Advertisement

Man Claims Using Indian Surname In "Fake" Resume Increased Job Chances, Sparks Debate

After facing rejections, the man claimed that he decided to make a "fake resume" and change his last name to 'Singh'.

Man Claims Using Indian Surname In "Fake" Resume Increased Job Chances, Sparks Debate
  • A job seeker sent over 300 applications with no callbacks initially received.
  • He changed his last name to Singh and got three employer calls in 24 hours.
  • The video was posted on X by Wall Street Apes, sparking online debate.
Did our AI summary help?
Let us know.

A job seeker claimed that he sent out more than 300 applications and received "not a single callback". However, when he changed his last name to an Indian surname on his resume, three employers allegedly reached out within 24 hours. The video was posted on X (formerly Twitter) by an account named Wall Street Apes, which has over one million followers, including Elon Musk.

The man sparked an online debate by suggesting that names can influence job opportunities. "I've applied for over 300 jobs. Not a single callback. Nothing," the man said in a video transcript shared in the post. 

"Decided to make a fake resume, and change my last name to 'Singh', different email address, different job qualifications, but all in the same line, same everything."

Also read | Man Shares "Humiliating" Experience Of Getting Soaked By Unidentified Liquid During Flight, Video Viral

Watch the video here: 

Also read | "India Changed How I See travel," Says A Foreigner In Viral Video, Shares Reason Why

Social Media Reaction

"This is discrimination based on race, and it's happening everywhere to White people," the caption of the video read. 

The post gained massive traction with over 1.3 million views and more than 2,200 likes. Many users shared their perspectives in the comment section; some agreed with what he said, while others noted that his claims have no merit. 

"I feel like this would be an AI flaw, maybe??? No shot 300 employers turned down a man simply because he is 'white,'" one user wrote in the comment section. 

"It would appear he says he changed his qualifications. As such, that will be why he is getting calls back," another user added. 

"He ruined his own experiment by changing his own qualifications. He should have kept the same resume and just changed the words around alongside the new last name and email," a third user added. 

Track Latest News Live on NDTV.com and get news updates from India and around the world

Follow us:
Listen to the latest songs, only on JioSaavn.com