Episode 2769: Ten Foot Polemic

Apr. 23rd, 2026 09:11 am
[syndicated profile] darths_and_droids_feed

Episode 2769: Ten Foot Polemic

An important principle of GMing is to tell the players what their characters perceive, not what they feel. Don't tell them they see a spooky graveyard and feel frightened. Your job is to describe the graveyard in such a way that they naturally feel frightened.

This can be difficult, but part of the learning to be a good GM is to read stories and learn how writers create a mood by describing the scene, without telling you, the reader, to feel anything. Next time you feel something while reading a story, pay attention to the words and phrases the writer uses to create that feeling.

aurilee writes:

Commentary by memnarch (who has not seen the movie)

Yep, yep. No surprises here so far. Floating platform, giant statues, empty bio-canisters.... wait. Empty? Those yellowing panels look empty now. Well, I guess Rey would need something to fight before we get to Palpatine, and other degenerated clones would work just fine for that. Bonus points if we have a single clone to start out that's easily beaten, and then more show up as a surprise reveal.

I wonder what makes the wall cyclopean. Is there a giant eye we haven't seen yet? Is it just a giant wall made out of flat boulders? Was this planet originally colonized by Mycenaeans? It's probably just a minor GM description detail that stuck out at me. It's funny how things like that can happen.

Transcript

[syndicated profile] opinionatedgamers_feed

Posted by Dale Yu

So, each year (well, nearly each year) since 2000, I have been able to attend the Gathering of Friends – an invitational event which is unlike any other that I go to.  The Friends all meet at a hotel, and … Continue reading
[syndicated profile] askamanager_feed

Posted by Ask a Manager

It’s five answers to five questions. Here we go…

1. Coworker threatened me and HR isn’t doing anything

Last fall, a coworker made an inappropriate comment toward me (called me a “ho” out of nowhere) and also made a statement about using a gun on me. She made these comments in front of several coworkers, who reported the incident. Around that same time, it had been announced that she was receiving a promotion, which added to the confusion.

The following week, we were told this employee was no longer with the team. About a month ago, we learned she had actually been on leave and has now been reassigned to a different team within the organization.

While I have not had direct contact with her since the incident, I feel uneasy knowing she is still employed here, given the nature of what was said. Leadership and HR have not communicated much about the situation, and I’m unsure what protections or boundaries are in place.

I have asked for support from HR to avoid interaction, but they have been less than helpful. My manager is also frustrated with HR and has offered to help me come up with our own safety plan, which I appreciate, but I’m not sure what that should realistically include or whether that responsibility should fall on us.

What is a reasonable course of action here? Is it appropriate to push HR more directly for clarity on safety measures, or to formally request that I not have any interaction with this person? How much responsibility should I or my manager be taking on in creating a “safety plan” in a situation like this

When things are at the point that you need a safety plan, the person really shouldn’t still be working there — not unless there are extenuating circumstances that mitigate what happened (for example, a medical issue that has been treated, combined with compelling reason to believe that whatever caused the original threat won’t be repeated and sincere contrition).

It’s absolutely appropriate for you and your manager to push HR very directly for a clearer answer about how you can feel safe at work. Ideally your manager would take the lead on advocating for this … and also should have a conversation with HR, the company’s lawyers, and her own boss about the company’s legal and moral liability when an employee has threatened to shoot another employee.

2. Can I wear earbuds to drown out diet talk?

Recently, I’ve been wearing two earbuds at the office with music or podcasts in the background while I work. Typically, this isn’t something I like to do because I think it can come off as unprofessional. Especially because I’m in my 20’s — I think my generation can get a reputation for constantly being on our phones (and to a certain extent I understand that reputation and it can be true), so that’s another reason I try to avoid it.

Recently, everyone in the office has been talking about their diets – weighing themselves, the amount of calories they consume, the foods they’re cutting out, etc. As someone in recovery from an eating disorder, hearing these things can be difficult for me. For a while, I was in a really good place where, yes, it was annoying to hear these conversations, but I could try and zone it out. Lately though, the repetition of these conversations has hit more closely and makes it more difficult for me to focus on my work and maintain my recovery. I would love to ask my coworkers to not talk about these things during work, but I’m not sure it’s my place do that given that it’s a “me” issue that I have to work through. My solution has been to wear two earbuds while I work to drown out those conversations. Is this a happy medium compromise, or do you think it would come off as too unprofessional?

It’s pretty office-dependent; in many offices, it would be a non-issue and completely unremarkable. In others, it might feel out of sync with the culture but still be fine to do (especially if you explain it helps you focus). In a minority of others, it would feel out of sync with the culture in a way that could affect how you were perceived there.

So, first: does anyone else wear earbuds? Do you need to be able to hear people talking to you unexpectedly? If you’re still left unsure, ask your manager about it! It’s fine to say, “I’ve found some of the chatting in the office distracting and realized I focus really well with headphones on — is it okay with you if I keep doing that?” There’s a pretty good chance you’ll hear it’s fine. (And if you don’t, you could potentially approach it as a formal accommodation if you’re willing to disclose what’s going on.)

But also, you do have some standing to ask people to lay off on the diet talk, and there’s advice here on how to do it.

3. Is there a polite way to offer editing services?

I am a very active member of an online community for a particular hobby and would love to work for this community. I have years of experience as a writer and editor, and I have noticed that the site could probably use one — they put out a lot of content and quite a few errors get missed. I also want to add that I’ve been interviewed by the owner of this community, so I’m not a complete stranger.

I’m struggling with a polite way to say to them, “You need an editor. Would you like to hire me?” *Is* there a polite way to say this? Any suggestions?

It probably isn’t going to be a super high priority for an online hobby community, which likely has limited resources and may rely mostly or entirely on volunteers. But you can offer! It’s okay to be straightforward about it: say you’re a fan of their work and active member of the community, work professionally as an editor, have noticed their content not infrequently contains editing errors (you could include something like “understandably, since I’m sure the people creating it have lots of demands on their time”), and you’d love to talk with them about what an editing arrangement could look like if that’s something they’re interested in. Assuming you’re not offering to volunteer your services, you’d want to make that clear (probably by stating your rates up-front or mentioning that you’d be open to discounting them if you are).

4. What to say to a worker who was striking when we last spoke

I work for a company that provides vendor services to an industry that has a fair amount of unionized workers. A few months back, I contacted a client to check in, only to be told rather awkwardly that his department was on strike so he wasn’t sure how things were going. Such news typically doesn’t make it to a national level for this industry unless it’s very large or there’s some unusual circumstance. I’ve been doing this job for over half a decade and this was my first time speaking with a striking employee. At the time, I just wished him luck and well wishes, and ended the call.

It’s clear from the notes on his account that he’s now back at work, so today I reached out again. I got voicemail this time, but if I had gotten him on the phone, should I have said anything about the strike? Google doesn’t tell me much about how the strike was resolved, so for all I know he’s not happy about it, and it’s not appropriate for my role to get involved in those discussions. Overall, this feels pretty low-stakes but I’m curious about your thoughts.

You don’t need to reference the strike. It would also be fine to say, “Glad you’re back” or “Glad the strike didn’t have to last very long” (if it didn’t) or “I hope the strike was successful” or otherwise express your support.

5. How to explain my recent layoff

As a result of some reorganization in the department, I was recently made redundant after only a year and a half on the job. Leadership made their decision based on shifting strategic priorities and it had nothing to do with my performance. How should I think about explaining this redundancy to potential employers as I begin to apply for new positions? The “reason for leaving last position” question is bound to come up on applications and in interviews and I’d like to have an answer prepared.

Being laid off is a completely routine and unremarkable reason for leaving a job and you won’t need a lengthy explanation! You can simply say, “Our team had a reorg that significantly changed our priorities and my position was eliminated as part of that.” If multiple positions were cut, you can say, “A reorg eliminated multiple positions on my team, and I was laid off as part of that.”

The post coworker threatened me and HR isn’t doing anything, telling someone they need editing, and more appeared first on Ask a Manager.

Encourage

Apr. 23rd, 2026 04:01 am
[syndicated profile] dumbing_of_age_feed

Posted by David M Willis



Day three of the Dumbing of Age Book 15 Kickstarter ended!  On day one we also unlocked the second stretch goal, Free Amber Magnets for everybody!  if you pledged for something i physically mail to you, anyway

Getting Tatted On A Tuesday

Apr. 23rd, 2026 03:00 am
[syndicated profile] scalziwhatever_feed

Posted by Athena Scalzi

My mom and I both had three tattoos. One of hers was from before my time, and she got two more while I was a kid. I got my first one at eighteen; a matching one with my two cousins who are practically like my sisters. It was all three of our firsts. My second one at twenty was not perfectly matching but very samesies with my lifelong bestie. My third was just for me, and it represents a promise to myself.

My mom and I always knew we wanted matching tattoos eventually, it just took us both four to get there. But we’re finally here, with the matching tats we’ve wanted for years. We just kept not getting them, and another year would pass. I asked her to look at artists, find some she likes, and I’d do the same and we’d pick our favorite. It never happened, and eventually I said, “mom, I booked us a consultation.” I was dragging her to get a tattoo because I knew if I didn’t, she’d never slow down on her own long enough to get one.

I follow a lot of tattoo artists on Instagram, but most are states or even whole countries away. However, there’s one in Dayton I’ve been following for about two years. After seeing his floral work time and time again and thinking how amazing it was, I finally just booked a consultation because I figured taking at least a step in that direction was a good idea. So, my mom and I headed to Truth and Triumph Tattoo in Kettering and met Kevin Rotramel.

My mom had sketched a design of a sunflower, and after talking with him about what we wanted and where we wanted it, he said he’d come up with a design that was close to the original my mom drew, but just more cleaned up and with more depth and detail. While we had always dreamed of color, we both knew yellow would look awful on our skin tones, and just went for greyscale, which our artist highly recommended anyway.

Before I show you how our tats turned out, I want to showcase some of Kevin’s work. I know I said his floral work is what made me decide to go to him, but check out this insane octopus:

Or this sick giraffe:

How about this super cool lantern?!

And this castle is incredible:

Okay, I won’t keep you in suspense any longer, but seriously Kevin’s work is so cool.

My mom went first, and I was starting to get nervous, but also was so excited to finally be doing this!

Finally, it was my turn:

Me sitting in a chair with my back to the tattoo artist, with my back exposed and my head hanging down so he can get to my upper back area. He is actively tattooing me in the shot!

Honestly it barely hurt for the first like half, but in the latter half of the tat I was definitely starting to get sensitive. I always seem to be chill for about an hour, and then right at the hour mark I’m like, “ooh okay I want to be done now.” But I hung in there!

And here they are, our matching sunflowers:

My mom and I with our exposed backs to the camera, looking at each other. Our sunflowers are both in the middle of our upper backs, mine between my other two tattoos (a pineapple and purple flowers), and hers all lonesome on her back by itself.

I am so happy with these! I appreciate Kevin for putting mine up a little bit higher than my mom’s so it wasn’t just straight up in line with my other two. I do love how my mom’s looks as her only back one, though. It’s framed so nicely! They’re the perfect size and aren’t too wild, just something pretty and simple to remind us of each other.

I absolutely love how they came out, and I’m just thrilled to finally have a matching tattoo with my mom. I know it’s corny, but sunflowers have always been a symbol of our love for each other, because we are each other’s sunshine, and we make each other happy when skies are grey. I love my mom and our tattoos, and I only wish we had gotten them sooner.

-AMS

2026 Hugo Award finalists

Apr. 23rd, 2026 02:29 am
[syndicated profile] zarfhome_blog_feed

Posted by Andrew Plotkin

The 2026 Hugo Award finalists are up. Awkward for me: I really like many of the nominees, but I haven't read (seen, played) a majority of any category. So I can't give a useful overview or say that any given work is "best of the year".

I'll just recommend a bunch!

(I am not registered for Worldcon this year. I attended last year, which makes me eligible to vote this year, but I didn't submit nominations. I might vote in the finals though.)

Novel: A Drop of Corruption (Robert Jackson Bennett) is an enormously readable fantasy-meatpunk mystery... with kaiju. (Series; book two is now out.) Shroud (Adrian Tchaikovsky) is the old-school genre of "humans visit alien planet -- badly." (Haven't seen one of those since Dragon's Egg.) The Incandescent (Emily Tesh) is magical-college but from the teacher's side, which I thought was very interesting. Ending maybe doesn't hold together but it's still a good read. The Raven Scholar (Antonia Hodgson) is an entertaining court succession crisis. I haven't read The Everlasting but I've enjoyed Harrow's previous stuff so I'll probably get there.

Novella: Automatic Noodle is semi-cozy robot restaurant fic. I say "semi" because there's some nasty online harassment which kind of took it out of the comfort zone for me, but all does end happily. I read The River Has Roots (Amal El-Mohtar) but I'm afraid it didn't stick with me. What Stalks the Deep (T. Kingfisher) is more Ruritanian myco-horror. The series is getting more nuanced in neat ways. Also the author seems to be writing books literally faster than I can read them; I have no idea how she does it.

Novelette: I haven't read any of the nominees but I'm excited to see a new Scott Lynch story and will definitely track it down.

Graphic novel: This probably makes me an uncultured oaf, but I'm really enjoying The Power Fantasy (Kieron Gillen, Caspar Wijngaard, Clayton Cowles). No, the world did not need another take on superheroes; yes, this one is well done.

Related work: I want to read Inventing the Renaissance (Ada Palmer) but I have not yet dug in and done it. I have read most of Last War in Albion (Elizabeth Sandifer) -- interest: I support her Patreon. The nominated chapter, "The Cuddled Little Vice (Sandman)", is a stand-alone deep-dive into Neil Gaiman And That Whole Situation, but starting right at Gaiman's launch as an ambitious journalist. It's a hell of a read.

Dramatic Long Form: KPop Demon Hunters was as much fun as everybody said. I don't think a single thing in the plot surprised me, but they got a lot out of the Rumi-Celine parental relationship.

Dramatic Short Form: Okay, I have good coverage here. Murderbot (two episodes nominated) was excellently done. "The Story & the Engine" got in my head enough that I turned into a Dr Who blogger for a day. The Wheel of Time, hey, I never read the books but they got three watchable seasons out of it. And Severance is very impressive, although not in a pleasant way. (And I still think it should have been a one-season firecracker with a WTF ending. This is, after all, the spiritual remake of The Prisoner.)

Fan Writer: I know nobody reads down this far, but I follow and enjoy James Nicoll's book reviews. I particularly admire his unfailing optimism and faith in the human bwaaaaaahhh okay I couldn't finish that sentence. He's fun to read. Interest: I once went to a fan meetup at James's game store, back when he ran a game store.

Game: I surely loved the heck out of Blue Prince. The Citizen Sleeper games are solid work. (My comments: CS1, CS2.) I haven't played the others, largely due to the fact that I can't parry for crap and skip any game where I need to. Dispatch is the non-combat one that I missed; heard good things about it but never got around to.

But let's talk about stats!

You may recall from my 2025 post that, in last year's Best Game category, the final round of voting was pretty clearly split between "indie gamers" and "AAA gamers". I'm not trying to nail down category definitions; I'm just observing that almost every voter who put Dragon Age: Veilguard first put Zelda: Echoes of Wisdom second, and vice versa. Everybody else was split between Caves of Qud, 1000xResist, Tactical Breach Wizards, and Lorelei and the Laser Eyes -- but those folks generally did not rank the two "big games" high.

As a result, there were nearly (though not entirely) two separate races. Dragon Age won one, Qud won the other, and then Qud handily beat Dragon Age in the final showdown.

Will the same logic apply in 2026? Let's have those nominees again:

  • Blue Prince (Dogubomb / Raw Fury)
  • Citizen Sleeper 2: Starward Vector (Jump Over the Age / Fellow Traveller)
  • Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 (Sandfall Interactive / Kepler Interactive)
  • Dispatch (AdHoc Studio)
  • Hades II (Supergiant Games)
  • Hollow Knight: Silksong (Team Cherry)

None of those companies are Nintendo or Electronic Arts, that's for sure. Or even Bioware. These are all plausibly indie games; all six got labelled as "independent" in industry award shows. Although I've seen plenty of argument over whether Clair Obscur was too big or too big-budget to really count.

On the other hand, Silksong and Hades 2 both came in with the expectation of being Momentous Games Releases. Clair Obscur was a surprise, but rapidly hit escape velocity and, e.g., swept the heck out of The Game Awards 2025.

So when I observed a split in 2025, what was I really seeing?

  • If it was between fans of giant traditional game companies and fans of small studios, then it doesn't apply at all this year.

  • If it was between fans of big-budget behemoths and scrappy little projects, then it may be Clair Obscur against everybody else.

  • If it was between fans of long-expected titles and fans of surprise newcomers, then it's Silksong and Hades vs the world. (Citizen Sleeper 2 is a sequel but not in a way that makes it big news.)

  • If it's people who think award-winning games should win more awards vs people who want to give weird little niches a chance, then it's Silksong / Hades / Clair Obscur against Blue Prince / Dispatch / Citizen Sleeper.

Obviously none of these cases predict a winner. The whole point of the runoff system is that the race is not superdetermined by a single litmus test. (Nothing in 2025 told you in advance that Qud would be the favorite indie game.)

Really I'm just pinning down some cases, so that my post-2026 analysis has hypotheses to falsify! Gonna be an interesting race regardless.

[syndicated profile] kottke_org_feed

Posted by Jason Kottke

“I believe in an old-fashioned virtue called Doing the Freakin’ Work. Read the book, not the summary. Write the piece, not the prompt. Suffer like the artist you are. It ain’t easy, but if it were easy, it wouldn’t be worth doing.”

The Big Idea: Samantha Mills

Apr. 22nd, 2026 08:35 pm
[syndicated profile] scalziwhatever_feed

Posted by Athena Scalzi

Family ties aren’t always a prettily done bow, sometimes they’re fraught with fraying ends and tricky knots, all woven together in the branches of family trees. Love ’em or hate ’em, everyone’s got parents, and everyone’s relationships with them are vastly different. Nebula Award-winning author Samantha Mills explores these varied relationships in her newest collection of short stories, Rabbit Test and Other Stories.

SAMANTHA MILLS:
Assembling a short story collection is an exercise in self-reflection. Material written over the course of years is placed side-by-side for the first time. Themes emerge. Preoccupations become clear. Where one story can be read in isolation and stand on its own terms, a collection can’t help but blare its author’s recurring fixations.
If there is one big fixation recurring throughout Rabbit Test and Other Stories, it is parenthood—specifically, the many ways that parent-child relationships buttress, cast shadows over, and intersect with so many other aspects of our lives.

Nearly every story here includes parents (usually mothers) and/or children (usually daughters). Frequently, this relationship is ruptured. Someone is missing, or dead, or dragged away by forces beyond their control. In “Strange Waters,” a fisherwoman is lost in time, struggling to get home to her children. In “Spindles,” a young fairytale princess has been separated from her mother during an alien invasion, and is struggling to make it to their rendezvous point before being captured. The settings change, the anxiety remains. What if, what if?

Parent/child separation is not something I keep writing about on purpose, but it’s a worry I can’t shake. When my first baby was born and then immediately whisked away for a 3-day stay in the NICU, I felt fear like nothing I had ever experienced before. I looked at that tiny face and felt the weight of the generations stretching behind me, the future spiraling uncertainly ahead of me, and I thought: oh no. I’m going to be scared for the rest of my life.

Weirdly, this was what leveled up my writing, though I didn’t realize it right away. About six months after giving birth, after years of fits and starts, I finally figured out how to craft a proper short story. The immensity and clarity of those new mom emotions were what tipped me over the line from knowing how to write a pretty sentence to knowing what I wanted to say.

Having kids forced me to think more deeply about my own childhood, both what I wanted to carry forward from it and what I wanted to leave behind. I was looking forward and backward at the same time—and god, I was so sleep-deprived! It was in this fevered state that I began to think about society generationally in a way I hadn’t before, reflecting on the ways that traditions or traumas (or traumatic traditions) are passed down from one generation to the next.

That tension—being caught between generations and deciding what, if anything, to do differently—surfaces in several of these stories. In “Rabbit Test,” the main character is prevented from getting an abortion by her parents; later, she has an opportunity to give her own daughter the choice she didn’t have. In “The Limits of Magic,” a repressive patriarchal state is passed down in the nursery by women who never saw a way out for themselves, and a new mother can’t bear to follow in their footsteps. In “A Shadow Is a Memory of a Ghost,” a pair of nemesis witches have to face the fact that, in trying to avoid the harms of their father, they’ve hurt their own children in entirely new ways.

There are good parents, here, too (the aforementioned fisherwoman; the fairytale queen; a tightknit family surviving in a mining colony company town in space), but even they make mistakes, because who doesn’t? What keeps drawing me back to this topic is the sheer variety of possible perspectives. I could write a thousand more stories and still not feel I’ve adequately conveyed the many facets of this experience. We do not all become parents, but we’ve all been children. We all spent our formative years utterly dependent on the adults in our lives—some up to the task, some not. It’s a bond that can be a comfort and joy for the rest of one’s life, or a fragile, fraught connection, or a disaster to be worked out in therapy for years to come, and whether we like it or not, this affects how we see ourselves and how we move through the world.

Now, don’t get me started on siblings.


Rabbit Test: Amazon|Barnes & Noble|Bookshop|Powell’s

Author socials: Website|Bluesky|Instagram

[syndicated profile] kottke_org_feed

Posted by Jason Kottke

Sony’s AI division has designed a robot that can beat elite human players at table tennis. From the paper:

Evaluated in matches against elite and professional players under official competition rules, Ace achieved several victories and demonstrated consistent returns of high-speed, high-spin shots. These results highlight the potential of physical AI agents to perform complex, real-time interactive tasks, suggesting broader applications in domains requiring fast, precise human–robot interaction.

Ace is a fine name, but I might have gone with something like WALL-E Supreme instead. (Robbie Supreme?)

Tags: artificial intelligence · robots · sports · table tennis · video

[syndicated profile] kottke_org_feed

Posted by Jason Kottke

I had somehow missed (or forgotten) that Greta Gerwig is writing and directing an adaptation of The Magician’s Nephew, one of The Chronicles of Narnia books by C.S. Lewis. Filming has wrapped and it’s out in theaters on Nov 26.

[syndicated profile] jwz_org_feed

Posted by jwz

Noah Hawley:

This is different from classic narcissism, in which a grandiose but fragile self-image can mask deep insecurity. What I'm talking about is a self-definition in which the individual grows to the size of the universe, and the universe vanishes. [...]

Decades of research in developmental psychology have shown that moral reasoning develops through consequences -- not punishment, necessarily, but experiencing the effects of your actions on others, receiving honest feedback, having to accommodate reality as it actually is rather than as you wish it to be. It's not that the wealthy become evil; it's that their environment stops teaching them the things that nonwealthy people are forced to learn simply by living in a world that pushes back. When you can buy your way out of any mistake, when you can fire anyone who disagrees with you, when your social circle consists entirely of people who need something from you, the basic mechanism by which humans learn that other people are real goes dark.

When Peter Thiel said, "I no longer believe that freedom and democracy are compatible," he wasn't talking about your freedom. He was talking about his own. You don't exist.

Previously, previously, previously, previously, previously, previously, previously, previously, previously.

[syndicated profile] daringfireball_feed

Posted by John Gruber

Thumbnail of a heather black Daring Fireball logo hoodie.

Daring Fireball t-shirts and hoodies are back. Order now, and we’ll start printing shirts at the end of this week and shipping them out next week. The hoodies are a new model from Bella Canvas, the manufacturer. Our previous hoodies were “heather gray” and the fabric was a blend of 50% polyester, 37.5% cotton, and 12.5% rayon. That model is being phased out. So we’ve switched to a new model that’s 85% cotton, 15% polyester, and a darker “heather black” color. The old ones were good, but the new ones feel even better.

[syndicated profile] kottke_org_feed

Posted by Jason Kottke

A group of “unauthorized users” have accessed Anthropic’s Mythos AI model, which the company recently said they couldn’t widely release because it was too dangerous. Whoopsie doodle! Maybe don’t use guessable paths for your powerful cyberattack model?

[syndicated profile] askamanager_feed

Posted by Ask a Manager

It’s Administrative Professionals Day! Last week we talked about the most ridiculous requests you’ve seen made of assistants, and here are 17 of my favorite stories you shared.

1. The flusher

This was when I worked at a toxic doctor’s office. I was admin assistant to his wife, the practice manager, and my desk was closest to the bathroom. She always wore a headset and once took a call while in the bathroom. When she was done with the bathroom part, she came out and motioned for me to flush the toilet for her so her caller didn’t hear it.

2. The astrologist

When I was an assistant, my boss made me input every day when Mercury would be in retrograde into her calendar.

3. The prayer

My boss at a legal staffing company once sent me to a church to light a candle of remembrance to honor her late husband, asking me to be sure to pray for him on her behalf. She told me she was too busy to go on her own (I was her EA; she wasn’t) and I heard her explaining to her adult children the heart rending emotions she felt while she lit the candle.

It was my first job out of college and I had a great deference to authority, and so I did it. Even the prayers, although we did not share a religion.

4. The eye drops

I was working at a Big8 accounting firm and for a brief period of time I had to put eye drops in the eyes of one of the senior partners. (Editor’s note: this has apparently happened enough that there were TWO stories submitted of two different bosses requesting this.)

5. The car

When my boss couldn’t park in her preferred spot in the parking garage, she’d leave her car in the loading dock, come inside, and throw her keys on the reception desk. I was supposed to go park her car for her and then, of course, retrieve it again at the end of the day since she didn’t know where it was in the garage.

6. The binder clip prep

I was an admin for three years to the president of a tiny medical software company. I would place office supply orders — pretty normal. But when I ordered new binder clips, I had to dump out the plastic cylinder of clips and flip up the tabs on each one, then put them back (at which point they never fit properly into the cylinder anymore and I had to kind of jam them in). This was because my boss was too busy to do this himself when he wanted to use a binder clip.

7. The mail chute

This happened back in the early 1990s, before there was internet and email. I worked as an assistant to a salesman in a bank and used to wear dress suits and pantyhose to work. My job was to help him put together proposals for organizations. He was a type A personality, and I tried to comply to his demands, even making sure that the paper on which we printed had the watermark consistently facing in the same direction.

One day we had accidentally sent out a proposal with a section missing. It had already been delivered to our mailroom’s DHL bin, awaiting its final destination. I asked why we couldn’t just send the missing section separately, but my boss was worried that it would appear unprofessional. Then he suggested that the two of us go to the mailroom together, where he would pick me up by the ankles and dip me upside-down, head-first into the DHL bin to retrieve the package. He was completely serious. For a second, I imagined this scenario in which my skirt would slide up my thighs. I refused. In the end, we got a couple of the smaller men from the mailroom to recover the proposal for us, so it all worked out and my dignity remained intact.

8. The coffee

This wasn’t so much an unreasonable request, but I was so proud of my sneakiness at the time – I occasionally had to assist a woman who was notoriously mean to everyone. She always wanted Starbucks coffee, but the trouble was that the closest Starbucks was 4 blocks away and always had a huge line (this was before online ordering was a thing), so getting it would take forever. She DID. NOT. UNDERSTAND why her coffee wasn’t magically appearing two minutes after she asked for it.

Finally, after being berated one too many times, I asked the Starbucks barista for a bunch of cups and lids, and from then on, any time this woman demanded her Starbucks coffee, I simply dipped into our kitched, poured whatever Folgers coffee was let in the shared pot into the Starbucks cup, popped a lid on, and brought it back to her. She never knew the difference.

9. The light

My boss once texted me to come turn on his office light while he was already sitting in there.

10. The avocados

The dumbest request I’ve ever gotten as an assistant: going out every morning to buy multiple avocados for the CEO to choose from. After she chose her preferred avocado, I had to slice it in half, put cayenne pepper on it, and serve it to her on a plate. With chopsticks.

She once asked me to put the whole avocado setup on a paper plate in a ziploc bag so she could eat while driving to the Hamptons (again – with chopsticks). I made the more senior assistant handle that one as I didn’t want to be liable in case her dumb ass did something on the road.

11. The trash collector

I worked for a tiny org, with a tiny office space. The boss refused to buy the city’s trash and recycling services because the rolling bins would have to be visible in the main space and that would “look unprofessional.” Instead, multiple times a week I was tasked to take office trash home to dispose of in my own residential bins. I even handled some bulky trash disposal piece by piece from a renovation prior to my start date.

12. The chef

The EA at my first big job was responsible for preparing lunch for the CEO every day. She cooked it at home the night before and warmed it for him (always on the stove, no microwaves allowed) and served it to him at the same time daily. Every other task on her agenda was dropped for lunch. It took at least an hour a day, between prep and dishes afterwards.

13. The rehab driver

I was voluntold to escort the nonprofit CEO’s adult child to rehab. To make matters worse, the adult child didn’t realize that the “appointment” was an intake to a 30-day program. Needless to say, she declined. That was an awkward Uber ride back to the office.

14. The swim instructor

After my first year of law school, I was hired for the summer by a law firm in my hometown as a law clerk/paralegal/administrative assistant/whatever Weird Lawyer needed me to do.

I mentioned I was on the swim team in college. He would swim for exercise a few times a week. I had to give him swim lessons.

15. The sofa

Early in my career, I was part of a small army of assistants supporting the owner/CEO of a reasonably sized company. When I was hired, her office was mid-refurbishment — and she was profoundly offended by how new the leather sofa looked. Apparently, it didn’t align with her carefully curated vision.

To fix this, another junior assistant and I were given a highly specialized assignment: make the sofa look lived-in. How? By taking turns jumping on it in 30‑minute shifts until it met her aesthetic standards.

This was a very professional office. It was the 1990s. The dress code was strict. We wore pencil skirts and pantyhose. Picture two exhausted assistants aggressively bounce-testing a leather sofa like it owed us money. It’s honestly a miracle neither of us pulled a muscle, ripped hosiery, or had to explain to HR why we were airborne in the CEO’s office.

The sofa survived. So did we. Barely.

It was also the exact moment I realized I might want to explore a different career path — one that didn’t involve trampoline-based interior design.

16. The fish tank

Years ago, I worked for the very sweetest, most lovely older man who happened to be very short. He also loved tropical fish, and in his office he had a wall-sized tank that he was very proud of.

One day I heard him yelling my name, ran to his office, and turned the corner to see him standing in a stepstool, in his underwear, soaking wet. This was confusing, to understate it.

Turns out one of his fish had died and he had been trying to use a net to get the body off the bottom of the tank, but couldn’t reach and fell in! He thought maybe I could help because I had longer arms.

Once I got some clarity on What exactly Was Going On Here, I of course happily tried to help, but it was wall sized! I couldn’t get the poor deceased fish either, but I did call the fish tank guy (yes, we had a guy) for an emergency rescue.

17. The refusal

My second day working for a renowned surgeon and department chair (and big muckety muck overall), he gave me his wife’s phone number to assist her with her afternoon social in three days. (Note: attendees were just her friends and social climbing assets.) I was so shocked, my spine grew unexpectedly and I told him that I was a state employee and would never perform any personal errands for him and certainly not his wife. To his credit, he just said okay and never brought it up again. I actually think he respected me for speaking up and the four years I worked for him were some of the best in my work life.

The post the eye drops, the flusher, and other ridiculous requests made of assistants appeared first on Ask a Manager.

“Even the Weather Felt Expensive”

Apr. 22nd, 2026 06:30 pm
[syndicated profile] kottke_org_feed

Posted by Jason Kottke

Filmmaker Noah Hawley was invited to Amazon founder Jeff Bezos’s Campfire retreat in 2018. Reflecting on the experience recently for The Atlantic, Hawley writes that today’s super-rich have stopped “pretending that the rules of human society apply” to them.

The Jeff Bezos of 2018 acted as if he still believed that people’s impression of him mattered, that his financial and social value could be affected by negative publicity. He still believed that his actions had consequences. He had not yet freed himself—the way Daniel Plainview freed himself—from the rules of men.

Eight years later, Bezos and two of the world’s other richest men—Mark Zuckerberg and Elon Musk—have clearly left the world of consequences behind. They float in a sensory-deprivation tank the size of the planet, in which their actions are only ever judged by themselves.

The closer I’ve gotten to the world of wealth, the more I understand that being truly rich doesn’t mean amassing enough money to afford superyachts, private jets, or a million acres of land. It means that everything becomes effectively free. Any asset can be acquired but nothing can ever be lost, because for soon-to-be trillionaires, no level of loss could significantly change their global standing or personal power. For them, the word failure has ceased to mean anything.

Daisy Grewal in 2012 for Scientific American: How Wealth Reduces Compassion.

Who is more likely to lie, cheat, and steal—the poor person or the rich one? It’s temping to think that the wealthier you are, the more likely you are to act fairly. After all, if you already have enough for yourself, it’s easier to think about what others may need. But research suggests the opposite is true: as people climb the social ladder, their compassionate feelings towards other people decline.

Billionaire Wilderness: The Ultra-Wealthy and the Remaking of the American West by Justin Farrell sounds like an interesting read along these same lines.

Tags: Daisy Grewal · Jeff Bezos · Noah Hawley · wealth

Profile

jazzfish: Jazz Fish: beret, sunglasses, saxophone (Default)
Tucker McKinnon

Most Popular Tags

Adventures in Mamboland

"Jazz Fish, a saxophone playing wanderer, finds himself in Mamboland at a critical phase in his life." --Howie Green, on his book Jazz Fish Zen

Yeah. That sounds about right.

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags