What does it say about me that I enjoy stumping the interviewer? I need help.
It was a fairly informal interview, and he got this momentary look of "the who with the what now?" The answer was even helpful - it was more "seeing that the trainees succeed" and less "getting projects done on time and under budget" - which is good for me.
Double Rainbow has nothing on Brooklyn Tornado:
DUDE IT'S FUCKING FUNNELING! DUDE, I KNOW!
DUDE IT'S FUCKING FUNNELING! DUDE, I KNOW!
DUDE, LOOK AT THE TREE! LOOK AT THE TREE, DUDE! HOLY GOD!
What does it say about me that I enjoy stumping the interviewer?
I think that is was bumped me up in my rank at my last interview. Esp. in a non-profit organization, soe one who comes up with a question that makes the interviewer pause is a sign that this might be a person you need
darwin waiting to happen . ( tornado video )
I think I need to work on the stump the interviewer skill! I could use more of that...Though at the moment I could use "freakin' promote me one lousy job title level that wont' change my job any" -ma, more. And if that DOESN"T happen, I'd need the interviewing....
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THIS is hilarious--Adrian Fenty, current mayor of DC, did not win the Democratic primary. Given that DC is like, 90% Democrat, that means he lost the race. HOWEVER...he did win the Republican primary! By write-in vote! So he could still run....
Though at the moment I could use "freakin' promote me one lousy job title level that wont' change my job any" -ma, more. And if that DOESN'T happen, I'd need the interviewing....
You and me both.
Happy birthday to the Phoenix!
Happy birthday to Perkins!
Though at the moment I could use "freakin' promote me one lousy job title level that wont' change my job any" -ma, more. And if that DOESN'T happen, I'd need the interviewing....
You and me both.
I third this sentiment. I haven't made the absolute choice to change jobs if it doesn't go through, but it is a possibility.
'BFF,' 'LMAO' and 'Interweb' Join the New Oxford American Dictionary
The next time someone tells you to stop saying "interweb" instead of "internet," you can tell them it's in the dictionary. It's in the New Oxford American Dictionary, to be precise. And so are all the other terms we've been using online for years now, including LMAO, BFF, TTYL and defriend/unfriend.
This year's class of new words is like a tribute to the web culture of half a decade ago. The New Oxford American is the young, hip rebel of the dictionary world, and it still can't keep up with the internet's incredible rate of linguistic change. Does anyone else think it's an epic fail that they left out epic fail?