
This Gen Zer washed his college basketball team’s dirty clothes to prove his passion—now he’s one of the youngest interns ever at the NBA
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Mocked as ‘mop boy,’ Daniel Sung turned a year of college basketball grunt work into a dream NBA internship, LinkedIn fame, and multiple startup offers at just 19.
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7 min read
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personal finance
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August 21, 2025
09:05 AM
Fortune
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Success·Gen ZThis Gen Zer washed his college basketball team’s dirty clothes to ve his passion—now he’s one of the youngest interns ever at the NBABy Orianna Rosa RoyleBy Orianna Rosa RoyleAssociate Editor, SuccessOrianna Rosa RoyleAssociate Editor, SuccessOrianna Rosa Royle is the Success associate editor at Fortune, overseeing careers, leadership, and company culture coverage
She was previously the senior reporter at Management Today, Britain's longest-running publication for CEOs
SEE FULL BIO Mocked as ‘mop boy,’ Daniel Sung turned a year of college basketball grunt work into a dream NBA internship, LinkedIn fame, and multiple startup offers at just 19.Courtesy of Daniel SungWith over 4 million Gen Zers currently unemployed, the competition for entry-level roles have never been fiercer
One college student even spent a year washing his basketball team’s sweaty jerseys and socks to stand out and ve his passion for the industry
His peers mocked him at the time, but now he’s having the last laugh, having secured his dream internship with the NBA’s LA Clippers—at just 19 years old
Gone are the days when showing a passion in a subject was enough to land an internship
With over 4 million Gen Zers currently unemployed (and AI continuing to wipe out entry-level roles), even a degree is no longer enough to get your foot in door
And in an industry fessional sports, where competition for even unpaid roles is cutthroat, in often takes even more creativity and sometimes, a willingness to do the jobs no one else wants
That’s why Daniel Sung reed to cleaning his college basketball team’s laundry and mopping the court floors to stand out—and he up securing a courtside seat to success as one of the youngest interns in NBA history at just 19 years old. “When I was mopping floors, people would come take pictures of me and call me ‘mop boy’
At some point, when people keep laughing it does get to you,” the Vanderbilt University scholarship student tells Fortune
Sung spent a year volunteering as manager of the prestigious college’s basketball team and got mocked relentlessly for it. “Even my friends would be , ‘dude, you’re a janitor’
But honestly, I knew what my ultimate vision was, and that was to get this internship—and I was able to really ve them wrong because, realistically, no one after their freshman year gets the internship
Now they’re all , ‘Daniel, we’re so ud of you—even the people that didn’t know me before.” From mopping floors to multiple job offers rolling in Sung’s drive was shaped early on by his family’s experience immigrating from South Korea to San Bernardino, and opening a 7-Eleven and later a Mexican restaurant to make ends meet
Without any personal connections in the sports industry, Sung knew he’d have to open his own doors. “Within the sports world, you survive either by being a hustler, or you have people that open doors for you—with my background, I have no one that can open those doors for me, the only person that can open those doors myself,” Sung says. “I knew working in sports first would give me the ground that I needed.” “I was expected to do 30 to 40 hours of unpaid work, and the work that I was doing was washing laundry for these 6-foot-8 basketball players that had just hours of practice
So I’m doing their laundry until 1 a.m., passing the ball to them during game days
If a player falls, I’m the person running with the towel and getting on my knees, wiping that spot.” NBA internships are usually reserved for college juniors or seniors—around 20 to 22 years old
This year, the basketball league received over 19,000 applications for its 2025 Summer Internship gram
And despite being years younger than the competition, Sung says his application to join the LA Clippers because of the very experience his college peers had snubbed. “After my interview one of the people said my story was unbeatable because a lot of people come into sports and just say, they want to work in sports because it’s really cool or they love basketball,” Sung adds. “But I literally built up my past year for it
I wasn’t there to joke around.” Last week was the final week of his marketing internship
Sung had been posting his experience on LinkedIn, detailing the challenges he faced and the lessons he learned along the way. “Ever since I started posting on LinkedIn, which was around four weeks ago, a lot of people have actually noticed my story—and that’s really opened the door to a lot of opportunities.” The attention online has already translated into thousands of ers and tangible job offers
Sung now works with two startups: one, a job-application platform with an AI focus, where he’s helped launch a new cohort gram; the other, an agency managing LinkedIn pages for large companies
Later this year, he’ll also got a marketing role lined up with Red Bull in Nashville—which he’ll have to juggle with college. “I actually got those offers just from a month of posting,” Sung says. “The thing that really opened my eyes after working this internship was that you really have to be innovative, you have to think differently and you have to get yourself out there.” “It also taught me how I need to expand my personal brand—hence the LinkedIn posts
And as I’ve been posting, I’ve gotten a lot of opportunities and doors I thought would have never opened, so it’s been one heck of a summer, that’s for sure.” Advice for Gen Z on landing their dream internship Instead of applying for jobs that fit your experience after graduating, Sung advises fellow Gen Zers to first think of their ultimate career goal—and align every experience to that, no matter how small. “When you think of job applications, it’s very important that your life tells a story,” the teenager explains. “My story was that I wanted to work with the LA Clippers, right? And so I kind of worked backwards from there
If I wanted to work for the LA Clippers, I knew I needed to work in sports.” Knowing that you need experience to get experience, Sung figured his best options to get started would be within his college sports team. “So I think if you want to get your foot in the door, you just have to be very on your why, and you have to start very small,” he says
In the end, that one year of drudge work gave him more than a relevant resume entry—it also gave him access. “Even if it’s the unglorified and unpaid work with unseen visibility, being in an environment where there are fessionals in the industry just gives you that exposure,” Sung says, adding that he was able to get career advice from coaches and the college’s director of basketball operations
Whenever they’d pass by him at work, he’d throw quick questions their way. “It’s hard for a normal student to do that,” he adds. “So being in that environment, you’re surrounded by people that have made it and so you just have to get in there
But first, you just have to know your why, and that has to be your guiding start through all of that.” Fortune wants to hear the unusual routes and creative strategies that led to your first role
Get in touch: orianna.royle@fortune.comIntroducing the 2025 Fortune Global 500, the definitive ranking of the biggest companies in the world
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