Let's just say once you've gotten a guy to play the audio of a turtle having sex with a boot over a busy freq with no solicitation, you've made a lasting connection.
I was told by an ATP recruiter that you just have to do the fast track, BUT there are 2 fast tracks; 0 to hero or PPL with X amount of XC hours, which I meet, and either qualify you. So if I take this IFR written I have coming up, I'm disqualified (yes, just for passing the written before ATP, they want your $$$). So that is why I'm considering.
Sorry for the long post to follow, but I feel like I need to explain myself to justify why I actually think this could happen for me.
I lol'd at the first part of your post
@Maximilian_Jenius. You guys are correct, you have to be invited I found out. I talked to a recruiter, told her my background, and that this is pretty much what interests me about ATP after having turned down ATP in the past. I don't take anything a recruiter for some pilot mill says to heart, but she said they rarely get applicants that have worked in as many different aviation positions as myself (highschool airline internship+scholarship, airline CS\Ramp\Ops\Cargo, Ramp Tower+trainer+senior controller title, Terminal management at a major airport, FBO work, published aviation photographer, flightsim content writer\software developer, FAA ATC poolie, monetized aviation youtube channel, ect) and I guess she said the "VERY" few (she emphasized that) people that got accepted to the F9 program were people who lived and breathed aviation before they ever entered the program and had some level of previous flying experience, though she did not elaborate if they had PPLs or not upon entry. She said they don't want a single person to fail that program, so they only sent highly capable pilots. According to her, a little prior flying experience goes a long with with opportunities offered at ATP as most people have none. She also said there is no written number of people per any amount of time to be selected, and no forecast on how many will be selected period, so it is more or less random for now, and she reminded me that the program was in it's "infancy". When she said all that about my background, given that she seemed pretty chill, I said "All that somewhere along the way I still lost my virginity" and she laughed really hard, so that's good.
Surprisingly, she told me MOST people who come to ATP have never worked in aviation at all. I find that pretty crazy, as yes, I've wanted to be a pilot my whole life, but that's because I am infatuated with aviation, so I've only ever worked in aviation accordingly, other than side gigs like Uber. I seriously don't get how people commit to $80k in debt for a career they aren't passionate about, but hey, I guess most college graduates aren't exactly ecstatic about the career they end up in, either.
But you're right, I am not a sycophant, at all. BUT, though I keep it real, I do generally try to make any place I'm at better and get in with the people running the place not to be an ass-kisser (you can totally say ass on here), but to learn everything I can, understand why things are the way they are, figure out who I can talk to and get results, who I shouldn't talk to about improvements or risk getting on their bad-side, ect. I tend to be very vocal about my goals, and people tend to end up helping me. Every job I've ever had, I'm always top of my class all through training and quickly climb the ladder. I was the first one done in a large room every time I took the AT-SAT ATC test, and passed it well-qualified (85%+) each time, and that is the hardest test I've ever taken. Hell, even driving Uber for a year I had damn near a 5-star rating which is very hard to get in the Bay Area, and I was just myself. I have also been invited to become involved in training at every job I've had, so I think I'll be a great CFI since I love to teach people and I tend to look at things differently than most people so I wouldn't just be reciting FARs like a parrot with a one-size-fits-all method. I'm no super human, but I am either 200% into what I'm doing, or you can't get me to care 1% and I loathe every second of it (I often fold laundry days after washing it for example). Luckily, I'm 200% into anything aviation, even the boring parts because I know the end goal, and usually I make friends, so I'm confident that I'd stand out and earn respect without being fake, over-the-top, and desperate. I've always also been super nerdy about Frontier, they've always been one of my favorite airlines, though I was pretty pissed to see their ULCC transition, I've come to accept it.
In most aspects of life, I actually think of myself as average or even below average. But when it comes to aviation, I see no reason why I can't accomplish what those other pilots did. For me, it is more a matter of will this program be terminated, or not. If I go to ATP and work my ass off but they never select another person for F9, then I'd rather not go. And the phone call with ATP only reinforced these worries. A huge gamble, very high risk, but a potentially very big reward. A tough one, especially with a plan already in action, people willing to go above and beyond to help me, an interest free loan set up, 240 hours, and a local CFI job most likely waiting for me at the school I'm furloughed from. I wish I knew about this sooner, I only found out about the F9 program this week. Now, not much time to decide given the entry criteria and the fact I'm 2 months in on Sheppard Air and have the written tests paid for and scheduled.
EDIT: Also, I see that though the price has gone up, ATP now only gets you 25 hours Multi unless you cough up extra dough. It used to be, what like 200ish multi? WTF happened to where the program cost goes up from previous years AND you get less multi? Da faq?