Growing up in the '60s, I would mow lawns, shovel snow, rake leaves, wash cars, make and hawk trinkets in my neighborhood, run a lemonade stand, deliver newspapers 7 days/week, 365 days/year, and babysit. As I got older, I would clean the local movie theater before school, saved and bought diving gear and did light salvage (purses, winch handles, and outboard motors dropped in the harbor), and boat bottom cleaning, painted boats and homes, washed airplanes at the local airport, cleaned sewer pipes, shoveled shyte at the local greenhouse, did day labor on construction sites, etc. Pretty much anything to honestly and legally earn money. I feel like I worked my ass off for many years, learning a lot about making and saving money. My parents taught me NONE of these skills directly. They also wouldn't let me get a license until I saved enough to buy a vehicle ($600 USD for a 1963 Ford Econoline van, bought in 1969, equivalent to about 5K today).
I know many of these jobs are unavailable now- but the lack of a strong work ethic prevents many from being creative. Being a creator/influencer is not really a great career choice.