In this episode “Do We Really Like AI?”, we unpack the uncomfortable gap between how executives talk about AI and how young people entering the workforce actually experience it. Instead of treating AI adoption as a simple story of productivity, automation, and inevitable progress, this piece reframes the debate around trust, opportunity, and the future of entry-level work. It covers: The AI Enthusiasm Gap: Why leaders, founders, and marketers often see AI as an efficiency engine, while graduates and young professionals may see it as a threat to their first real career opportunity;The Disappearing First Job: How the repetitive junior tasks that companies are eager to automate first drafts, research, summaries, reports, coordination were also the messy learning grounds where young professionals built real skills;The Booing as a Market Signal: Why student resistance to pro-AI messages is not anti-technology sentiment, but a warning that the next generation does not automatically trust the people deploying AI;The Broken AI Promise: A critical look at why “doing more with fewer people” sounds exciting in boardrooms but frightening to the people who fear they are the “fewer” being removed;The AI Apprenticeship Model: A more constructive path forward, where companies use AI not to delete junior roles, but to redesign them around faster learning, better feedback, guided practice, and stronger human judgment;In essence, this isn’t just a question of whether people like AI. It’s a question of who benefits from it, who is protected by it, and who gets left out of the deal. The article challenges companies, universities, and leaders to stop selling AI only as a cost-cutting machine and start building a new social contract around work, training, education, and opportunity. For growth marketers, founders, and business leaders, it’s a timely reminder that AI adoption is not just a technology strategy. It is a trust strategy. If AI is used only to extract productivity, it will be resisted. If it is used to expand capability and create better paths into work, it has a chance to be embraced.