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#1
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Should have known!
It sounded like a job offer or a job fair. But it turned out to be a multi level marketing thing. I even asked to make sure but I guess I wasn't clear enough.
And they made me take my hat off. Which is obnoxious anyway, but particularly annoying because the room lights were super bright and hurt my eyes. And there's something about being in a room full of true believers that makes me feel utterly alone in the universe. But the speaker was funny, at least, and I got to play dress up which is good practice for a real job offer so no big loss. |
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#2
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Somewhat cynically - I think you might have been perfectly clear, but overestimated their intention to be upfront and honest with you about it.
__________________
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#3
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Quote:
I had a co-worker get caught up in the Herbalife scam - he was not a naive or stupid person in the least! - but no amount of evidence or debunking could dissaude him from going "all in" once he'd been programmed at a couple of meetings. Lost all his savings, and very nearly lost his job (for pestering co-workers and customers to join Herbalife) by the time he finally realized that he'd been lied to. MLMs need to go the hell away and stop preying on the people who can least afford to be fleeced. (The poor, underemployed, unemployed, retirees, students, recent immigrants, etc.) But of course those are the people desperate enough to listen to the spiel, and the recruiters know it. |
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#4
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Ah, memories... I was a mere child of 21, recently arrived in San Diego (I was in the Navy at the time) and the girl who worked at the flying club invited me to a party! I was so excited, since I rarely get invited to parties anyway, and here I was, new in town, and already having a social life!!!
And when I arrived, that's when I first hear the term AMWAY. For all that I was usually a pushover for salesmen in those days, I managed to resist the lure of becoming one myself. And now, 37 years later, it still hurts to know I wasn't really invited to a party... ![]()
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#5
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You donned a suit, tie, and hat to (what you thought was) a nondescript job interview/fair?
My two cents: Lose the hat for the next interview, unless you're auditioning for a part on Mad Men. |
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#6
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#7
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(Either way, gentlemen remove their hats indoors, dude.) |
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#8
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Yeah. I've considered that. I used the term "pyramid scheme" which could have been interpreted as a Ponzi thing rather than MLM. But it's just as likely he understood and misrepresented things. OTOH the people there seem to really believe in this stuff so he may have been honest but deluded.
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#9
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Besides which I have a sensitivity to light so being without some protection can be quite uncomfortable, and really it is presumptuous to insist people remove their clothing. Anyway it was a nice hat, one that matched the semiformalness of the rest of my outfit. I might have taken it off for a personal interview, but it turned out to be a large convention hall in a larger hotel. I'll honor the bizarre religion in personal meetings, churches, and courts. But I'm not about to volunteer in a giant public hotel lobby or meeting hall. |
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#10
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Could blame a politician here, but...
SPOILER:
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