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keg411

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by keg411 » Thu Feb 16, 2012 3:58 pm
Ozymandias wrote:Jessuf wrote:Females who do not do home-brewing: what interests did you put on your resume?
A baseball team I'm a huge fan of, travel/culture interests in an interesting country where my extended family lives, and board games.
As a woman and a die-hard sports fan, I'd recommend that if you're female, try to avoid sports on your resume, but if people ask you about interests not on your resume, you can talk about it then. The reason? Male BigLaw partners tend to be sexist assholes and they don't want to hear women talk about sports, no matter how much you know (this is directly from a former BigLaw partner).
I changed my interests to "girlier" interests and just brought up sports during the interviews if asked about other interests (or if someone had memorabilia in an office), and my interview outcomes afterwards were much, much better.
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Ikki

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by Ikki » Thu Feb 16, 2012 6:26 pm
Don't want to highjack your thread Arbiter, but I would like to have an "interests" section but have no idea what to put.
I don't think employers want to know about the thrash band I used to play in while I was in undergrad, or that I spend more time watching obscure foreign films on netflix than going out.
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kalvano

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by kalvano » Thu Feb 16, 2012 6:27 pm
I would just put "musician" and "foreign film fan".
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20160810

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by 20160810 » Thu Feb 16, 2012 9:46 pm
I would like so see someone with top-shelf grades at YLS see what kind of shit they could get away with in their interests section and still snag a V100 job, e.g.
Fuckin like makin bongs and shit, hot chicks with like tits and stuff, strippers, ICP, the usual shit
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leobowski

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by leobowski » Fri Feb 17, 2012 12:42 am
SBL wrote:I would like so see someone with top-shelf grades at YLS see what kind of shit they could get away with in their interests section and still snag a V100 job, e.g.
Fuckin like makin bongs and shit, hot chicks with like tits and stuff, strippers, ICP, the usual shit
Total honesty would be somewhat refreshing in that case.
Interests: frequent unnecessary masturbation, playing skyrim/ COD until 3am, hitting the gym, bacon
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kalvano

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by kalvano » Fri Feb 17, 2012 1:09 am
Honestly, who can't list bacon as a valid interest?
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Arbiter213

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by Arbiter213 » Fri Feb 17, 2012 9:46 am
kalvano wrote:Honestly, who can't list bacon as a valid interest?
Fuckin' vegans... :sigh:
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btw384

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by btw384 » Fri Feb 17, 2012 12:05 pm
This thread has convinced me to take up homebrewing so I can put it on my resume in a year or so.
Any good resources?
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DubPoker

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by DubPoker » Sat Feb 18, 2012 7:25 pm
First off, you should homebrew because it is awesome and fun. Also you will not save money homebrewing, you will just make amazing craft beers for yourself and whoever you choose. It is a lot of fun- you will get addicted to it.
The TLS of homebrew is
http://www.homebrewtalk.com/
Just look around. There is a beginner forum there.
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DallasCowboy

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by DallasCowboy » Sat Feb 18, 2012 8:10 pm
disagree about women not putting down sports interests. Anecdotally, a surefire superstar from an offer standpoint had competitive golfer on her resume and it was very well received / she got invited to golf. If you are going to put down a sports team from a fan's standpoint though, you'd better be well versed on it.
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20160810

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by 20160810 » Sat Feb 18, 2012 8:54 pm
leobowski wrote:SBL wrote:I would like so see someone with top-shelf grades at YLS see what kind of shit they could get away with in their interests section and still snag a V100 job, e.g.
Fuckin like makin bongs and shit, hot chicks with like tits and stuff, strippers, ICP, the usual shit
Total honesty would be somewhat refreshing in that case.
Interests: frequent
unnecessary masturbation, playing skyrim/ COD until 3am, hitting the gym, bacon
I... don't know what this means.
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btw384

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by btw384 » Sun Feb 19, 2012 12:32 am
DubPoker wrote:First off, you should homebrew because it is awesome and fun. Also you will not save money homebrewing, you will just make amazing craft beers for yourself and whoever you choose. It is a lot of fun- you will get addicted to it.
The TLS of homebrew is
http://www.homebrewtalk.com/
Just look around. There is a beginner forum there.
Cheers.
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keg411

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by keg411 » Sun Feb 19, 2012 1:29 am
DallasCowboy wrote:disagree about women not putting down sports interests. Anecdotally, a surefire superstar from an offer standpoint had competitive golfer on her resume and it was very well received / she got invited to golf. If you are going to put down a sports team from a fan's standpoint though, you'd better be well versed on it.
Obviously if you play it makes sense. I was talking about the fan sense (and believe me, I'm well versed).
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DallasCowboy

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by DallasCowboy » Sun Feb 19, 2012 2:58 pm
k we are on the same page then. I just wanted to clarify so as not to scare away women from talking sports in all contexts. I do agree that for whatever unfair reason, we guys shift the burden to a female to defend her fanhood. Plus, given that being a fan is not a huge boost, it's really just not worth it.
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quakeroats

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by quakeroats » Sun Feb 19, 2012 3:33 pm
DallasCowboy wrote:disagree about women not putting down sports interests. Anecdotally, a surefire superstar from an offer standpoint had competitive golfer on her resume and it was very well received / she got invited to golf. If you are going to put down a sports team from a fan's standpoint though, you'd better be well versed on it.
As with anything else on your resume, you should be ready to talk about your interests in depth, but feel out your interviewer for how much they know before diving in. For example if you write about your interest in whisky, be prepared for the guy who asks about it, but hasn't ventured beyond Johnnie Walker. If you launch into your love for early 90s Ardbeg, you risk making the interviewer feel bad. If, however, you're not that into whisky, you risk running into the partner who is and asks you about it. Basically, list interests you'd feel comfortable discussing with experts and non-experts alike.
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5ky

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by 5ky » Sun Feb 19, 2012 4:22 pm
quakeroats wrote:DallasCowboy wrote:disagree about women not putting down sports interests. Anecdotally, a surefire superstar from an offer standpoint had competitive golfer on her resume and it was very well received / she got invited to golf. If you are going to put down a sports team from a fan's standpoint though, you'd better be well versed on it.
As with anything else on your resume, you should be ready to talk about your interests in depth, but feel out your interviewer for how much they know before diving in. For example if you write about your interest in whisky, be prepared for the guy who asks about it, but hasn't ventured beyond Johnnie Walker. If you launch into your love for early 90s Ardbeg, you risk making the interviewer feel bad. If, however, you're not that into whisky, you risk running into the partner who is and asks you about it. Basically, list interests you'd feel comfortable discussing with experts and non-experts alike.
This is good advice
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spaceman82

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by spaceman82 » Mon Feb 20, 2012 1:51 am
This might be a mini-hijack, but how do people feel about listing MMA or combat sports as an interest, either as a fan or participant? Training is one of my main interests, and my initial thought is that it's a polarizing topic about which some interviewers are going to be really interested and others are going to want to auto-ding me.
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20160810

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by 20160810 » Mon Feb 20, 2012 7:53 am
quakeroats wrote:DallasCowboy wrote:disagree about women not putting down sports interests. Anecdotally, a surefire superstar from an offer standpoint had competitive golfer on her resume and it was very well received / she got invited to golf. If you are going to put down a sports team from a fan's standpoint though, you'd better be well versed on it.
As with anything else on your resume, you should be ready to talk about your interests in depth, but feel out your interviewer for how much they know before diving in. For example if you write about your interest in whisky, be prepared for the guy who asks about it, but hasn't ventured beyond Johnnie Walker. If you launch into your love for early 90s Ardbeg, you risk making the interviewer feel bad. If, however, you're not that into whisky, you risk running into the partner who is and asks you about it. Basically, list interests you'd feel comfortable discussing with experts and non-experts alike.
This is good advice, though it compels me to point out that scotch blowhards are at least as horrible as wine blowhards.
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Guchster

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by Guchster » Mon Feb 20, 2012 10:43 am
spaceman82 wrote:This might be a mini-hijack, but how do people feel about listing MMA or combat sports as an interest, either as a fan or participant? Training is one of my main interests, and my initial thought is that it's a polarizing topic about which some interviewers are going to be really interested and others are going to want to auto-ding me.
I'd personally would put down cage fighting over MMA. I think the point is to be as alpha as possible.
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kalvano

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by kalvano » Mon Feb 20, 2012 10:46 am
I would just put "modern-day gladiator" and go from there. You'll get screeners just to see what you mean.
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Guchster

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by Guchster » Mon Feb 20, 2012 10:57 am
I had yoga down on mine. One older hiring partner at a Texas firm asked me if I liked doing any "real" sports and chucked about yoga as an interest. I thought of
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=in9SiDtJ ... re=related
I lol'd and started to be a dick the rest of the interview cuz I got a bad vibe from this dood and the place. Partner liked it and gave me jerb. told them to go fuck themselves with passive aggressive email about finding a place that was a better fit for me, lol.
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Guchster

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by Guchster » Mon Feb 20, 2012 12:15 pm
Also with regard to alcohol, is robotripping an appropriate interest to include on resume?
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20160810

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by 20160810 » Mon Feb 20, 2012 7:22 pm
Guchster wrote:Also with regard to alcohol, is robotripping an appropriate interest to include on resume?
Not if you don't properly hyphenate it dude
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jess
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by jess » Tue Feb 21, 2012 9:17 pm
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Last edited by
jess on Thu Oct 26, 2017 2:11 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Arbiter213

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by Arbiter213 » Wed Feb 22, 2012 2:53 pm
Jessuf wrote:Is it bad for a female to have pretty feminine interests on her resume? I'm not sure how douchey male interviewers will receive my interests section.
Define "feminine interests". Cooking would probably be fine, "makeover parties" or "fashion" might be a bit much.
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