I worked at 33 Universal

If it's between this place and starving or being thrown out of your apartment, seriously consider if you could consider dumpster diving and sleeping rough as an "urban adventure" rather than a last resort. If you absolutely cannot, you might be slightly more comfortable working with this outfit than you would sleeping among the rats in the subway. Slightly.

Cons

Extremely low pay -- the rate will be less than minimum wage once that law changes, so you'd be better off at McDonald's. And the first time you ask when you can expect to see the pittance you've earned, you'll get your walking papers. This happened to me, and I spent the next four months fighting to get them to pay me what I was owed. I mentioned the word "lawyer," and the funds magically appeared two days later. The writing is terrible, and that is with the native English speakers. There's little to no original content, and a growing reliance on cheap labor in the form of aggregators in the Philippines, which usually results in straight-up plagiarism (who can blame them? They don't speak the language). This leaves editors a huge mess to clean up, yet you're expected to do that in less than 15 minutes per story. It's all about clicks, quantity over quality. Do a little digging online and you'll see that these low-traffic, poor-quality websites are a front for an evangelical South Korean ministry whose leader believes he is the second coming of Christ.