Gig

Americans Talk About Their Jobs

Look inside
Paperback
$24.00 US
On sale Aug 21, 2001 | 688 Pages | 9780609807071
Taking their cue from Studs Terkel's book Working, the editors of word.com have produced a book that provides real insight into how people work and how they describe their jobs. Composed of more than 120 monologues Gig allows disparate people—from a wide variety of occupations and locations—to describe their day to day experiences in the office, on the street corner, or where ever their occupation places them. The jobs covered are sometimes outside of the mainstream (transvestite prostitute) and sometimes out of reach of all but a few (professional basketball player), but, taken as a whole, they create a portrait of employment in America that is devoid of agenda, abstraction, and theory.

The people in Gig speak of the constant and complex stresses that they are subjected to and the increasing importance of technology (and consequent increase in speed) that have become so much a part of the modern landscape. The picture that emerges is one a dedicated workers who throw themselves into coping with changes that were unimaginable thirty years ago. Some love their jobs, some don't, but the majority have, in different ways, adapted themselves to the new problems and opportunities that have emerged.

Table of Contents:

Acknowledgements


Introduction


Welcome
Wal-Mart Greeter

Workers and Managers
UPS Driver
Corporate Headhunter
Telemarketing Group Supervisor
Software Engineer
McDonald's Crew Member
Workfare Street Cleaner
Construction Forman
Steelworker
Ford Auto Worker
Slaugherhouse Human Resources Director
Chief Executive Officer
Temp

Goods and Services
Systems Administrator
Kinko's Co-Worker
Automobile Parts Specialist
Merchandise Handler
Corporate Identity Consultant
Clutter Consultant
Crime Scene Cleaner
Computer Chip Layout Designer
Tofu Manufacturer
Taxidermist
Bar Owner

Buyers and Sellers
Lemonade Salesmen
Hallmark Gift Shop Saleswoman
Gun Store Owner
Drug Dealer
Adhesives Company Sales Representative
Advertising Executive
Financial Advisor
Traveling Salesman
Hat Saleswoman

Transportation

Highway Flagger
Long-Haul Truck Driver
Gas Station Attendant
Bus Driver
Train Engineer
Flight Attendant

Plants and Animals
Campground Maintenance Worker
Lawn Maintenance Man
Florist
Dog Trainer
Research Biologist
Commercial Fisherman
Buffalo Rancher

Food
Poultry Factory Worker
Waitress
Smokehouse Pit Cooks
Diet Center Owner
Pretzel Vendor
Produce Stand Owner
Food Stylist

Media
Film Producer
Film Development Assistant
Film Director
Actress
Casting Director
Supermodel
Paparazzo
Journalist
Book Scout
Anchorwoman
Television Guest Coordinator
Television Station Receptionist

Artists and Entertainers
Songwriter
Advocate for Rappers
MC
Heavy Medal Roadie
A&R Executive
Painter
Art Mover
Web Content Producer
Carnival Worker
Video Game Designer
Comedian
Elvis Presley Interpreter

Sports and Gambling
High School Basketball Coach
Professional Hockey Player
Professional Snowboarder
Professional Basketball Player
Sports Agent
Squash Instructor
Bookie
Casino Surveillance Officer

Sex
Escort
Porn Star
Stripper
Adult Webmistress
Transvestite Prostitute

Children and Teachers
Labor-Support Doula
Mother
Toys "R" Us Marketing Executive
Second-Grade Teacher
High School Math Teacher
College Professor

Lawyers and the Law
Personal Injury Trial Lawyer
Corporate Securities Lawyer
Social Worker
FBI Agent
Border Patrol Agent
Homicide Detective
Bounty Hunter
Prisoner

Government and Military
Sailor
Army Psychological Operations Specialist
Air Force General
Environmental Protection Agency Specialist
Lobbyist
Public Utilities Specialist
Town Manager
City Planner
U.S. Congressman
Political Fund-Raiser

Bodies and Souls
Nurse
Anesthesiologist
Orthopedic Surgeon
Plastic Surgeon
Pharmaceutical Company Sales Representative
Psychiatric Rehabilitation Therapist
Medicine Woman
Minister
Palm Reader
Telephone Psychic
Funeral Home Director
Neal Smither

I'm the President and owner of Crime Scene Cleaners. We clean up death scenes, like homicides. You know, the room where someone gets murdered. We also handle suicides, accidental deaths, meth labs, things like that. A lot of people have the assumption that police take care of the cleanup after a crime. That's not true. It's never been true. If Johnny or Sally gets shot in your house, or your store, and there's brains everywhere, it's your problem. You have to do the cleaning. It's not the police's responsibility at all. You clean it. Or else you call my company or one of my competitors.

The idea to start this business came to me six years ago. I was twenty-five years old. I'd just been laid off from my job as division manager at a mortgage banking firm. And there I was, wallowing for weeks in my unemployment misery, when one day, bam! I was watching the movie Pulp Fiction. And you know that scene where they blew the guy away in the back of the car and then had to bring in Harvey Keitel to clean the whole thing up? Well I saw that scene and I thought, wow, that's intriguing. Are there people out there doing this kind of job in real life? And I did some research and found out that that the answer was yes. But there were only a few companies, and they weren't marketing themselves to a broad based range of clients. They weren't selling effectively. Well, I knew I could sell, I just didn't know if I could do that kind of cleaning. So I made some phone calls.

I called every janitorial company, anyone who had anything to do with cleaning. I made literally thousands of calls. I'm a neat freak, typically, but I didn't know how professional companies carried out their work. So I took a job with Merry Maids for a couple of weeks. Merry Maids is a residential cleaning company, sort of the McDonalds of maids, really cheap, really shitty. But working there taught me a lot about technique.

Then, next, I started contacting coroners and police, because they were going to be my target audience. I was gonna give them a percentage to give me business referrals. You know, so like somebody dies, the cops show up, they're like, Hey, we know a guy who'll clean this up. They send me the business, they get a cut of my fee. Good idea, right? No. Wrong. Because what I found out is that they're not allowed to give out referrals, due to liability. They can't give one, they have to offer a list of cleaning companies, so there's no issue of favoritism. That was a bit discouraging, but whatever, I was into it by then. I just changed gears and I started targeting the people at mortuaries. They can give referrals.

My first job came on referral from a mortician. The victim's sister hired us. It was a lady down in Marina Bay area of Richmond. She had terminal cancer and she'd blown her brains out -- shot herself in the head with a .357. Experience-wise, it wasn't too messy -- just enough to cut my teeth and kind of get an indicator of whether I could do this. And I learned I was capable of doing it. And when the cleanup was done and I named my price, the client started cutting a check without any hesitation whatsoever. I knew immediately that this work was for me.

Of course, back then, I was totally inept. My partner and I -- I used my wife as my partner on that job -- we were there for three hours and I only charged two hundred and fifty dollars. Now, I'd be there an hour and we'd charge five seventy-five. So I've learned. I've learned so much.

My second job was so hardcore -- I'll never forget it. When I think of how little I knew, doing a job like that, it just makes me laugh. It was at a fairly upscale condominium complex in Oakland. A hugely fat guy had died on his hide-a-bed. Weeks, weeks and weeks had gone by and no one had discovered him. He was a loner. No one knew he was dead until they smelled it outside and by that time, it was atrocious. My assistant and I -- this time it was my sister -- opened the door and this ungodly smell just slammed us, big time. We hadn't learned about wearing respirators yet. We hadn't a clue. Well, the whole bottom of this guy's bed was encased in plastic from the manufacturer, and the plastic had trapped all these fluids. So I was moving the bed around, and it started stirring up these juices. And when I tip the bed over, not realizing what's going on inside of it, this rushing torrent of maggot-filled liquid spews out all over the place -- all over the carpet and all over my clothing. I vomited several times. My sister started gagging uncontrollably until she just couldn't take it anymore. So she ran out the door, and jumped over the deck, right into the pool! That one still rates as the worst decomp we've ever done. And we knew so little about equipment, disposal techniques, the whole thing.
  • WINNER
    School Library Journal Adult Books for Young Adults

About

Taking their cue from Studs Terkel's book Working, the editors of word.com have produced a book that provides real insight into how people work and how they describe their jobs. Composed of more than 120 monologues Gig allows disparate people—from a wide variety of occupations and locations—to describe their day to day experiences in the office, on the street corner, or where ever their occupation places them. The jobs covered are sometimes outside of the mainstream (transvestite prostitute) and sometimes out of reach of all but a few (professional basketball player), but, taken as a whole, they create a portrait of employment in America that is devoid of agenda, abstraction, and theory.

The people in Gig speak of the constant and complex stresses that they are subjected to and the increasing importance of technology (and consequent increase in speed) that have become so much a part of the modern landscape. The picture that emerges is one a dedicated workers who throw themselves into coping with changes that were unimaginable thirty years ago. Some love their jobs, some don't, but the majority have, in different ways, adapted themselves to the new problems and opportunities that have emerged.

Table of Contents:

Acknowledgements


Introduction


Welcome
Wal-Mart Greeter

Workers and Managers
UPS Driver
Corporate Headhunter
Telemarketing Group Supervisor
Software Engineer
McDonald's Crew Member
Workfare Street Cleaner
Construction Forman
Steelworker
Ford Auto Worker
Slaugherhouse Human Resources Director
Chief Executive Officer
Temp

Goods and Services
Systems Administrator
Kinko's Co-Worker
Automobile Parts Specialist
Merchandise Handler
Corporate Identity Consultant
Clutter Consultant
Crime Scene Cleaner
Computer Chip Layout Designer
Tofu Manufacturer
Taxidermist
Bar Owner

Buyers and Sellers
Lemonade Salesmen
Hallmark Gift Shop Saleswoman
Gun Store Owner
Drug Dealer
Adhesives Company Sales Representative
Advertising Executive
Financial Advisor
Traveling Salesman
Hat Saleswoman

Transportation

Highway Flagger
Long-Haul Truck Driver
Gas Station Attendant
Bus Driver
Train Engineer
Flight Attendant

Plants and Animals
Campground Maintenance Worker
Lawn Maintenance Man
Florist
Dog Trainer
Research Biologist
Commercial Fisherman
Buffalo Rancher

Food
Poultry Factory Worker
Waitress
Smokehouse Pit Cooks
Diet Center Owner
Pretzel Vendor
Produce Stand Owner
Food Stylist

Media
Film Producer
Film Development Assistant
Film Director
Actress
Casting Director
Supermodel
Paparazzo
Journalist
Book Scout
Anchorwoman
Television Guest Coordinator
Television Station Receptionist

Artists and Entertainers
Songwriter
Advocate for Rappers
MC
Heavy Medal Roadie
A&R Executive
Painter
Art Mover
Web Content Producer
Carnival Worker
Video Game Designer
Comedian
Elvis Presley Interpreter

Sports and Gambling
High School Basketball Coach
Professional Hockey Player
Professional Snowboarder
Professional Basketball Player
Sports Agent
Squash Instructor
Bookie
Casino Surveillance Officer

Sex
Escort
Porn Star
Stripper
Adult Webmistress
Transvestite Prostitute

Children and Teachers
Labor-Support Doula
Mother
Toys "R" Us Marketing Executive
Second-Grade Teacher
High School Math Teacher
College Professor

Lawyers and the Law
Personal Injury Trial Lawyer
Corporate Securities Lawyer
Social Worker
FBI Agent
Border Patrol Agent
Homicide Detective
Bounty Hunter
Prisoner

Government and Military
Sailor
Army Psychological Operations Specialist
Air Force General
Environmental Protection Agency Specialist
Lobbyist
Public Utilities Specialist
Town Manager
City Planner
U.S. Congressman
Political Fund-Raiser

Bodies and Souls
Nurse
Anesthesiologist
Orthopedic Surgeon
Plastic Surgeon
Pharmaceutical Company Sales Representative
Psychiatric Rehabilitation Therapist
Medicine Woman
Minister
Palm Reader
Telephone Psychic
Funeral Home Director

Excerpt

Neal Smither

I'm the President and owner of Crime Scene Cleaners. We clean up death scenes, like homicides. You know, the room where someone gets murdered. We also handle suicides, accidental deaths, meth labs, things like that. A lot of people have the assumption that police take care of the cleanup after a crime. That's not true. It's never been true. If Johnny or Sally gets shot in your house, or your store, and there's brains everywhere, it's your problem. You have to do the cleaning. It's not the police's responsibility at all. You clean it. Or else you call my company or one of my competitors.

The idea to start this business came to me six years ago. I was twenty-five years old. I'd just been laid off from my job as division manager at a mortgage banking firm. And there I was, wallowing for weeks in my unemployment misery, when one day, bam! I was watching the movie Pulp Fiction. And you know that scene where they blew the guy away in the back of the car and then had to bring in Harvey Keitel to clean the whole thing up? Well I saw that scene and I thought, wow, that's intriguing. Are there people out there doing this kind of job in real life? And I did some research and found out that that the answer was yes. But there were only a few companies, and they weren't marketing themselves to a broad based range of clients. They weren't selling effectively. Well, I knew I could sell, I just didn't know if I could do that kind of cleaning. So I made some phone calls.

I called every janitorial company, anyone who had anything to do with cleaning. I made literally thousands of calls. I'm a neat freak, typically, but I didn't know how professional companies carried out their work. So I took a job with Merry Maids for a couple of weeks. Merry Maids is a residential cleaning company, sort of the McDonalds of maids, really cheap, really shitty. But working there taught me a lot about technique.

Then, next, I started contacting coroners and police, because they were going to be my target audience. I was gonna give them a percentage to give me business referrals. You know, so like somebody dies, the cops show up, they're like, Hey, we know a guy who'll clean this up. They send me the business, they get a cut of my fee. Good idea, right? No. Wrong. Because what I found out is that they're not allowed to give out referrals, due to liability. They can't give one, they have to offer a list of cleaning companies, so there's no issue of favoritism. That was a bit discouraging, but whatever, I was into it by then. I just changed gears and I started targeting the people at mortuaries. They can give referrals.

My first job came on referral from a mortician. The victim's sister hired us. It was a lady down in Marina Bay area of Richmond. She had terminal cancer and she'd blown her brains out -- shot herself in the head with a .357. Experience-wise, it wasn't too messy -- just enough to cut my teeth and kind of get an indicator of whether I could do this. And I learned I was capable of doing it. And when the cleanup was done and I named my price, the client started cutting a check without any hesitation whatsoever. I knew immediately that this work was for me.

Of course, back then, I was totally inept. My partner and I -- I used my wife as my partner on that job -- we were there for three hours and I only charged two hundred and fifty dollars. Now, I'd be there an hour and we'd charge five seventy-five. So I've learned. I've learned so much.

My second job was so hardcore -- I'll never forget it. When I think of how little I knew, doing a job like that, it just makes me laugh. It was at a fairly upscale condominium complex in Oakland. A hugely fat guy had died on his hide-a-bed. Weeks, weeks and weeks had gone by and no one had discovered him. He was a loner. No one knew he was dead until they smelled it outside and by that time, it was atrocious. My assistant and I -- this time it was my sister -- opened the door and this ungodly smell just slammed us, big time. We hadn't learned about wearing respirators yet. We hadn't a clue. Well, the whole bottom of this guy's bed was encased in plastic from the manufacturer, and the plastic had trapped all these fluids. So I was moving the bed around, and it started stirring up these juices. And when I tip the bed over, not realizing what's going on inside of it, this rushing torrent of maggot-filled liquid spews out all over the place -- all over the carpet and all over my clothing. I vomited several times. My sister started gagging uncontrollably until she just couldn't take it anymore. So she ran out the door, and jumped over the deck, right into the pool! That one still rates as the worst decomp we've ever done. And we knew so little about equipment, disposal techniques, the whole thing.

Awards

  • WINNER
    School Library Journal Adult Books for Young Adults