Key word being OURSELFS though
There is no such word.
At 12:30am and you are babbling on a message board, then yes it does become a word!

Okay, it wouldn't count for Words with Friends...
Key word being OURSELFS though
There is no such word.
Key word being OURSELFS though
There is no such word.
At 12:30am and you are babbling on a message board, then yes it does become a word!
Okay, it wouldn't count for Words with Friends...
Dear god, i just became a grammar nazi. Please tell me there's a cure.
Dear god, i just became a grammar nazi. Please tell me there's a cure.
I go by "gorzek" elsewhere, which is a pretty obscure (and nerdy) reference. But I still put down my gorzek email address on my resume and everything.
I'm 30.
I go by "gorzek" elsewhere, which is a pretty obscure (and nerdy) reference. But I still put down my gorzek email address on my resume and everything.
I'm 30.
See.. every guide i ever read and every person i ever talked to about applications and resumees was very adamant that you should stay away from "fun" email adresses when applying for a job. A serious adress like your real life name@... is always preferred and when we recently built up a new department in my company and had applications coming in there was one woman who honestly replied with ...bunny@... (can't remember right now) and the entire office had a good laugh and her application was set aside.
I'm curious.. did you get many job interviews and did it ever come up?
I've done that back when I was a floor-super and had to do selection/interviews for new hires. Mostly though cause our DM at the time had a thing for being ultra-professional (movie theater, interviewing for ushers and concessionist and he was acting like it was a 5 star hotel) and thought that anyone that put down a "fake name" (what he called screennames) e-mail address wasn't professional enough.I go by "gorzek" elsewhere, which is a pretty obscure (and nerdy) reference. But I still put down my gorzek email address on my resume and everything.
I'm 30.
See.. every guide i ever read and every person i ever talked to about applications and resumees was very adamant that you should stay away from "fun" email adresses when applying for a job. A serious adress like your real life name@... is always preferred and when we recently built up a new department in my company and had applications coming in there was one woman who honestly replied with ...bunny@... (can't remember right now) and the entire office had a good laugh and her application was set aside.
I'm curious.. did you get many job interviews and did it ever come up?
That's really sad to see, since not everyone likes those kinds of sites. I don't even bother to use my Facebook account that much at all. There's no real point to it. As for avatars... I'm one who would never use my own picture as an avatar (again a privacy thing with me).I think we are dinosaurs, The entire ideal of avatars and user names and message boards is dying as people post real pics and names on Facebook and other sites.I'm 35, went online in 1995. Back then, even now, I try to keep my "online life" apart from my "real life". I'm very selective about who knows what about the other. And I would never think to consider my online nick my "real" name......
I'll cop to being a little out of touch with the newest 'net trends or the "lifestyle" (as one snarky little teen I know calls online life). But is this a new fad that's just popped up, a symptom of new digital "Social media" lifestyle?
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.