The Show series Exit Interview that takes a critical look at Phoenix and asks why so many influential people have decided to leave.Head south of the border to meet Yvonne Watterson in a tiny Mexican town outside of Guadalajara called Ajijic.It’s a picturesque place full of ex-pats from around the world, just like her.You might guess from her accent that Watterson didn’t grow
greg: what do you think tyrus. tyrus: none of that is true. this is why you don t do interviews when you re asked to leave quietly. he was retired. so on his way out, in his exit interview, he did it on a podcast. he was trying to go out with a blaze of glory. [bleep] you guys i m out. this place sucks, they re all socialists. so when you were the boss and could have made changes you didn t do anything about it and then when you got let go you re telling everybody. this is when guys get dumped for their lives and they leave them for somebody else and all of a sudden they have great ideas of things they should have said and done this is the exact same thing. he got on a podcast someone would finally listen to him, they re socialists, the company s going to he hell and the vaccine. he got it all out. he got it all out. that s what happens when you get let go you shouldn t talk, take a month off and don t speak. it s called an exit interview. don t do it live. greg: all right, up ne
In our Exit Interview series we are talk to former Phoenicians about why they left why Phoenix couldn’t keep them here. Today, meet Rachel Egboro.Egboro was born and raised in Phoenix, the daughter of Nigerian immigrants who came here for her father’s degree at Arizona State University. She said she has always loved stories. She majored in English in college, “because I
Today The Show is launching a new series called Exit Interview that takes a critical look at Phoenix and asks why so many influential people have decided to leave.