scameron77,
Sorry to burst your stereotypical bubble but I never had the silver spoon, only the baseball bat with rusty 6 inch nails through it. Answering your question, why don't you communicate with people whose job it is to recruit for the airlines and listen to what they have to say? If you research enough you'll realise that there are many, many paths to that airline job, all of which have been followed by members of pprune.
I decided to go to Oxford because I believe it presented the best option to get me where I want to go (monitoring the success of APP graduates I have not regretted doing so). For others that meant CTC or Jerez. Some chose to go modularly. The fact is there is no ideal way. You could go to one school and not get a job, when going to another you would have. This is what is called the lottery of life. For sure, wherever you do train, they will all try to get you a job, but ultimately it depends on the effort you put in during training, how competent a pilot you are and whether you have a suitable personality to fit in to a particular airline's profile.
Why don't you visit all the schools you have in mind, get a feel for what training would be like there, and ask all the important questions - what's the groundschool success rate, how many students have gained airline jobs (or any flying jobs for that matter), can you speak to any former students, etc, etc ?
Remember, don't place so much emphasise on the school getting you a job - you are going to get yourself that job. NETWORK, NETWORK, NETWORK.
Good Luck!
VC10 Rib22