Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

New York City Just Appointed Its First-Ever Rat Czar—And Her Salary Is Staggering

A rat; Kathleen Corradi
@time/TikTok; @nytimes/TikTok

Former elementary teacher Kathleen Corradi steps into the newly created role of Citywide Director of Rodent Mitigation for New York City with a salary of $155,000 per year.

Imagine having a rat problem so bad you need to hire a Rat Czar.

Then imagine the job of Rat Czar is so important it pays $155,000 per year.


Rats aren't exactly the "huddled masses" poet Emma Lazarus was referencing when she wrote the poem engraved at the Statue of Liberty, but it seems to be the huddled mass the city has ended up with.

And Mayor Eric Adams has had enough.

After announcing he would appoint a "Rat Czar" to the city's government back in 2022—and the city's sanitation commissioner Jessica Tisch infamously announced "the rats don't run this city, we do"—Adams filled the spot at last.

At an event last week, Adams welcomed former elementary school teacher Kathleen Corradi as New York's first-ever Citywide Director of Rodent Mitigation—as seen below.

@nytimes

Kathleen Corradi, New York City’s first rat czar, will oversee efforts to drive down the rat population.

In her speech, Corradi vowed to rid New York City of its most infamous denizens.

She told those in attendance:

"As the first director of rodent mitigation, I'm excited to bring a science and systems-based approach to fight rats."
"New York may be famous for the Pizza Rat, but rats, and the conditions that help them thrive, will no longer be tolerated – no more dirty curbs, unmanaged spaces or brazen burrowing."
"I'm honored to lead this work, grateful to Mayor Adams for this opportunity, and look forward to sending the rats packing."

For that work, Corradi will be handsomely rewarded with that $155,000 salary.

Although that's not nearly as lush a payday in New York City as it would be in pretty much any other part of the country. It's an amount Mayor Adams thinks is "not enough" given the scope of the job.

On social media, many disagreed and thought $155,000 sounded pretty good.




And of course, given the slight absurdity of the whole situation, there were lots of rat-related jokes.




Corradi is part of Mayor Adams' billion-dollar initiative toward rat abatement in the city.

Much of the effort is focused on Harlem, where the city will send 19 full-time staff and 14 seasonal staff to clean and maintain public spaces, perform inspections and exterminate rats where needed.

We offer Corradi our heartfelt congRATulations on her new position.

More from Trending

Will Forte
First We Feast/YouTube

Will Forte Reveals Painful Bathroom Incident After Eating Hot Wings—And Ouch!

If you ever needed to be convinced of the importance of hand-washing, this story is as good as you'll ever get.

Will Forte recently appeared on Hot Ones, the YouTube series in which celebrities eat increasingly tongue-searing chicken wings. And it reminded him of a previous incident with the spicy food.

Keep Reading Show less
Nancy Mace
Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images

Nancy Mace Has Unhinged Meltdown After Voter Asks Her About Town Halls In Bonkers Video

South Carolina Republican Representative Nancy Mace was criticized after she filmed her argument with a voter who asked her if she'd be hosting any more town halls this year—only for Mace refer to him as an "unhinged lunatic" for approaching her in the first place.

Over the weekend, Mace shared a video she recorded in the skincare aisle of a South Carolina Ulta store, in which she confronts a man she assumes is gay after he inquired about her public schedule. While the man remained calm and kept a respectful distance, Mace quickly escalated the situation—invoking LGBTQ+ topics without prompting, shouting profanities, and accusing him of harassment.

Keep Reading Show less
Mike Lindell
Stephen Maturen/Getty Images

MAGA MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell Dragged After Weeping To Judge That He Has No Money To Pay Fines

MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell was mocked online after it emerged that he reportedly sobbed to a judge that he's "in ruins" and doesn't have the money to pay a court-ordered $50,000 fine to the voting software company Smartmatic, which he falsely claimed had rigged the 2020 election results in favor of former President Joe Biden.

Appearing via Zoom at a hearing in U.S. District Court in Washington, D.C., Lindell claimed Wednesday that he doesn’t even have “5 cents” to put toward the $56,396 he owes the company, telling the court he has “nothing” beyond two homes currently being liquidated and a truck. He has recently laid off hundreds of MyPillow employees due to what he described as severe financial distress.

Keep Reading Show less

Therapists Share Their Biggest 'I'm Not Supposed To Judge, But..." Experiences

It's true that we all go through something at some point, and it's true that therapists are supposed to be there to help people process, improve, and heal.

While both of these statements are true, therapists sometimes cannot help but judge the situation, even when they try their hardest not to.

Keep Reading Show less
A man sitting down with his hands folded.
man in black pants and pair of brown leather lace-up shoes sitting on brown carpeted stairs inside room
Photo by Ben White on Unsplash

People Describe The Best Decisions They've Ever Made In Their Life

Everyone finds themself questioning a decision we once had to make.

From trivial decisions, such as what toppings to put on a pizza, to rather more substantial ones, such as deciding if staying in your current relationship is a good idea.

Keep Reading Show less