Talk:Chris's resume
To do
- Categorize
- Fix formatting
- wikify this biz-nitch.
- incorporate into the articles about his jobs. Also, CWChronology. --Champthom 23:40, 9 September 2009 (CEST)
I'd fix the formatting a bit more, but without access to the actual resume, I can't proceed without risking some minor betrayal of Chris's originial, terrible layout. Llort 00:53, 10 September 2009 (CEST)
- I think in the meantime, it wouldn't hurt to just put every "experience" into one heading and maybe make a note that Chris, for some reason, labeled each experience as "experience." It's a bit of an unorthodox departure from the original but it will help preserve the sanity of anyone reading it. Good work with the formatting, by the way. --Champthom 01:00, 10 September 2009 (CEST)
- It doesn't help that Chris also headed every job that he listed with the placeholder phrase "Job Title" instead of actually entering in the job title for each fucking job! Llort 04:27, 10 September 2009 (CEST)
- Goddammit, Chris, this is not how to do a resume. If any employer saw this jumbled mess under "job objective", they'd toss it right out (it should be very TL;DR). Why didn't his mom and dad help him out on doing this at all? Sure, sure, mommy and daddy shouldn't do everything for him, but they are the only people that'd help him. Unless Bob didn't want to because of the gubbiement monies...oh I get it now. --Wild Sonichu 04:30, 10 September 2009 (CEST)
- While it seems like resume advice is entirely subjective and you could probably find an "expert" who would find this resume acceptable, I think it's reasonable to say that this resume violates the general standards associated with resumes (namely, being more than one page long, including references directly onto the resume, etc.). It might be interesting to note which resume rules he's broken, briefly at least. --Champthom 23:58, 10 September 2009 (CEST)
- Whatever he calls this jumbled mess of garbage and spelling errors... at least he copyrighted his resume... nice little copyright logo at the bottom. --DrBonerSauce 07:45, 10 September 2009 (CEST)
- What's up with his idiotic and obsessive desire to copyright everything he produces? Should it be mentioned in some article or is it already? --Hayate666 22:04, 10 September 2009 (CEST)
- Chris doesn't like to share--that's what I think. Look at his copyright disclaimer and note how he wants to regulate every little thing about Sonichu. He wants everyone in the world to know that he created Sonichu and thus that he owns Sonichu and no way are you going to take that away from him. Thus, the obsession with "C-in-a-circle." I wonder if he shared his toys with other kids when he was younger. Ensign disposable 00:20, 11 September 2009 (CEST)
- Ah, but don't forget, he loves to "share" from other people without their permission. Because not only is he a selfish little twat, he's also a hypocrite. But we knew that already, didn't we. Ensign disposable 00:22, 11 September 2009 (CEST)
- Has anyone tried contacting any of Chris's references? I get the feeling that he hasn't actually asked some of them if he can use them for a reference ('good people/social skills' my ass), or that some of them might not be so eager to provide a reference for him nowadays. SirCucumber 15:38, 11 September 2009 (CEST)
BAM job? LOL
I can't believe he put that down as a "job". I actually worked at that BAM but not during those years he was there. A friend/coworker of mine did, so I'll have to ask them about this in more detail, but I do vaguely remember them saying something about extremely obnoxious & smelly people. (We were complaining one day a year or two ago about the Yu-Gi-Oh players & he started talking about the Pokemon players.) Obviously, this isn't something he could put down as employment, but did anyway. I just think it's funny that he's trying to say that his Pokemon game playing was a job. If anyone ever does bother calling (which would mean that they would be actually entertaining the idea of hiring him, which isn't going to happen any time soon) I'll have an earful to give them! Meeko 01:16, 10 September 2009 (CEST)Meeko
- Yeah, pretty much. Chris is essentially conflating doing something for free with "volunteer work." The thing is, Chris wasn't playing Pokemon with these kids because he was a sweet and caring young man who cared about inner city youth or some shit like that, it's because he'd be playing it anyway and it just so happened that the only people who would play with him happened to be 8-10 years his junior. Furthermore, according to Mimms and Lucas, Chris never really did gym leader shit at the GAMe PLACe because the people running the place wouldn't let him, and only once when the regular guy was out did Chris really do anything. The rest of the time was Chris hovering around Megan and him yelling at black children to not steal his cards.
- I'll see about copying and pasting the PVCC thread where Mimms and Lucas answer questions. --Champthom 01:30, 10 September 2009 (CEST)
- Pffft!! He must have gone insane at the Midlo store- the old location got a lot of black kids coming in. I'm guessing that he probably wasn't a gym leader at BAM either- I was told that the Pokemon stuff was just like the Yu-Gi-Oh stuff- the kids would show up & play in their little cliques, then leave. There wasn't any real leadership within the groups as a whole, although they did have staff members who would watch over the kids to make sure that they weren't bothering anyone or fapping to book covers. (Somebody actually found a kid rubbing one out over the covers in the fantasy section. It'd be hilarious if that was Chris, but it was some 12 year old.) Meeko 02:53, 10 September 2009 (CEST)Meeko
1996, not 1998
Pokemon, the games that is, came out in early 1996 in Japan, not 1998. IMB706 01:40, 10 September 2009 (CEST)
- But Chris lives in the US, when it didn't come out until September 1998. --Champthom 01:55, 10 September 2009 (CEST)
Publishing doesn't work that way!
Good grief, why does he have to be so clueless about things he really cares about? Publishers don't look for resumes online. This is how publishing really works: You make a complete work on your own dime, send it to a publisher (via an agent in some cases), the editor reads it over, and if it is good enough and fits the publisher's tastes/target demographics/publication schedule, they offer a contract. You get an advance based on an estimate how much it will sell, and possibly royalties if it does really well on the market. At least this is how it works in literature, I'm fairly confident the comics world works pretty much the same. If he really wants a job as of a full-day commissioned artist under Archie, Marvel etc, he'd probably have to have some sort of top-notch comic publication credits under his belt... --wwwwolf (wake me when you need me) 13:31, 10 September 2009 (CEST)
- Ah, but that's the wonder of Chris's mind: he doesn't want to go to them, he wants THEM to come to HIM. He thinks he's so important that they must bow down to his requests. Let's face it: he's no Jack Kirby, he's no Mark Bagley, and hell, Ron Lim can draw Sonic circles around Chris! --Blazer 23:11, 10 September 2009 (CEST)
- As well as a portfolio of his artwork. He can't just describe himself as having "great hand-drawing skills" to be hired as an artist: he has to show that he does. And he obviously doesn't. --Spandam-sama 00:53, 11 September 2009 (CEST)