jobs-related stories
Posted Nov 14th 2007 10:01AM by Keith McDuffee
Filed under: Site Announcements

Your favorite, ever-expanding TV blog (no not that one, TV Squad!) is looking to add to its team of writers. Are you a TV junkie and interested in news of all-things TV? Do you have an RSS feed list for TV news in the double digits? Would you like to be paid to write about TV? Well, this may be your chance!
Read on for a few details about this new opening...
Continue reading Come write for TV Squad! - VIDEO
Posted May 20th 2007 9:04AM by Adam Finley
Filed under: The Simpsons, Video, Web, Celebrities
It must be all this 400th episode hoodly-hoo, but I'm getting a lot of Simpsons stuff forwarded to my inbox. Not that I'm complaining.
Following up on my recent post featuring a bunch of couch gags from the Simpsons comes this video list of every job Homer has held from season one through season seventeen. You can also see a list of his various occupations on this Wiki page.
The fact that Homer willing quits his job at the nuclear plant at the drop of a hat has been a running gag on the series for a long time, but it also makes me think about all the jobs I've held (and I sometimes feel I've had as many jobs as Homer) that I wasn't exactly qualified to do. Most of these jobs I held right out of college when I was desperate for any kind of work:
Continue reading The many, many jobs of Homer Jay Simpson - VIDEO
Posted Nov 11th 2006 8:06PM by Anna Johns
Filed under: NBC, News, Industry

Last month,
Rich told you all about NBC Universal's plans to cut costs by cutting jobs. Seven hundred jobs to be exact. The first wave of cuts came last week, where at least 17 people were laid off from
Dateline NBC. Most of those jobs were based out of New York, with a handful in Washington, D.C. and Chicago. There is also an undisclosed number of people who volunteered for the company's buyout package.
More layoffs within NBC News will come this week, with even more coming in the next year. According to
Broadcasting & Cable, NBC Universal is slashing costs mostly at the NBC television network, while its movie and cable networks remain untouched. That means the news division is going to take the biggest hit because it takes a lot of people to cover the news. I guess we know where NBCU's priorities are. If it's anything like the newsrooms I've worked in, the most expensive employees will be told to take a hike and they will be replaced by cheaper people with less experience. Does the quality of the product take a hit? You betcha.
[Via
Lost Remote]
Posted Oct 26th 2006 2:29PM by Joel Keller
Filed under: Other Comedy Shows, OpEd, The Simpsons, Animation

For a complete moron, Homer Simpson does pretty well for himself, doesn't he? First we learned the other day that his job as a nuclear safety inspector makes him
over $67,000 per year; now comes a
comprehensive list, sorted in alphabetical order, of all the jobs Homer has held in the eighteen seasons of
The Simpsons, courtesy of our friends at Wikipedia.
Some of the more famous forays into other careers, like his time as an astronaut and as the voice of "Poochie" (listed under V for "voice actor"), but he was also a chiropractor, Death, a homophobe, a mob boss, and a panhandler. Most jobs have the names of the episodes in which he held the listed job (some jobs spread across episodes). In some cases, there's an explanation listed next to the job, especially if Homer only had that job for one scene. It's a good way to waste an afternoon; at least it's more fun than trying to figure out last night's
Lost.
[via
digg.com]
Posted Apr 10th 2006 10:30AM by Adam Finley
Filed under: FOX, OpEd, The Simpsons, Animation
(S17E17) I thought Family Guy's recent reference to the
Great Space Coaster was esoteric, but I think The Simpson's reference to Mac Tonight, a short-lived
mascot created for McDonald's in the late 80s, may have topped that.
It's been awhile since I've seen this show running on all cylinders as it did last night. When I watch these shows
for review I usually have a pen and paper sitting next to me so I can jot down lines of dialog and other things to
write about, but the jokes kept coming so fast I finally gave up and, you know, just watched the show. The opening gag
with Lenny having his skeleton exposed by nuclear waste was somewhat of a letdown, since that gag has been used
numerous times already, but it was quickly followed by a short film about the joys of outsourcing, which pretty much
made up for the lackluster opening gag and set the stage for the rest of the show, which was almost pitch perfect. I
loved the reference to those old Calgon commercials when one of the workers in the film, lamenting his job, pleads,
"Outsourcing, take them away!"
Continue reading The Simpsons: Kiss Kiss Bang Bangalore