NYU professor Suzy Welch told CNBC that a desire to avoid anxiety was behind the viral "lazy girl jobs" trend.
The "lazy girl jobs" trend has gone viral on TikTok, with videos under the #lazygirljobs hashtag racking up more than 17.9 million views since May.
TikToker Gabrielle Judge, who popularized the trend, urged her followers to seek out "lazy girl jobs."
However, TikTok users — including Judge — have begun warning users to stop sharing their lazy girl jobs online to avoid becoming "socially outcasted," Insider previously reported.
Welch's remarks are the latest in the debate over work-life balance stirred up by the lazy girl jobs trend.
Persons:
Suzy Welch, somethings, TikTokers, Welch, Jennifer Sotsky, Sotsky, TikToker Gabrielle Judge, Judge, Gabrielle 👸🏻 @
Organizations:
CNBC, Service, NYU Stern School of Business
Locations:
Wall, Silicon