Welcome to the Day Club!
We started this blog to trade stories about losing our jobs and grappling with an increasingly sour labor market. Some of these stories are real doozies. But after a few months of free time and some really cool experiences that our busy schedules simply wouldn’t permit while we were working, our attitude toward this little gap in our resumes started changing. In short, we’ve been pleasantly surprised by our little turn of events.

So rather than just commiserating about being unemployed, we're gonna make lemonade from the lemons. Don’t get us wrong. We don’t mean to make light of the gravity of being jobless. But we have enough to remind us of that, thank you very much. Besides, we think it would be fun to share our stories about losing one life-line and finding new and unexpected ones. So after regaling us with your own unemployment story, we would love to hear how you’re surviving, and even thriving in this dreadful economy. That’s what The Day Club is all about.

So if, for whatever reason, you find yourself without gainful employment, we heartily welcome you to The Day Club. Have a look around and tell us what’s on your mind. We welcome your stories, thoughts, pictures, articles, connections, helpful hints and any other insights you may have about being in The Day Club.

Email us at: thedayclub@gmail.com

Thursday, June 4, 2009

Day Club Initiation - Brigham Barnes – A Devout Day Clubber

I come before you today as a devout and committed Day Clubber. I cannot tell you the tale of my induction into this honorable and esteemed society because I’ve never had a job to lose. May I present myself to you as a 31 year old graduate of the New York University School of Law (Class of 2006) who has yet to hold a fulltime job. Now don’t get the wrong idea, I have worked . . . a little—teaching swimming lessons in High School, various internships and summer jobs in college, atypical internships with public interest groups, record companies and sporting enterprises during law school, and several bouts of legal temping since graduating (but only in the year 2008). I truly relish the routine of having a place to go every day, having responsibilities to tend to, and sharing a convivial atmosphere with my colleagues—but a job, featuring an offer letter and a salary and ensuring these daily joys and obligations? That’s something that I hold up in my mind with an awe and reverence worthy of a holy grail with just about as much of an idea of how to get my hands on it as the Nazis that kidnapped Dr. Henry Jones, Sr..

The reasons for my never-employment? Oh, I’ve got my ideas, and they’re many and if we explore them too deeply I’ll turn testy and nasty. And others have their own opinions—an able critic of my shortcomings once told me, during a generous hour-long exploration of my flaws, that, among other things, I’d need to get a pair of glasses to be taken seriously by interviewers. I joke about that piece of advice often, but I’ve yet to follow it, and yet to find a job, so who knows? Fake corrective lenses could be what I’m missing. Additionally, when I tried to end that conversation on an optimistic note, you know, digging for a bit of reassurance that everything would work out in the end, by saying, “Well, I can’t imagine I’ll die 60 years from now having never had a job” my Able Critic replied, “Well, don’t be so sure.” There is something that needs to be added here: this was one of my ecclesiastical authorities, one of the people in charge of the messages of faith and hope that fill each of my Sundays. So, yes, that really filled my heart with confidence.

As I said, I don’t really thrill in the examination of my non-success, but my journey to where I am (or perhaps I should say “where I am not”) is not without its anecdotes that strike me as a little amusing. Consider the following, for example:

Once, during an interview with a New York City law firm (one no more or less prestigious than the rest of the sort that come to NYU to interview as many students as possible in a day during a week of these interview-filled days) I found myself engaged in the usual interview small-talk that precedes the meat and potatoes discussion of interests, qualifications, strengths, weaknesses, and etceteras with a partner from the firm. She had a piece of paper in front of her for making the occasional note about where I was from or what classes I had taken and in the middle of our small-talking she writes across this sheet of paper, in extremely legible handwriting not intended for me to read but in no way kept from my sight:


“Not Smart. No Way. Strong No.”

While it’s not on my resume, but something I’m able to do is read things, even when they’re written upside down and these six words smashed into my interview confidence and train of thought like a wrecking ball into a skyscraper of sugar cubes. I proceeded as if nothing nasty had been written about me right in front of me and we were done before too long. We exchanged a firm good-bye handshake with a smile full of eye contact and I got away from there as fast as I could.

I spent my first hours following the interview reeling from having been called Not Smart and a Strong No and it’s a blow and it leaves me feeling pretty small, but then my reels change to focus on the normalcy of the situation. Nothing in that interview, in our conversation, or in our pleasantries seemed different at all from any of the many, many interviews I had had before it that week . . . had I left the same impression on each interviewer? Did I come across as extremely unemployable to every person I sat down across from? It was something to lose pounds of thought over, believe me, particularly after the week spent interviewing with firms from sun up to sun down didn’t produce a single invitation for a second interview.

Of course, long after the initial shock, panic, and worries, the perfect response comes to me. What I should have done, instead of sticking it out with the interview, was interrupt whatever question she was asking me to say: “I might not seem as smart as other candidates that you have interviewed, but one thing I am is not afraid to stand up to a partner from a major firm and tell them that I think their behavior is out of line and inappropriate. Now, if you think someone with that kind of character and courage might be of value, let’s talk. Otherwise, I bid you good day.”

Yes, that would be neat and champion for a day of me, but it is not what I said and I remain without job earned by qualifications or gall. But humbling experiences like that one, and loads more like it, they just make me tougher and give me more stories to tell. And while I’m off to no great start with my days as a worker, I remain confident that someday I will retire from some sort of noble career and, after I’ve been toasted by all my admiring coworkers and colleagues, I’ll stand and thank them for their kind words and generous donations in my name and then regale them with many an incredible tale of rejection and insult heaped upon me by the many that passed on an opportunity to have someone so eminently employable as myself join them at their law firm, consulting agency, bank, comic book company, record label, television studio, or off-shore gambling operation.

Or, as my Able Critic implied, I may just die having never had a proper job. I suppose that’s a pretty real possibility.

(Editor's note: I would hire Brigham for his breath holding skills alone. Take note: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5_lsFyRh5Aw. For more on Brigham, check out his blog at www.briggie.blogspot.com.)

Wednesday, May 27, 2009

Day Club Initiations – Chinkara Singh – Three Easy Lessons

I had 2 sessions that morning - a record session and an edit session - just another day where I felt I had to clone myself to get all my work done. It was the norm. The only way to catch up was to work 14 hour days consistently. You could feel the belt tightening around our company, but with all the work I completed at record speed, I was irreplaceable, right? In fact, a friend had heard a rumor that I was going to get a promotion.

And, It's always the two people in the office. That's the rule -- there has to be more than one person for legal reasons. And they called me in from my 2 -session-morning to do it, but i thought i was getting a promotion.

And though it didn't seem like it at the time, I was.

That morning, I was laid off from my employer of 5+ years with no warning and locked out of my computer immediately. Didn't get to say good bye to friends or even get all of my personal information off the computer (lesson 1). Even though I felt my loyalty to them had been betrayed, I immediately felt relieved. The market was still good, and I was leaving for LA the next day.

I moved to LA later that year. And would never have done so if the layoff hadn't happened. I learned how to sell my skills as a freelancer and give what they call the 15 second pitch (lesson 2). I had time to take short workshops to refine my skills as a producer in the industry - SAG talent workshops / Apple apps workshops / NAB conference / etc. I was never more connected to the production that I love.

From the layoff, I learned to market myself. I was never good at that - I found it to be cheesy, like a name dropper - but it forced me to find a flow, how to show people what I'm good at, and tell them effectively so they remember me (lesson 3).

A couple of years into it, I had my own logo designed that was echoed in my business card, website, portfolio, letterhead, invoices, stickers, and thank you postcards. And finally, people started remembering me by my logo.

It was the insight into my industry that I needed to be successful - marketing myself, advertising myself. Six years of being a freelancer, I immersed myself in more layoffs and rehires to conquer my fear of it. In turn, my measurement of success was how I turned a layoff into a promotion.

Sunday, May 10, 2009

Coolest Recession Ever!


Is anyone besides me starting to get the impression that this recession, aka ‘The Great Recession’, is rapidly becoming the latest ‘it’ thing? Everyone’s talking about it and blogging about it (guilty); it’s all you hear about when you turn on the news. And when the news takes a commercial break, most of the commercials will invariably reference the recession one way or another. Car companies are letting people drive off the lot with no money down and with the option of bringing the car back if they lose their job….or even if they just don’t want the car anymore. (Thanks for the loaner, GM. Sucks to be you.) Restaurants are offering discounts for folks who can prove they’re unemployed. Laundromats too. And have you people been shopping lately? I walked through an outlet mall in the DC area a couple weeks ago. Whereas it was a madhouse in prior visits, this time….very lonely. Again, sucks for those folks on the other side of the counter. But for the smart shopper, these are boom times. Apparently it’s even easier to get into certain oh-so exclusive clubs and bars that wouldn’t give us the time of day, pre-crisis. Is the Meatpacking District on the (velvet) ropes too? Horrors!

Again, there’s a certain pervasiveness to the recession zeitgeist. Being a victim of the recession has taken on a certain panache. It’s become an identifier of our time. Twenty years from now, if you can’t say that you weren’t personally affected by the recession, you’re going to feel left out. I’m not saying it’s a good thing. It is, however, at the very least, a thing to marvel at. And marketers have clued in. Identifying with one’s loss of a job and/or one’s loss of purchasing power and confidence in the economy has ironically become a potent marketing tool. It’s a buyers’ market out there. Everywhere. There’s never been a better time to be jobless and poor. Sure would be nice to have a little to take advantage of all those fire sales tho……..

Monday, May 4, 2009

The Day Club Reading List


The Manhattan Users Guide pointed out a couple blogs we think will be helpful for all you Day Clubbers out there:

Penny Palate: Food and Drink for the Thrifty New Yorker. If there are three words to describe your typical Day Clubber, they are: Hungry, thirsty and thrifty. This is a blog we need. http://pennypalate.wordpress.com/

offManhattan. As much as we love our island paradise, sometimes it’s nice to leave, at least for a day. And what with all our free time, now’s the time. I’m already planning my own ‘Self-Guided Brooklyn Grafitti Tour’. Here’s the link: http://offmanhattan.com/

Sunday, May 3, 2009

Day Club Initiation - Paul Dozier - Where's My Bailout?


December 11, 2008 is a date that has been etched on my memory, along with all those other dates of infamy. We had been forewarned it was the day my department would contribute its share of the 5,300 investment banking jobs that needed to be cut. If I could last through the day, I could count myself a survivor, for that round anyway. A colleague and I had joked about making ourselves scarce. Hey, if you’re never at your desk, how are they gonna tap you on the shoulder? I smirked about that as I left my desk to grab breakfast down in the cafeteria, which I rarely did.

When I got back to my desk and settled into my chair, there was something on my screen that stuck out like a sore thumb. It was one unread email, in bold, a new one, sitting atop all the other emails I had already opened. It was from our admin, who sits right next to me…..who was staring intently at her screen. It said, ‘Call so-and-so (my boss, who’s based in Sao Paolo) at such and such number…. it wasn’t his number. Somewhere in my brain, an alarm went off.

I picked up the phone and called…..it rang for a few seconds…probably the time it took my boss, whom I still consider a friend, to step into an empty office and close the door. He picked up and asked me to walk down to the reception area of our floor where an HR representative was waiting for me. More alarms in my head. Got up and started the long walk, like a lamb to the slaughter. The HR rep was clearly nervous. She took me into another glass office; together we called my boss. He informed me that the firm was no longer in need of my services. And all the sudden I’m short of breath and sweating and a little dizzy….and I start wondering, well, should I tell everyone out loud when I get back to my desk or do I let them surmise from my filling a box with personal effects that I will no longer be with them?

Back to my desk. Avoided eye contact. Everyone else’s eyes were glued to their screens anyway. Did they already know? Were they avoiding eye contact? I couldn’t tell. Told my closest colleagues as discreetly as possible. Started packing my stuff, sending out all the requisite mass emails. Got a call from a colleague in Mexico City. She got let go too. Then, the department head, also a friend, called me into his office, offered his apologies, condolences, support.

Walked back to my desk. People finally started coming by my desk bearing hugs, tears, business cards, righteous indignation and the like. Soon enough, my collea…..er, former colleagues and I were all laughing about how good it would be for me to be surfing while they were still hard at work. They knew me so well. Weird how a lay-off can trigger a huge outpouring of love and support to the point of making one feel good about the whole thing. It’s like the last day of school before summer vacation.

By 11:30am, I was gone. For anyone not familiar to the ways of Wall Street, two hours is ample time to say your goodbyes, clean your desk and walk out the door. There’s too much at stake to risk a disgruntled former employee stealing sensitive information or sending out disparaging emails. Not that I would do anything like that. I actually have nothing bad to say about my former employer or my former colleagues. The layoff was nothing personal. It’s business. As much of a cop-out as this may seem to the Day Club, I don’t hold grudges toward my former place of employ, nor any of my former colleagues….not even the people who had to let me go. In fact, I miss ‘em. And I knew the risks, which are significant, going in. It’s business.

It’s now been over four months since that day of infamy. Not knowing when the next paycheck will come nor from whence it will proceed is no bueno. But unemployment does have certain perks, like more free time for surfing…. and working a temp production assistant job on an iPhone commercial….and getting a picture with Ice-T when they filmed an episode of ‘Law and Order: SVU’ in my neighborhood….and attending Obama’s inauguration….and sitting in on Hillary Clinton’s confirmation hearings as Secretary of State….the list goes on. Maybe getting laid-off wasn’t such a bad thing, after all.

Friday, May 1, 2009

Day Club To-Do List for Friday, May Day (Gotham)


Strawberries. NYU’s annual Strawberry festival, featuring carnival games, live music and NYC’s longest strawberry shortcake, is going on today on LaGuardia Place between the Kimmel Center and Bobst Library (just south of Washington Square Park).

Laidoffcamp. As we mentioned in a prior post, Laidoffcamp is going down today and tomorrow here in NYC. So if you’re looking to leave the Day Club, start your own thing or just do a little networking, you should check it out. Here’s the link:
http://laidoffcamp.pbworks.com/NewYork

Art. Free Fridays at the Museum of Modern Art. Show up at the MoMA, at 11 W. 53rd Street, between 4pm-8pm and get in, gratis!

Comedy. Eastville Comedy Club will feature sets by Todd Lynn, Julian McCullough, Godfrey and Maddog Mattern (never heard of ‘em) tonight, starting at 10pm. Call the club at 212.260.2445, mention ‘FreeNYC’ and get in for free. The club is at 85 East 4th Street.

Thursday, April 30, 2009

Day Club To-Do List for Thursday, April 30th (Gotham)


Theater. Give Us Bread: A Staged Reading is a theater production by The Anthropologists, a theater company dedicated to socially relevant work. Give Us Bread is about food riots that started in the Lower East Side in 1917, and spread throughout the country. Hats off to our Day Club forebears. The ‘reading’ takes place tonight at 6:30pm at the Tenement Museum, which is located at 108 Orchard Street. It’s free!

Nightlife. Mobius Collective with DJ Misbehaviour. This is a weekly dance party in Brooklyn, which features guest DJ’s and vocalists that have included Matisyahu and Eric Krasno (of Soul Live). It’s at Rose Live Music tonight at 10pm. Rose Live Music is at 345 Grand Street in Williamsburg. Also free!