I finally watched the video and those two gentlemen are going to have to get over their sense of entitlement pretty quickly.
There are no guarantees and no well-worn paths in this profession.
They need someone to mentor them that would help elucidate that the system that they're so aghast about was the "unwritten rule" a little more than a decade ago.
After college, unless you had 2,500 hours, to even fly right seat in a Navajo carrying passengers you would be laughed out of the hangar, so you kept on hustling as you built flight time and eventually the right opportunity would spring up.
But the concept of getting out of college and going direct into an airline where you're flying around 50 to 90 passengers in a jet is something is not the industry norm. It may become the industry norm as the pilot pool gets a little dry, I guess, but no one owes them a shiny jet after they leave Purdue. It doesn't matter if your friend Karl was able to do it a few years ago.
Make your own success.