 A Message From Lucianne
Now More Than Ever Get Your Eagles Up! Lucianne Tees - in Black or White Click to Buy
|
|
Low wages, incompetent managers and what you have to do to become full-time: Confessions of an ex-Best Buy Geek Squad agent
Daily Mail [UK], by Staff
|
|
Original Article
|
|
Posted By:Attercliffe, 1/1/2013 8:18:49 AM
|
| He took the job to become a tech support guru, but what he got in return were nothing but headaches. A jaded former Best Buy employee crafted a 1,100-word blog post shortly after quitting--and dishing the dirt on the electronics giant. In a piece posted to the Tape Noise Diary blog on Sunday, user JayCruz writes that he had high hopes after scoring a job with the Geek Squad in 2009 after attending technical school. [Snip] But it wasn´t long before he realized that his job involved more retail-related tasks and less IT problem solving.
|
Reply 1 - Posted by:
Spidey, 1/1/2013 8:29:48 AM (No. 9092789)
I don´t patronize Best Buy anyway but I´m going to mentally boycott them for trampling on geeks.
|
Reply 2 - Posted by:
franq, 1/1/2013 8:34:54 AM (No. 9092797)
True or not, this person may have trouble finding work now. Employers monitor the web to screen out what may be considered malcontents and troublemakers.
|
| |
|
Reply 3 - Posted by:
Kitty Myers, 1/1/2013 8:37:23 AM (No. 9092803)
Our Geek Squad agent, Sam, is the best. We gladly pay for him to come to our home about twice each year to keep our computer in top shape. He´s friendly and very helpful; we´ve never had a single complaint about Sam. We can´t say the same about the geeks at our local Best Buy store.
|
Reply 4 - Posted by:
cThree, 1/1/2013 8:47:28 AM (No. 9092813)
Holy mackerel, folks! This guy it the whiniest loser I´ve had the pleasure of reading in a very long time...
´You have horrible bosses always writing you up because that’s the only way they know how to be a manager. You get threatened to be fired about three times.´
HAHAHAHAHAHA! I had to stop reading.
|
Reply 5 - Posted by:
LouD, 1/1/2013 8:50:39 AM (No. 9092822)
Let´s see; a kid right out of school wants to start at the top, and complains when he has to do menial work. Sounds familiar. The kid sounds like millions of other "workers" who know far more than the boss, and works for dumb, incompetent managers. I often wonder how those people in charge got their jobs, if they are so stupid?
|
Reply 6 - Posted by:
Liberal like Jefferson, 1/1/2013 9:05:01 AM (No. 9092840)
Hey, kid, hate your job? There´s a club for that. They meet at the bar.
|
Reply 7 - Posted by:
ranger06, 1/1/2013 9:07:27 AM (No. 9092842)
The time to find out what the job is all about is really before you take it... just saying.
Someone should ship this kid over to Foxconn and see how he likes the management, pay and hours...
|
| |
|
Reply 8 - Posted by:
pinger, 1/1/2013 9:12:47 AM (No. 9092848)
As a general comment about retail customer service, Best Buy notwithstanding, is that it runs the full range of competencies....just like the skill levels of medical doctors or automotive technicians. I´ve known excellent people in both retail store management as well as "worker bees" below them (on and off the job)....as well as deplorable examples in both categories. Given that most retail jobs require no particular education or particular skills to get a foot in the door, consider the set of folks who populate a very large portion of that industry. The current efficiency of the average parent coupled with the efficiency of the average public school system relative to preparing kids for the real world has been in the toilet for the past twenty-five or so years. Many of these kids end up, at least for a time, working in a store. Coupled with the fact that so many people have seen terrible role-modeling by their parents relative to workplace ethics, the intentional "dumbing down" ideology of government run schools and the fact that quite often in the real world, customer service people actually have to talk to a customer face to face, versus through some electronic media...they´re lost. From a poisoned well flows poisoned water.
|
Reply 9 - Posted by:
mossley, 1/1/2013 9:17:30 AM (No. 9092856)
I´m no fan of Best Buy - the company is crashing because of its incompetent management and horrible customer service - but what did the kid expect? He took a job at a retail store and then complains he has to deal with customers.
|
Reply 10 - Posted by:
45_Auto, 1/1/2013 9:23:46 AM (No. 9092866)
Never understood all the complaints about BestBuy. They´ve always taken care of me, been helpful, etc. ´
|
Reply 11 - Posted by:
Rama41, 1/1/2013 9:23:47 AM (No. 9092867)
This guy is a loser and Best Buy is better off without him. FTA: ´I remember how badly I wanted to work there. The whole Geek Squad thing, with the uniforms and the custom-painted Volkswagen Beetles was kind of cool. It seemed like a "fun" job.´
|
Reply 12 - Posted by:
Bad Dog, 1/1/2013 9:29:21 AM (No. 9092876)
Clearly, no poster here yet read the guy´s actual blogpost. It´s linked in the Daily Mail ´´analysis´´ piece, which I didn´t read. I went to the source instead.
He acknowledges he has learned from his time doing retail, such as realizing he has to deal with his customers, no matter who they are. And he wishes he´d gone slower in school toward a BA degree rather than the quick tech school certificate he did obtain. He says he has learned patience and acquired some better conversational skills.
Those things, if he really learned them, should take him further in his chosen career. That he blogged about his former employer specifically ... not so good. And now, he´ll learn that.
|
| |
|
Reply 13 - Posted by:
bluefindad, 1/1/2013 9:31:46 AM (No. 9092884)
Oh! The irony!
The CEO of Best Buy got canned because of an innapropriate relationship with a female staffer. Anybody remember Bill Clinton?
|
Reply 14 - Posted by:
bobgray2, 1/1/2013 9:47:37 AM (No. 9092912)
The only way to avoid having a jerk for a boss, is to work for yourself. And even that is no guarantee.
|
Reply 15 - Posted by:
rubberneck, 1/1/2013 9:52:42 AM (No. 9092921)
Jay: And now we’re in the age of the geeks and The Big Bang Theory fan-girls that think you’re sexy because you know how to reset their routers. But no one really likes real geeks. Sheldon is a funny character with a script. Real geeks are rarely funny, they’re awkward in conversations, and are annoying with their obsessions. You know who really likes geeks? Your Grandma.
Okay, the guy may be a whiner, but that´s pretty funny! (Or maybe I should be offended, since I´ve been in a "geek" career for 35 years.)
|
Reply 16 - Posted by:
phx4546, 1/1/2013 10:55:46 AM (No. 9093035)
The CEO of Best Buy got canned because of an innapropriate relationship with a female staffer.
Maybe she was trying to get more hours
|
Reply 17 - Posted by:
NancyD, 1/1/2013 11:01:46 AM (No. 9093051)
I agree with #10. We´ve had good service, good prices and a good selection from Best Buy.
Obviously not all BB are the same, but the ones in our area are great.
No problems whatsoever.
|
| |
|
Reply 18 - Posted by:
mominNoCA, 1/1/2013 11:31:42 AM (No. 9093102)
LOL #16! I was thinking the same thing!
Maybe this kid would have a better chance at Wal-Mart. I´ve heard better things about working for that store.
|
Reply 19 - Posted by:
chumley, 1/1/2013 11:34:38 AM (No. 9093109)
Never worked for BB but do have experience with incompetent managers. The majority of their leadership philosophy seems to be keeping the employees in the dark and the firing threats. I worked for a company like that for eight miserable months and finally took a better job elsewhere. When they asked me why I was putting in my notice, I told them with all the threats I figured I was next. They told me I was never in any danger, and that the threats are just something they do. A year later all of their middle management had been fired.
|
Reply 20 - Posted by:
franq, 1/1/2013 12:15:55 PM (No. 9093168)
#20 confirms my belief that there is a dearth of leaders everywhere.
|
Reply 21 - Posted by:
MDConservative, 1/1/2013 12:56:30 PM (No. 9093265)
Most anyone who has ever been employed worked for an incompetent supervisor or manager... some have successfully become one. Others were too afraid to try.
|
Reply 22 - Posted by:
shalimar, 1/1/2013 1:28:55 PM (No. 9093321)
I dunno, if I were this kid, I think I would have been happy to have a job. I started my career at the equivalent of less income and ended up very happy with where it ultimately took me.
He´s disappointed because it wasn´t fun like he thought it would be. Poor boobie. It´s called work because it *is* work.
|
| |
|
Reply 23 - Posted by:
Rat Patrol, 1/1/2013 2:14:15 PM (No. 9093346)
The corporate philosophy of today is that they do not want anyone who is too good or too bad,they prefer mediocre and they want things nice and quiet,the higher ups do not want to hear about problem´s even if it means saving money for the company or making money for the company,they really do not seam to care.
This kid has some growing up to do and at 13k a year, he could make far more doing IT work on his own, but it does not mean he has it all wrong.
|
Reply 24 - Posted by:
MickTurn, 1/1/2013 2:44:39 PM (No. 9093375)
From Geeks to Creeps, Money grubbers all of them. I wouldn´t let them work on my computer if they paid ME!
|
Reply 25 - Posted by:
Not gonna take it anymore, 1/1/2013 2:50:23 PM (No. 9093385)
I have had nothing but good service from the geek squad and the sales associates at my Best Buy.
|
Reply 26 - Posted by:
Grambo, 1/1/2013 3:31:06 PM (No. 9093425)
Anyone who thinks they’re going to get through life without having an incompetent, nasty unfair boss, is delusional. It’s a law of nature, you will have them --lots of them. Get used to it. Successful people are the ones who figure out how to deal with it. Watch what they do and do the same. Oh, and watch the ones who never succeed, and don’t do what they do.
|
Reply 27 - Posted by:
TXknitter, 1/1/2013 4:44:41 PM (No. 9093503)
#20, oops, sounds like most hospitals I have worked for!
|
Reply 28 - Posted by:
tomanderson61, 1/1/2013 5:25:52 PM (No. 9093545)
#10, I agree with you. I don´t get the Best Buy bashing. I have bought 1/2 dozen various computers there before switching to Apple. I bought my Nikon DSLR there and my Sony camera there. Yes, sometimes they were really busy and I had to wait a while for a clerk. Yes, once they had to send a computer of mine off for a week.
But to listen to people *itch and moan is amazing. These are likely the same people that walk into a store, waste a sales person´s time getting free education, then buy it on Amazon. Then turn around and complain that Best Buy charges more. I guess a store, convenience, personnel, power and inventory costs should be just disappear into the ether.
I should know, I started out in retail in the computer retail business. People would come to us to learn about computers, tell us they´ll think about it, go down the street and buy it at a discounter, and when it broke, bring it to us with an attitude and demand it be fixed immediately. Retail a place to start, and leave, as quick as you can. People that stay in retail, generally, don´t have enough skills to grow into something else. Nothing wrong with that, but that is what you are dealing with. My dad in all his wisdom said, "Never settle in a career where you have to deal with John Q. Public in a retail environment". Boy, was he right.
If you want service, you will pay a little more. If you don´t want to pay, don´t open your mouth and complain about the service you are not entitled to.
|
Reply 29 - Posted by:
bob913, 1/1/2013 5:28:51 PM (No. 9093551)
My advice to a relative of mine whose son is now looking for work after getting out of college is to make sure you don´t have anything on the internet at places like Facebook with stupid photos and quotes like "My boss thinks I´m sick when I am at the ballgame Whooohooo!" and posting a photo to prove it....
I also said when interviewed just give them a direct answer and no more. No need to go on and on. Keep the resume clean and read up on how to write one with key words that employers like. Many HR depts use software to view your resume and will reject many qualified people just because a resume did not have the key words they are looking for.
No stupid email address names like geekman@hotmail.... Use an address with your name if you can at yahoo or gmail etc that you only use for job hunting because the sites like Monster.com will spam your address (happened to me a decade ago).
Dumb luck plays a big part as well. Meaning ask around to friends, family, strangers where the jobs are.
Once you have a job keep your mouth shut and show up to work everyday. There are people there who will gladly knife you in the back to move up. Always be looking for something better as you will run into bad bosses who will wreck the company and you end up looking for another job.
|
Reply 30 - Posted by:
ColonialAmerican1623, 1/2/2013 12:44:55 AM (No. 9094040)
The geek did not say how old he is, but many leave school today expecting to earn the same as owners and managers, and not climb the ladder.
However, I fail to understand why big box stores take million dollar plus operations and hire kids to run them. Many of the managers are on a power trip and not only the employees, but the customers suffer for it. When they go out of business, there is no big personal loss.
|
Below, you will find ...
Most Recent Articles posted by "Attercliffe"
and
Most Active Articles (last 48 hours)
|
Most Recent Articles posted by "Attercliffe"
|
An English class for trolls, professional offence-takers and climate activists
|
|
Telegraph [UK], by James Delingpole
Original Article
|
|
Posted By: Attercliffe- 4/7/2013 10:38:34 PM
Post Reply
|
|
Should Michael Mann be given the electric chair for having concocted arguably the most risibly inept, misleading, cherry-picking, worthless and mendacious graph--the Hockey Stick--in the history of junk science? Should George Monbiot be hanged by the neck for his decade or so´s hysterical promulgation of the great climate change scam and other idiocies too numerous to mention? Should Tim Flannery be fed to the crocodiles for the role he has played in the fleecing of the Australian taxpayer and the diversion of scarce resources into pointless projects like all the eyewateringly expensive desalination plants built as a result of his
|
|
Call illegals ‘irregulars’ says Eurocrat
|
|
Daily Express [UK], by Staff
Original Article
|
|
Posted By: Attercliffe- 4/6/2013 9:11:37 AM
Post Reply
|
|
A senior Eurocrat sparked outrage last night after calling for the phrase “illegal immigrant” to be banned from the European Union.[Snip] She has instructed EU Commission staff to refer to foreigners who break border control laws as “irregular migrants” or simply “people” instead. But her attempt to dictate how the issue of immigration is discussed was savaged last night. UK Independence Party leader Nigel Farage said: “Now the EU is even trying to change the language. “This sounds like something straight out of the pages of George Orwell’s Animal Farm. It shows that what we are dealing with here
|
Michael Philpott is a perfect parable for our age: His story shows the pervasiveness of evil born out of welfare dependency
|
|
Daily Mail [UK], by A. N. Wilson
Original Article
|
|
Posted By: Attercliffe- 4/6/2013 8:56:04 AM
Post Reply
|
|
His house, his booze, his drugs, his women and his 17 children were paid for by a benefits system meant to be a safety net for the truly needy.[Snip] This was one of the most horrible crimes committed against children in Britain in recent years. It was cynical. It was calculating. And it was done out of malice in a ham-fisted plot which went wrong. The trial spoke volumes about the sheer nastiness of the individuals involved. But it also lifted the lid on the bleak and often grotesque world of the welfare benefit scroungers--of whom there are not dozens,
|
The reef that regenerated: Researchers find corals in Northern Australia healed themselves in just 12 years
|
|
Daily Mail [UK], by Mark Prigg
Original Article
|
|
Posted By: Attercliffe- 4/6/2013 8:07:06 AM
Post Reply
|
|
A coral reef in Northern Australia severely damaged by warming seas has managed to completely heal itself in just 12 years, stunned researchers have found. The team found that being left alone to breed on its own was key. The discovery raises hope that other damaged reefs could ´regenerate´. The new research shows that an isolated reef off the northwest coast of Australia that was severely damaged by a period of warming in 1998. It was hit by coral bleaching, caused by higher water temperatures that break down the coral´s symbiotic relationship with algae that provide food for coral growth.
|
North Korea moves second missile as UN chief warns ´nuclear threat is not a game´
|
|
Daily Express [UK], by Charlotte Meredith
Original Article
|
|
Posted By: Attercliffe- 4/5/2013 5:36:43 AM
Post Reply
|
|
North Korea has transported two more missiles to the east coast, Seoul military sources have revealed, triggering speculation that it is ready for an abrupt missile launch. North Korea has loaded two intermediate-range missiles onto mobile launchers and hidden them in an unidentified facility near the east coast, South Korea´s Yonhap news agency has said. "It has been confirmed that North Korea, early this week, transported two Musudan mid-range missiles by train to the east coast and loaded them on vehicles equipped with launch pads," Yonhap quoted the official as saying. The official said the mobile launchers had since
|
Is North Korea really looking to start a war?
|
|
Telegraph [UK], by Shashank Joshi
Original Article
|
|
Posted By: Attercliffe- 4/4/2013 3:47:13 PM
Post Reply
|
|
As the US and China grow increasingly involved, Kim Jong-un must be brought into line if war is not to be triggered by an act of recklessness. There are two schools of thought about what lies behind North Korea’s increasingly frenzied posturing. The first goes like this: the rhetoric emanating from Pyongyang--including calls to “break the waists of the crazy enemies [and] totally cut their windpipes”--is no worse than their decades-old ritualistic promises to turn South Korea into a “sea of fire”. What we are witnessing, according to this theory, is nothing more than an inexperienced leader
|
Islamism is winning the cognitive war – thanks to manipulative and gullible journalists
|
|
Telegraph [UK], by Richard Landes
Original Article
|
|
Posted By: Attercliffe- 4/4/2013 3:43:17 PM
Post Reply
|
|
Anyone who remembers the halcyon dreams of the 1990s, of civil society spreading the world over, heralding a new peaceful, global millennium, must marvel at the path the young 21st century has taken. Even those who paid attention to global Jihad before the millennium could not imagine how vulnerable the West would prove in the coming, wildly asymmetrical war. Those who, over the course of the last 13 years, have awakened to the ever-growing danger of Islamism and to the astonishing inability of decent people--Muslims and non-Muslims--to effectively oppose its aggressions, owe themselves a brief lesson in cognitive warfare, and
|
Sanford defeats Bostic to claim 1st District GOP runoff
|
|
Post & Courier [Charleston, SC], by Robert Behre
Original Article
|
|
Posted By: Attercliffe- 4/2/2013 8:49:22 PM
Post Reply
|
|
The political race many had anticipated would unfold in the 1st congressional district--the national comedian’s sister versus the once-disgraced governor angling for a comeback--is here. Former Gov. Mark Sanford won Tuesday’s GOP runoff over former Charleston County Councilman Curtis Bostic, according to unofficial results. Sanford now faces five more weeks on the campaign trail before a May 7 showdown with Democrat Elizabeth Colbert Busch, whose business background and moderate politics are expected to create a tight contest. Lowcountry voters haven’t elected a Democrat from the 1st District for more than three decades, but Colbert Busch already has shown
|
Most Active Articles (last 48 hours)
|
´My bangs are getting a little irritating´: Michelle Obama admits she already regrets her high-maintenance hairdo
|
|
Daily Mail (UK), by Margot Peppers
Original Article
|
|
Posted By: pineledger- 4/7/2013 7:43:42 AM
Post Reply
|
|
Michelle Obama has admitted that she is already tired of the bangs she first sported in January. The First Lady said in an interview with Entertainment Tonight: ´Bangs are a day-by-day proposition. They´re starting to grow out, get a little irritating.´ Still, she hasn´t let her hairdo woes get her down. ´It´s okay,´ she said after her initial complaint. ´We´ll be good.´ The first indication that her hairstyle was becoming a burden came about last weekend, when Malia, 14, was spotted adjusting her mother´s hair during the White House Easter Egg Roll.
|
McCain: ´I don´t understand´ GOP filibuster on guns
|
|
Politico, by Jennifer Epstein
Original Article
|
|
Posted By: JoniTx- 4/7/2013 12:18:14 PM
Post Reply
|
|
Sen. John McCain says he doesn´t understand the threats from some of his Republican colleagues to filibuster a bill on background checks to buy guns. "I don´t understand it," the Arizona Republican said on Sunday of the threat coming from Sen. Rand Paul,Sen. Ted Cruz, Sen. Mike Lee and nine other Republicans. "The purpose of the United States Senate is to debate and to vote and to let the people know where we stand.” "What are we afraid of? ... If this issue is as important as we all think it is, why not take ... it up and debate?"
|
Why Obama´s ´Best-Looking Attorney General´ Comment Was a Gaffe
|
|
The Atlantic, by Garance Franke-Ruta
Original Article
|
|
Posted By: Oblio- 4/6/2013 6:51:15 AM
Post Reply
|
|
President Obama´s biggest gaffe yesterday when speaking of California Attorney General Kamala Harris was not in flirtatiously complimenting her as "the best-looking attorney general," but in introducing an observation from the system of beauty into a forum that was about the system of power.What´s that, you say? Irin Carmon does a great job in Salon in laying out the bounds of propriety for when it´s appropriate to talk about a woman´s looks as a general matter. But I´ve long felt we lack a solid theoretical underpinning for easily discussing these issues, and why precisely it is that
|
Christians, here´s why we´re losing our religion
|
|
Fox News, by Craig Groeschel
Original Article
|
|
Posted By: STLstudent- 4/7/2013 5:13:55 PM
Post Reply
|
|
Recent research indicates that the number of people who do not consider themselves a part of an organized religion is steadily on the rise. Interestingly enough, though the number of those religiously unaffiliated is increasing, there is little to no trend in the number of those who express atheist or agnostic beliefs. People aren’t saying they don’t believe in God. They’re saying they don’t believe in religion. They are not rejecting Christ. They are rejecting the church. This begs the question, “Why are we losing our religion?”
|
Broadcasters worry about ´Zero TV´ homes
|
|
Associated Press, by Ryan Nakashima
Original Article
|
|
Posted By: Ribicon- 4/7/2013 2:43:40 PM
Post Reply
|
|
Los Angeles — Some people have had it with TV. They´ve had enough of the 100-plus channel universe. They don´t like timing their lives around network show schedules. They´re tired of $100-plus monthly bills. A growing number of them have stopped paying for cable and satellite TV service, and don´t even use an antenna to get free signals over the air. (Snip) Last month, the Nielsen Co. started labeling people in this group "Zero TV" households, because they fall outside the traditional definition of a TV home. There are 5 million of these residences in the U.S., up from
|
Mother Of Slain Benghazi Officer To Sean Hannity: ‘They Want Me To Shut Up’
|
|
Mediaite, by A.J. Delgado
Original Article
|
|
Posted By: StormCnter- 4/7/2013 5:00:16 AM
Post Reply
|
|
On Friday, Sean Hannity brought Pat Smith, mother of the late Sean Smith, on his radio program. The 34-year-old information management officer was one of four Americans murdered in the Benghazi embassy attack on September 11, 2012. In the chilling interview, a distraught Ms. Smith, in tears, pleaded for answers and spoke of the efforts to silence her. Ms. Smith first relayed how her son, prior to the attack, requested additional security in advance and warned the State Department: He did tell them, ahead of time, he typed it into his little typewriter over there,
|
Vanishing workforce weighs on growth
|
|
Washington Post, by Jim Tankersley
Original Article
|
|
Posted By: Dreadnought- 4/6/2013 11:28:59 PM
Post Reply
|
|
Put out an all-points bulletin: Millions of Americans have gone missing from the workforce. Every month that those would-be workers are gone raises the odds that they might never come back, dimming the prospects for future economic growth. The vanishing trend is more than a decade old, but it accelerated during the Great Recession. Throughout 2012, economists held out hope that it had stopped. But then came Friday’s jobs report, and hopes were dashed. The Labor Department reported that the U.S. labor force — everyone who has a job or is looking for one — shrank
|
Hillary Clinton Would Not ´Clear the Field´ for 2016
|
|
New Republic, by Tod Lindberg
Original Article
|
|
Posted By: StormCnter- 4/6/2013 5:22:36 AM
Post Reply
|
|
No one is more preoccupied these days with Hillary Clinton´s 2016 plans than the Beltway political class—not even the former presidential candidate herself. To hear some tell it, her decision will be dispositive for all other Democrats thinking of entering the race. And pundits and reporters aren´t the only ones positing the "The Hillary Factor": No less than the House Democratic whip, Steny Hoyer, told BuzzFeed, “I don´t know that anybody would run against Hillary…. If she runs, she clears the field.” It´s an understandable conclusion, given Clinton´s stature in the Democratic Party and her 70 percent
|
Obama critic apologizes for his ´poorly chosen words´ on gay marriage
|
|
The Hill [Washington DC], by Alexandra Jaffe
Original Article
|
|
Posted By: JoniTx- 4/6/2013 12:18:19 PM
Post Reply
|
|
Neurosurgeon Ben Carson, considered by some to be a potential Republican contender for president, apologized to Johns Hopkins University for the "poorly chosen words" he used in expressing his opposition to gay marriage last month.“I am sorry for any embarrassment this has caused,” Carson said in the letter, reported in New York Magazine.(Snip) "Although I do believe marriage is between a man and a woman, there are much less offensive ways to make that point. I hope all will look at a lifetime of service over some poorly chosen words.” Carson will remain as commencement speaker at Johns Hopkins,
|
The Secrets of Princeton
|
|
New York Times, by Ross Douthat
Original Article
|
|
Posted By: Oblio- 4/7/2013 8:08:09 AM
Post Reply
|
|
Susan Patton, the Princeton alumna who became famous for her letter urging Ivy League women to use their college years to find a mate, has been denounced as a traitor to feminism, to coeducation, to the university ideal. But really she’s something much more interesting: a traitor to her class. Her betrayal consists of being gauche enough to acknowledge publicly a truth that everyone who’s come up through Ivy League culture knows intuitively —
|
Beyonce, Jay-Z celebrate 5th anniversary in Havana, Cuba
|
|
Los Angeles Times, by Nardine Saad
Original Article
|
|
Posted By: Fiesta del sol- 4/6/2013 8:20:04 AM
Post Reply
|
|
Beyonce and Jay-Z celebrated their fifth wedding anniversary in Cuba this week. The couple, who married on April 4, 2008, took in the sights of Old Havana, visited a school, dined on a rooftop terrace and strolled the fan-filled streets in their island best.(snip).The power couple declined to answer journalists´ questions about their visit to the island nation, but some outlets are reporting that the moguls are there as tourists, though that would be illegal because of the half-century embargo the U.S. has on the Communist country. However, the Miami Herald said Washington has issued special licenses for
|
|

© 2013 Lucianne.com Media Inc.
FS
|
|