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Rejected

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Part of a series on Discourse (Slang). [View Related Entries]


Zach Yadegari Personal Statement image and tweet example.

Zach Yadegari's Personal Statement

Part of a series on Discourse (Slang). [View Related Entries]

Updated Apr 03, 2025 at 03:04PM EDT by Zach.

Added Apr 03, 2025 at 05:19AM EDT by sakshi.

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About

Zach Yadegari's Personal Statement refers to discourse about a teenage tech CEO getting rejected by a majority of the colleges he applied to due to what Twitter / X users described as a weak college essay. Yadegari, the co-founder and CEO of the AI-powered calorie-counting app Cal AI, made a post about getting rejected by schools like Stanford, MIT, Harvard and Yale despite running a startup that supposedly generated $30 million in late March 2025. Yadegari then posted his personal essay, prompting several internet users to critique his writing, saying that it did not reflect his eagerness to learn and instead portrayed him as an arrogant student with a high potential to drop out of school.

Origin

Zach Yadegari is an 18-year-old entrepreneur and the co-founder and CEO of Cal AI, an AI-powered nutrition-tracking app that allows users to monitor their calorie intake by taking pictures of their food. Launched in May 2024, Cal AI quickly gained popularity, surpassing 5 million downloads within eight months and generating over $2 million in monthly revenue.[1]

On March 31st, 2025, Yadegari posted the results of his college application to Twitter,[2] sharing his basic stats and then listing the schools he applied to. Notably, Yadegari was rejected from his top choices, including Stanford, MIT, Harvard, Yale, Washington University, Columbia, UPenn and Princeton, among others. The post shows Yadegari describing himself as, "18 years old, 34 ACT, 4.0 GPA, $30M ARR biz," and gathered over 26,000 likes in four days.


A teenage tech CEO named Zach Yadegari became the subject of internet "discourse":https://knowyourmeme.com/memes/discourse-slang after he shared the essay he wrote to apply to the colleges he was rejected from. This tweet lists his stats as well as the schools he applied to.

Yadegari also posted his personal statement,[3] recounting his journey as a self-taught entrepreneur. He talks about pursuing independent learning at a young age and launching Cal AI, a fast-growing nutrition app. He then describes how a visit to Kyoto's Ryoan-ji rock garden sparked the realization that rejecting college had put him in another box, one of the archetypal dropout founders. Yadegari then decides that he does want to go to college and learn from his fellow students and professors instead of VCs and mentors.


A teenage tech CEO named Zach Yadegari became the subject of internet "discourse":https://knowyourmeme.com/memes/discourse-slang after he shared the essay he wrote to apply to the colleges he was rejected from. A teenage tech CEO named Zach Yadegari became the subject of internet "discourse":https://knowyourmeme.com/memes/discourse-slang after he shared the essay he wrote to apply to the colleges he was rejected from.

Spread

Several internet users reacted to Zach Yadegari's personal essay and pointed out what they perceived as its weaknesses as it spread on Twitter / X in early April 2025.

On April 1st, 2025, X[6] user @buccocapital wrote, "Of course Stanford, MIT, Harvard, and Yale rejected him. They have their pick of students with perfect grades and scores. His essay is just bragging that people think he’s too awesome for college. No self-awareness. Doesn’t get the prompt. A great example of why EQ matters." The post gathered over 20,000 likes in two days.


Several internet users critiqued Zach Yadegari's personal essay, including X user @buccocapital, who wrote, "Of course Stanford, MIT, Harvard, and Yale rejected him. They have their pick of students with perfect grades and scores. His essay is just bragging that people think he’s too awesome for college. No self-awareness. Doesn’t get the prompt. A great example of why EQ matters"

That same day, X[4] user @coldhealing wrote, "Harvard got the ick because you used a GPT amount of em dashes." The tweet is a reference to the text-generating app's tendency to overuse em-dashes. The post gathered over 18,000 likes in two days.


Several internet users critiqued Zach Yadegari's personal essay, including X user @coldhealing, who wrote, "Harvard got the ick because you used a GPT amount of em dashes." The tweet is a reference to the text-generating app's tendency to overuse em-dashes.

Also on April 1st, X[5] user @LittleMammith wrote, "I don't want to dunk on some poor teenager but it is unbelievably obvious why a college would not admit someone based on a statement like this and I'm honestly bewildered there weren't people in this kid's life who tried to explain that to him." The tweet gathered over 130,000 likes in two days.


Several internet users critiqued Zach Yadegari's personal essay, including X user @LittleMammith, who wrote, "I don't want to dunk on some poor teenager but it is unbelievably obvious why a college would not admit someone based on a statement like this and I'm honestly bewildered there weren't people in this kid's life who tried to explain that to him."

Some internet users posted parodies of Yadegari's tweets, as seen in this April 2nd, 2025, tweet by user @keysmashbandit that read, "18 years old, 34 ACT, 4.0 GPA," alongside a screenshot of Ted Kaczynski's Industrial Revolution and it's Consequences essay. The post gathered over 5,000 likes in a day.


Some internet users posted parodies of Yadegari's tweets, as seen in this post by @keysmashbandit that reads, "18 years old, 34 ACT, 4.0 GPA," alongside a screenshot of "Ted Kaczynski's":https://knowyourmeme.com/memes/people/theodore-kaczynski-unabomber "Industrial Revolution and it's Consequences":https://knowyourmeme.com/memes/the-industrial-revolution-and-its-consequences-copypasta essay.

Search Interest

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External References

[1] Tech Crunch – Photo Calorie App Built By Two Teenagers

[2] Twitter / X – zach_yadegari

[3] Twitter / X – zach_yadegari

[4]  Twitter / X – coldhealing

[5] Twitter / X – LittleMammith

[6] Twitter / X – buccocapital

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Rynjin
Rynjin

In the kid's defense, pretentiousness is exactly what colleges look for in essays, same as your high school graduation speech. You're supposed to treat this shit with way more gravitas than it actually warrants because Ivy League colleges in particular really like it when people indirectly butter up their ego "Oh going to college has always been my dream" type shit.

Having actual experience in the industry you're looking to further educate yourself into, combined with a teenager's lack of self-awareness is a giant detriment because these colleges typically aren't looking for people who HAVE accomplished things already, they're looking for people who they can point to and say "We made that person, we can take partial credit for everything we do".

Like sure, this essay is really fucking arrogant but TBH I don't think it's any more inflated than the kids who write about all the super terribly interesting things they did as the student body president or whatever they thought was important in high school. Part of going to college is gaining the social skills to realize nobody ACTUALLY cares about that shit.

Everybody was a cringelord when they were 18, no reason to metaphorically stone the kid over it.

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