I made'em extra sloppy!Mr. Matlock wrote: I'll sit in back of the kitchen next to the dishwasher for an amazing $5 sloppy joe!!

I made'em extra sloppy!Mr. Matlock wrote: I'll sit in back of the kitchen next to the dishwasher for an amazing $5 sloppy joe!!
I think the burgers are 2 bucks. I have no clue how I managed to overlook sloppy joes on the happy hour menu. I'd rather sit on the patio and stare at the milfs shopping at the Domain, so it's win-win.HBK wrote:You have to get there before 7p or after 9p. It's a happy hour special (sloppy joes may actually be $3, and burgers are <$5). The food is cheap, but the drinks are still ball bustingly expensive. Also, if you order off that menu, they don't let you sit with their regular dinner guests.Thirteen wrote:Really? Looks like I know where I'm going for dinner tonight.HBK wrote: Hey, McCormick and Schmick's in Austin serves $50 steaks, and $5 sloppy joes.
Just follow the golden rules of meal interviews.daesonesb wrote: Sidebar: Would you say anything in particular is off the plate foodwise when you go to a lunch interview? Obvious to me would be not to order anything more expensive than the partners you are eating with, but other than that? What would you all get if, for example, you were ordering first? The Donald always says he would only hire people who ordered steak.
That's where I took my fiancee on our first date. At that point in my life I always did happy hours as first dates to find out if I actually liked a lady before I would commit to an entire evening. I handed her the menu and said "Feel free to order ANYTHING you want" (the most expensive thing is $5).Thirteen wrote:I think the burgers are 2 bucks. I have no clue how I managed to overlook sloppy joes on the happy hour menu. I'd rather sit on the patio and stare at the milfs shopping at the Domain, so it's win-win.HBK wrote:You have to get there before 7p or after 9p. It's a happy hour special (sloppy joes may actually be $3, and burgers are <$5). The food is cheap, but the drinks are still ball bustingly expensive. Also, if you order off that menu, they don't let you sit with their regular dinner guests.Thirteen wrote:Really? Looks like I know where I'm going for dinner tonight.HBK wrote: Hey, McCormick and Schmick's in Austin serves $50 steaks, and $5 sloppy joes.
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am i out of your doghouse now, IAFG?IAFG wrote:worth reading, thanks for posting
out on probation?miamiman wrote:am i out of your doghouse now, IAFG?IAFG wrote:worth reading, thanks for posting
What is the story here?IAFG wrote:out on probation?miamiman wrote:am i out of your doghouse now, IAFG?IAFG wrote:worth reading, thanks for posting
UChi prob held together well. If not DIAF, that DLA Pipper semen sucker job is mine.miamiman wrote:I'll take probation.
DF: IAFG thinks my postings exude excessive worry about the economy.
I wish he elaborated on last year's program being "large".miamiman wrote:
How does this year's summer program compare with last year's?
We have 30 fewer students. This summer, there are 97 [participants] firmwide.
The firm extended offers to only 75 percent of last year's summer associates. That's a bit discouraging. Any chance that rate will improve this year?
Generally, our offer rate is north of 90 percent. We had a large program last summer and the economy was uncertain. Things are more stable now; we have room to make everyone an offer.
Actually, it does. If they plan on extending offers to everyone who doesn't screw up, then it is an indication that the firm feels confident about its predictions for their future workload. If all firms start to regain some sort of confidence about their short and intermediate futures, then the market will start to normalize. Now, this doesn't necessarily mean there will be more jobs out there, and there will certainly be fewer jobs for years to come. But as someone who is hopeful to land a 2L firm gig, I will feel a lot more confident knowing firms aren't no-offering and deferring everyone. There won't be as much pressure to "guess correctly" on taking a 2L gig since the fear of picking an unhealthy firm will be lower. That's my take, anyways.Scallywaggums wrote:I wish he elaborated on last year's program being "large".miamiman wrote:
How does this year's summer program compare with last year's?
We have 30 fewer students. This summer, there are 97 [participants] firmwide.
The firm extended offers to only 75 percent of last year's summer associates. That's a bit discouraging. Any chance that rate will improve this year?
Generally, our offer rate is north of 90 percent. We had a large program last summer and the economy was uncertain. Things are more stable now; we have room to make everyone an offer.
If it was just large compared to this year's, and there've been around 130 students in the summer program for years before this recent economy-driven cutback, then the "we have room to make everyone an offer" quotation serves absolutely no use as an economic indicator.
If it really was abnormally large, and the summer program has generally included 100 students over the past decade, then the "room for everyone" quotation is cause for uproarious glee.
I assume that reality's closer to the former, but I tend towards pessimism.
Anyone run across similar interviews?
dla piper sounds great to me.Desert Fox wrote:UChi prob held together well. If not DIAF, that DLA Pipper semen sucker job is mine.miamiman wrote:I'll take probation.
DF: IAFG thinks my postings exude excessive worry about the economy.
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jkthesealocust wrote:Wait, aren't you a 0L? What the fuck do your letters say?miamiman wrote:I've been mass mailing tampa and miami shitlaw for weeks. I've got a few leads; I'm not wonderfully hopeful but im using matthies advice in converting leads into offers.
Mass mailing is extremely inappropriate as a 0L. If that's what you thought Matthies was suggesting...
Great point. I was thinking only in terms of 'total number of jobs' and, thus, a vague guess at how tough the market is.romothesavior wrote:Actually, it does. If they plan on extending offers to everyone who doesn't screw up, then it is an indication that the firm feels confident about its predictions for their future workload. If all firms start to regain some sort of confidence about their short and intermediate futures, then the market will start to normalize. Now, this doesn't necessarily mean there will be more jobs out there, and there will certainly be fewer jobs for years to come. But as someone who is hopeful to land a 2L firm gig, I will feel a lot more confident knowing firms aren't no-offering and deferring everyone. There won't be as much pressure to "guess correctly" on taking a 2L gig since the fear of picking an unhealthy firm will be lower. That's my take, anyways.Scallywaggums wrote:I wish he elaborated on last year's program being "large".miamiman wrote:
How does this year's summer program compare with last year's?
We have 30 fewer students. This summer, there are 97 [participants] firmwide.
The firm extended offers to only 75 percent of last year's summer associates. That's a bit discouraging. Any chance that rate will improve this year?
Generally, our offer rate is north of 90 percent. We had a large program last summer and the economy was uncertain. Things are more stable now; we have room to make everyone an offer.
If it was just large compared to this year's, and there've been around 130 students in the summer program for years before this recent economy-driven cutback, then the "we have room to make everyone an offer" quotation serves absolutely no use as an economic indicator.
If it really was abnormally large, and the summer program has generally included 100 students over the past decade, then the "room for everyone" quotation is cause for uproarious glee.
I assume that reality's closer to the former, but I tend towards pessimism.
Anyone run across similar interviews?
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