When I entered the workforce in the early 2000s, I struggled to get a job. To get unemployment payments I had to attend a weekly session at a local job agency to prove I was actively trying to work.
I remember the advice from there clearly - “Just think of a place you want to work, go there with your resume, ask them what positions they have and offer to work for free. Then they’ll hire you if they like you.”
Not a Boomer, but did get an internship that eventually became a full time job this way, during the post-2008 recession.
I got laid off and wasn't getting any solid leads from traditional application processes or the town "career center" so I made a list of businesses in walking distance of eachother that might need my services, printed a few dozen copies of my resume, and beat the streets. I just walked in and asked for a manager but settled for whoever would talk to me, gave my brief elevator pitch, left a resume and contact info. A few called me and one actually worked out.
It can still work if it's a small business, fast food or certain blue collar work. I've done it a few times in my life the last time was 2 years ago, I walked in and asked for a job as an EMT 2 months ago but I did need a certification for that. Recently I got hired for a new position but not the one I really wanted so as soon a I got hired I walked in to the hiring manager for the position I really wanted and asked for that job, to be continued.
Re-waching that show as an adult, the animation is terrible and doesn't live up to my memories at all... But I've a new appreciation for the scenes with krang n shredder arguing like an old married couple. That shit is gold
Yeah, one of my childhood favorites was Thundercats. I tried watching once as an adult and the nostalgia died immediately. I'm ashamed of childhood me's lack of standards.
I just came across comic book collections I-IV and learned the live action movie was a mishmash of plots lifted from the original comic series. So that was cool! Hope this is interesting to you too
What makes this funnier, to me, is that animators and directors all had discussions about how this scene was going to be drawn. It's not like some rogue illustrator slipped this one in - the studio itself committed to the gag. Plus, it's very in-character for Casey Jones who is rarely seen without that mask, or unarmed.
This also has strong video-game energy, like "Dragonborn wearing a chef's hat", or "Solid Snake in a cardboard box."
I heard Casey Jones from the live action movies went on to be a detective of some special unit in NYC a few years later. He's clearly over-qualified for whatever office job this was.
Welll, I think you're joking, but Elias Koteas, who played Casey Jones, wasn't in any of the NYC cop shows as a regular.
Christopher Meloni, who does indeed look similar, was in l&w svu.
Now, Koteas has played a cop as a regular cast member, but in Chicago, not NYC.
Also, as a total tangent, it never ceases to amaze me how many of Meloni's Oz castmates ended up playing cops over the years. And it isn't like most of that cast didn't show up in svu here and there lol. I always joke that there was a prison break, and everyone just ran to NYC and became cops, except Beecher, who turned to murder.
it's been more than a quarter century since I've seen any of it (although the theme song is still in my head) ... was there any point to Casey Jones? was he like a metaphor, or a stand-in for a real person or something? such a weird character to have a pretty normal name in a show with characters like the turtles, Splinter, Shredder and whatever the fuck that brain dude was...