Recently laid off Tesla Production Supervisor says he slept in his car in order to work more
spoiler
Last week, news broke that Tesla had laid off over 14,000 employees, constituting a significant 10% reduction in its workforce. Now, one former Tesla employee’s story of dismissal on LinkedIn is capturing widespread online attention offering a glimpse into the human cost of such large-scale corporate decisions.
Nico Murillo started working at Tesla’s Fremont, California, plant in 2019, initially as a production associate, but quickly began climbing the corporate ladder, as detailed in his LinkedIn bio. In 2020, he was promoted to the position of Lead Production Associate, and in 2021, he became a Production Supervisor. However, last week, he was let go.
Murillo’s story begins on Monday, April 15, at 4:30 a.m., as he opened his laptop to check emails. Strangely, he discovered that his account had been deactivated but assumed it was an IT bug and continued with his morning routine.
By 5:00 a.m., he was on his way to work, a 90-minute drive away. Murillo mentioned that during his commute, he usually checks his email while his vehicle is in Autopilot. However, on this day, he received a devastating message stating that his position had been eliminated.
Murillo texted his manager, and was told that “everyone got it, we’ll get more info later.” By 5:50 a.m., he was trying to enter the factory, but was turned away, and a security guard took his security badge. He returned to his car and sat in disbelief.
He Slept In His Car And Showered In The Factory
While all layoff stories are sad, Murillo’s story is garnering a lot of attention, which may have to do with his unwavering dedication to Tesla. After laying out the timeline of his day, the Production Supervisor provided the world with an example of his remarkable commitment to work.
“At one point in 2023 I was even sacrificing sleeping in my car on work days just to avoid commuting to work,” wrote Murillo. “Showered at the factory and slept in the parking lot. Microwaved dinner in the break room.”
The post has received an outpouring of sympathy on LinkedIn, and another former Tesla employee shared a similar experience of giving it his all for the company, just to be let go, suggesting that Murillo’s story is anything but unique.
Then his linkedin post:
spoiler
Tesla lay off story
4/15 Monday
4:30am:
Opened my laptop, account was de activated. Thought it was just another IT problem, so didn't think anything of it.
5:00am
I usually check my emails while on my autopilot commute to work (1hr 30min drive)
Email read: "Unfortunately as a result, your position has been eliminated by this restructuring."
5:05am
Texted my manager, but he said "everyone got it, we'll get more info later"
5:50am
Tried to badge in, and the security guard took my badge and told me I was laid off
6:00am
Sat in my car in disbelief.
Tesla timeline:
07/22/2019 - 04/15/2024
About 5 years at Tesla. Half a decade!
At one point in 2023 I was even sacrificing sleeping in my car on work days just to avoid commuting to work. Showered at the factory and slept in the parking lot. Microwaved dinner in the break room.
Sacrificed a lot for the company. But this is just a small part of a chapter that is ending, and there’s a whole book waiting to be written. I’m only 29 years old and have a lot more career time in me.
I went from Production Associate, to Lead Production Associate, to being a Production Supervisor. Starting from the very bottom and worked my way up. Learned a lot of adapting to the ever-changing environment, to working with less but getting more done.
In the middle of my career, when I was a lead, I met the most funny and humble supervisor named Louie Afusia. Louie taught me about delegating, following up, and finishing through. He used to tell me: “listen to the people, not against them.” I even played semi pro football with him one Spring season. But he taught me a lot about leadership, and i’m glad to have met him in my career at Tesla. He was this huge Somoan USO, that had a good heart.
Louie passed away in 02/2023. He’s gone, but not forgotten.
How you make something last forever is you inspire the next generation and then the next. Always leave the place better than you found it.
One thing Tony Stark (Ironman) said in the movie Avengers Endgame:
No company will ever show you a lick of loyalty, no matter how good a customer or how hardworking an employee you are. You are nothing but a tool to them.
M'lord is even stronger now that he abandoned me family to the cold.
Always leave the place better than you found it.
Also just the fucking absurdity of this line given the current state of Tesla. It reminds me of this linkedin post by a microsoft manager who described how his team sacrificed their marriages working 80 hour weeks to create Internet Explorer, a web browser I've only ever used to download a different web browser.
Torpedoeing your life to raise shareholder value is something else. Burning a reality down to fuel an abstraction. All because your boss told you to do it. It's like the banality of evil but sadder. The banality of tragedy.
Pretty sure we're supposed to feel bad for these people no? They need money to live in this expensive ass world and they found themselves in a rare position where working hard could actually return significant material gains and so they chose to take advantage of that rare opportunity
And this doesn't seem to be a situation where they're crushing other workers either, unlike many other highly paid corporate tech workers
Obviously, unionizing is better but the default view is of course just licking boot harder
Please chime in with your opinion if you actually organize
The dude is more than willing to work for him for almost next to nothing, and make the job the ONLY focal point of his life, and THIS is how you repay his generosity? I NEVER want to hear a capitalist lecture anyone about "entitlement" when in this country it has to take a militant union to beat a "thank you" out of any CEO.
rare position where working hard could actually return significant material gains and so they chose to take advantage of that rare opportunity
idk this feels pretty shaky. the guy went from "peon" to "peon with better pay and more responsibility", to "peon supervisor", in 5 years. I don't think that's really much of an outlier, especially when you show up ready to put in double effort both at working and bootlicking, and frankly just seems like a normal career progression that shouldnt and often doesnt require this sort of fanaticism
I do feel bad for the fired workers though, even the ones that bought in this hard: they aren't responsible for their boss, and they are exploited regardless of how fanatical their devotion to the boot. Tesla's may suck but they aren't so bad that the people responsible for even building them are criminals, as some below seem to think.
The media focusing on this guy and not just a regular person who isnt such a bootlicker does suck tho
Factories have one supervisor for dozens of employees. Hierarchies of employees mathematically just mean the percentage of people who can climb up is extremely small
They empowered Elon Musk. Do I feel bad for a CIA agent that gets laid off? A pinkerton or a cop? A raytheon employee? No. They built something terrible and are surprised when the leopard ate their face. Fuck them to death.
Cool and normal for people to be keeling over just 2 years after being a fully capable manager. Not sure what "semi pro football" is but that's possibly further damning. That guy totally wasn't worked to death, no sir.
Maybe an arena league football team where you are an actual employee and get paid for the games sonce spectators pay for a ticket. There are loads of small sports leagues for every sport that dont pay much and have no real pathway to the upper level, but can be a fun job if you are fit enough to still play at a competitive level.
Im dissapointed he wasnt fired for being too smelly after libing in his car. How old was his supervisor? That death seeems suspicious. Whats up with that marvel bullshit at the end? Is this satire?
The one thing I learned from all the sappy Christmas movies from when I was a kid is that nobody will ever remember how great you were doing double overtime shifts, nobody will remember your personal sacrifice to make sure a report was finished, but your family will remember every event you miss. As a nurse it's easy to lose the barrier between "work" and just being nice. You're working with real humans that have real needs and going out of your way to be nice to them is fine and dandy, but the entire healthcare industry is built on that where you'll do a little here and there of unpaid labor or bringing in something from home. To think there's a person so atomized that they developed these kinds of feelings for a fucking car manufacturer.