Ok, I'll give you the full rundown. I started flying when I was 12 years old. Got my private as soon as I turned 16, and my commercial as soon as I turned 18. I was obsessed with being an airline pilot (had been since I was 4 years old), so I wanted to get there as soon as possible. I saw advertisements in Flying Magazine for years for Gulfstream International Airlines and their Gulfstream Academy. It was essentially a "pay for training" operation, which meant that you paid for your newhire training yourself (I believe it cost me about $14k), and they gave you a job flying their BE-1900s. It was a Continental Connection operator flying mostly inside Florida and out to the islands. I didn't realize at the time that this "PFT" thing was pretty frowned upon in the industry, and I was solely focused on getting to the airlines as quickly as possible, so it sounded like a great idea to me.
Then 9/11 hit less than a year into my time at Gulfstream, and I was back into the school house to get my CFI. Spent some time doing some instruction for the Gulfstream Academy side of the company, and then got hired at Pinnacle thanks to a preferential hiring thing they had worked out. Upgraded to captain at 23, and hired at AirTran shortly before my 25th birthday. That was about 7 years ago.
As JEP points out, lots of union work mixed in, beginning during my probationary year at Pinnacle. I realized around that time that the PFT thing was bad for the profession, and I regretted it, but what can you do? So now I get crap for the rest of my days from some of the people around here for it. Such is life.