RE: OT - He's just fine, right?
| Date : Tue, 2 Aug 2005 10:47:12 -0500 |
| To : <DS(at)Softimage.COM> |
| From : "Judy Ranelli" <jranelli(at)ewtn.com> |
| Subject : RE: OT - He's just fine, right? |
|
Please
stop, y’all are making my stomach hurt! ;-) JUDY -----Original
Message----- At
the CBS, channel 3 network affiliate station where both my brother and I
worked we had a 15 year old kid "Steve" show up and he was an
electronics whiz. It was only a few weeks before the nickname "Stevie
Wonder" stuck to him. He was one funny character. The joke when something
went wrong soon became. "Oh, oh. Where is Stevie". No
matter what you tried to show him he already "knew it".
Unfortunately the management took a shine to him because he was working for
free in order to "intern". Within two years he was a very unpopular,
paid manager and within two more years he moved on and started his own
company and went into and out of business about 5 times before he hit it big. He
made fistfuls of money and then crashed again. The last I heard Stevie had a
bad auto wreck, collapsed into self examination and sat in his apartment a lot
looking backwards. Kind of a sad little guy. To
this day when I hear Stevie Wonder's music I think of Stevie the intern. What a
twisted connection. H From: owner-ds(at)Softimage.COM [mailto:owner-ds(at)Softimage.COM] On Behalf Of Tom Harris Love it….30 years in this business,
with a lot of that time with my back to a group of egos , I’ve heard it
all…Your Theo has come and gone many times…. Tom -----Original
Message----- I can
certanily relate to this thread. I have hemorrhoids older than some of
the punk brats I work with. A common scenario as follows: 1.
Young Theodore the Intern delivers a much needed tape that the Agency Producer
forgot. Gets to watch his first edit session for about 5 minutes
before he has to go back to the agency and pick up the AE's dry cleaning
and wash their cars. 2.
A week later, he actually gets to sit in on an entire session
and after about 10 minutes is adding stupid suggestions which are promplty
ignored. Gets to eat lunch, orders basic fare and offers to pay for his
sandwich. Is told that lunch comes with the edit. 3.
Two weeks later, the Agency Producer calls in sick and young
Theodore who now is an employee, gets to actually supervise adding a phone
number tag to an existing spot. We spend about 4 hours trying about
50 different type faces for a phone number then another hour "art
directing" the slate. Milks the session long enough for lunch,
orders the most expensive item on the menu AND a Pizza. He eats the menu
item, doesn't eat the pizza, but takes it home for dinner. 4. A
month later, "Theo" as he insists to be called will be supervising an
all day session. Shows
up dressed in all black. Complains about the lunch menu selections and
insists we
order from a place not in the menu book. Complains that our wi-fi is slow
and spends the session on his cell phone pausing only occassionally to bark out
some insane order so whoever
he is talking to knows he is in an edit and in total control. 5.
A couple of month's go by and we don't see Theo. Find out that somehow,
none of the edit
shops in town are good enough anymore so he has to leave the market for post. Oddly,
he has learned more about the business than those of us who have been doing it forever
and strangely, our experience ceased as his continued to grow. Sound
familiar???? Rick at
naked eye |
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