new career opportunities. Knowing when you should (or shouldn't) quit your job can either fast-track your career or set you back, career experts and business leaders say. So how do you know it's time to head for the exit? Best-selling management author and CNBC contributor Suzy Welch says the big decision boils down to a few specific factors. According to Welch, these are four signs you should consider giving your two weeks notice immediately: 1. You're blocked If you don't see a path for promotion or
Ah, yes: " Waste of my f*cking time. " It's a phrase many Americans have probably found themselves thinking, recently. But some of them can't hold it in, as evidenced by the way a hot microphone caught someone expressing their unedited opinion during a GOP press conference on Capitol Hill on Tuesday. SEE ALSO: Paul Ryan didn't give us the dab we wanted, he gave us the dab we deserved After House Speaker Paul Ryan concluded the press conference where he answered questions on President Trump's recent travel ban, a hot mic on CNN caught someone complaining about the conference just as Ryan walks off stage. "F*ck. Waste of my f*cking time," the person can be heard saying under their breath. It's unclear if that person was at the press conference, an upset journalist, or if it was a microphone feed from CNN. Many were quick to point the blame at Speaker Ryan, but a closer look revealed that the words weren't coming from him. It's also unlikely Ryan would be wearing a portable microphone at the press conference considering most of the media's microphones are located at the podium or in the crowd. Not to mention it doesn't sound like him at all. As Mediaite points out, even Nancy Pelosi’s Deputy Chief of Staff Drew Hammill accused Ryan of uttering the phrase in a tweet that has since been deleted. Image: screenshot via mediaite Later, Ryan's communication director, Mike Ricci, responded to Hammill stating that it was not Ryan who said it."You know better," he scolded Hammill in the tweet. @Drew_Hammill Drew, that is not Speaker Ryan. You know better. - Mike Ricci (@riccimike) January 31, 2017 Hammill later apologized for the tweet following some backlash on Twitter. @MikePLong @Drew_Hammill Yeah, it's surely a bored cameraman. - Dave Weigel (@daveweigel) January 31, 2017 this is a lie. a blatant lie. you should be ashamed of yourself @Drew_Hammill #Drewisaliar https://t.co/EIPX7B3owS - Josh Finestone (@Josh_Finestone) January 31, 2017 .@BrendanBuck tells me that was not his boss. Will take his word for it and I apologized. - Drew Hammill (@Drew_Hammill) January 31, 2017 Needless to say, someone didn't enjoy the GOP's press conference. BONUS: All 13 times the stars at the SAG Awards threw shade at Donald Trump
"Traveling here with my family to start a life in a country that actually respected the Constitution and American dream."
2017 is starting off on a high note for Married at First Sight‘s Jamie Otis and Doug Hehner - the reality stars are expecting a baby later this year. “Doug and I have been praying and not so patiently waiting to have our rainbow baby since we lost our first born, Johnathan Edward, in July 2016.” Otis, 30, tells PEOPLE exclusively. It goes without saying that Doug is going to be the best daddy ever.
Mark Hamill has long been a defender of George Lucas’s prequel trilogy, and 18 years after the release of Star Wars: Episode I - The Phantom Menace, he still takes the insults personally. In an interview with Vulture at the Sundance Film Festival, where he was promoting his comedy Brigsby Bear, the man who plays Luke Skywalker said that he still can’t fathom the vitriol directed at the films. In particular, Hamill said, he’s “still angry” about the criticism directed at young Phantom Menace star Jake Lloyd.
(CNN)A 10-year veteran of the Volusia County Sheriff's Office in Florida resigned on Monday not long after officials released body camera video that allegedly shows the deputy taking money from the wallet of a DUI suspect. Deputy John Braman, 33, was placed on paid administrative leave last Wednesday as the sheriff's office investigated "multiple" allegations that he had taken money from defendants during DUI arrests. Braman resigned on Monday in a one-sentence letter sent through an attorney, which CNN has obtained. Volusia County Sheriff Mike Chitwood had harsh words for Braman, calling him a "thieving idiot" in an interview with the Daytona Beach News-Journal.