<![CDATA[Jezebel: brazen careerist]]> http://tags.gawker.com/assets/base/img/thumbs140x140/jezebel.com.png <![CDATA[Jezebel: brazen careerist]]> http://jezebel.com/tag/brazencareerist http://jezebel.com/tag/brazencareerist <![CDATA[4 Job Tips From Sarah Palin]]> To many, Sarah Palin's resignation was irresponsible, unprofessional, even bizarre. But to Penelope Trunk, it was inspirational! She offers four job tips based on Palin's colossal cop-out — and we offer our own versions, after the jump.

Trunk says: Get out of a job when you're done doing it

We know that the old ways of managing a career aren't working. But it's so scary to try something new. For example, you know you should job hop, but it's not what careers used to be. And it's scary. People are constantly telling you you'll destroy your career if you job hop. [...] I like that Palin refuses to kowtow to the idea that you have to finish a job just because you started it.


We say: Get out of a job before you start it

Actual duties are for losers. Real mavericks "hop" from job interview to job interview, with no actual service in between. The more titles you can amass without actually performing any of the tasks involved, the more successful you are.

Trunk says: Ideas matter, not your resume

We don't need to elect someone based on their resume because the world changes too fast for experience to be a huge factor. On top of that, the internet makes most information available to everyone, so putting in long hours gathering knowledge is not as valuable anymore. [...] Palin knows this, so she's not afraid to break resume rules – like leaving a job in the middle, and aiming for a job largely outside of her experience.

We say: Build your anti-resume.

As commenter egg cream explains, "An anti-resume is composed of anti-achievements, which have the same mass as achievements, but are actually failures." So start collecting anti-achievements, like getting continents confused with countries, being unable to name a single newspaper, and misquoting both Plato and General MacArthur. Get failin'!

Trunk says: Careers are built on teams and networks

Palin knows all this instinctively. She is ditching the governor's job, which, by nature, is about helping people in Alaska, and she is making herself available to help a wider range of people. So smart. She is campaigning across to help people she respects.

And she's building a team, which makes sense because the best way to sidestep the need for experience is with teams.

We say: Get other people to do stuff for you

If you don't know anything and have no experience, get other people to have experience for you. And if the people you're "helping" aren't important enough, ditch them and get new people — people who can provide the qualifications and know-how you so courageously lack. So smart.

Trunk says: No one controls your career except you

She could do what she's supposed to – finish up her job, focus on state-level politics, and talk to the press about ethics problems. But that's not what she wants to do.

We say: Don't let "doing your job" get in the way of just doing whatever the fuck you feel like

Sure, maybe you're "supposed to" check those coolant rods in the nuclear reactor or help those schoolkids cross the street, but is that really "your vision"? What if you feel like making the kids dodge some SUVs — or just knocking off and going fishing? Go for it, maverick!

In general, the more closely your job description resembles that of an inanimate object, the better you're doing. Oh, and if you know anyone named Levi, you might want to act fast and have them sent to Siberia. We hear that's pretty close to Alaska.

Sarah Palin's Resignation Inspires Me [Brazen Careerist]

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<![CDATA[New York State Court Says Dishing About Your Divorce Online Is Legal, But "Ill-Advised"]]> Tricia Walsh-Smith, the playwright and soon-to-be-ex-wife of theater executive Philip Smith who posted a tearful, angry rant about her divorce on YouTube, isn't the only divorcée talking about her plight on the 'net. Today's New York Times discusses the pitfalls of broadcasting a breakup for the world to see, profiling Laurie, a Manhattan lawyer who produces a podcast called DivorcingDaze and was sued by her ex-husband for telling the world he "was having an affair with his boss from e-mail on his BlackBerry." A New York State court decided that, though Laurie's podcasts were "ill-advised and do not promote co-parenting," Laurie had a first-amendment right to continue Daze.

Legal ramifications notwithstanding, it seems that the potential for collateral damage to children is a good reason for divorcing couples to keep their dirty laundry for margarita-laden dinners and phone conversations with friends. But blogger Penelope Trunk, author of the Brazen Careerist blog, defends the notion of mothers talking smack about their ex-husbands online. Trunk, who has written a lot about the demise of her 15-year marriage on her blog, tells the Times: "The bloggers who are doing the best are those who are injecting their personal lives. We think it will be a big deal, but it won't be to [our children]. By the time they are old enough to read it, they will have spent their entire life online. It will be like, 'Oh yeah, I expected that.' "

Child psychiatrist Irene Goldenberg disagrees with Trunk's assessment. "It is not good for children to get personal information in that way. And people have to consider doing things in the heat of the moment. The way they feel now will not be how they feel in two years, and there is no way it can be retrieved."

I had dinner with a acquaintance last night who likened his parents divorce to breaking a bone: it's so common, you think it can't be all that big a deal so you never realize how much it's going to hurt until it happens to you. With so much possibility for pain in the immediate aftermath of a divorce, is it really worth potentially breaking that bone years after it's healed for the sake of your freedom of expression?

[Image via Broadway World]

When The Ex Blogs, The Dirtiest Laundry Is Aired [NY Times]

Earlier: Why Marrying A Rich Old Dude Who Won't Fuck Will Not Solve Your Problems

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