US Olympic star sounds the alarm bell: 'I can just cover rent'

Silver medal
First medal in 20 years
Swept into headlines
Her journey
Turning to social media
350 million views
A 2020 survey
Paying athletes
Silver medal

Daniella Ramirez was part of the US synchronized swimming team that achieved a silver medal at the 2024 Paris Games.

First medal in 20 years

It was the team's first medal in the event since the 2004 Games in Athens, having failed to qualify since 2008. A lack of success means a lack of funding, and Ramirez has to find other ways to keep her Olympic dream alive.

Swept into headlines

It's easy to get swept into the headlines of Olympic medallists making huge sums of money like Philippines gymnast Carlos Yulo being set for life and Simone Biles making millions from sponsorship deals.

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Her journey

However, not every Olympian's journey is paved in gold and shiny objects. Ramirez revealed to the BBC how she gets by to pay her rent and how she continues training eight hours a day.

"Just enough to cover my rent"

"I get just enough to cover my rent a month. It's not enough to be a career, and this is a full-time job." The 22-year-old revealed she trains from 6:30 am until 2:30 pm at UCLA, leaving minimum time for a full-time job.

Turning to social media

The US Olympian has turned to social media as a means to pay her bills whilst training, building a brand of more than 600,000 people across Instagram (61.5k) and TikTok (547.5k).

Picture - Instagram @Daniellaaramirezzz

"My primary job"

According to Fortune, Ramirez said: "My primary job right now—the thing that makes the most money—is definitely TikTok, Instagram, and all my social media handles."

350 million views

Her 'ASMR' videos on how to take her artistic swimming hair out have nearly 350 million views between three videos, helping her land paid sponsorships from companies like L'Oréal Paris.

Picture - TikTok @Daniellaaramirezzz

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"Do your sport full-time"

"What social media means, [is] that you can do things on your own time, on your own schedule, make ends meet, and get to do your sport full-time."

A 2020 survey

A 2020 Survey of 500 Olympic level Athletes across 48 countries found that 58% didn't consider themselves 'financially stable,' claiming they have to live off casual work instead of their sport.

Paying athletes

The International Olympic Committee (IOC) doesn't provide prize money for any Olympic athletes who win a medal. Instead, it's up to individual nations. The US pays $37,500 (£28,400, €33,723) for gold, $22,500 (£17038, €20234) for silver, and $15,000 (£11,360, €13,489) for bronze.

"It's missing your family"

The World Aquatics Championship medallist said: "It is not every four years, it's every single day. It's missing Christmas, it's not going home, it's missing your family. It's worth it, but it's really grueling."

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