Gianna got her masters in epidemiology and before her fall semester started, wanted to apply for a summer job doing contact tracing.
[Ads /]
RELATED: Podcast by Stanford seniors gives platform to stories of being Black, first generation college students
Stanford seniors' podcast gives insight into being Black, first generation college students
Unsuccessful in the job hunt and also unable to secure a position working in retail, she followed in her family's footsteps and started picking blueberries at farms around the Bay Area.
In the tweet, Gianna wrote "I'm about to finish up my time in the fields, and wanted everyone to know that we (farmworkers) are paid $7 for two gallons of blueberries. How much do you pay for your blueberries?"
The tweet went viral with more than a quarter-million likes.
[Ads /]
Dion Lim, an anchor for ABC7 News in Northern California, asked Gianna what her goal was with the tweet.
She responded that it was for others to "become aware of the hands that feed you... humanizing the people behind that. It's so easy to serve your fruit not knowing where those blueberries come from. There's a workforce with people with dreams and hope behind every food you eat."
Gianna's sister graduated this past spring from Brown University, one of her brothers is an incoming junior at Bowdoin College and her youngest brother is an incoming freshman at the University of Washington.
VIDEO: Bay Area seamstresses work around the clock to make face masks for farmworkers
[Ads /]
Coronavirus kindness: Bay Area seamstresses make face masks for farmworkers
RELATED: Relief fund set up for California farm workers amid COVID-19 pandemic
Relief fund set up for farm workers amid COVID-19 pandemic
Team of doctors visit farmworkers in Ventura County on site amid coronavirus pandemic