On Christmas Eve 2008, I found out I would be losing my job. There is no day of the year to find out something like that, but it seems that Christmas Eve is a particularly bad one. I remember it very clearly, even down to what I was wearing. I was packing to go home over Christmas and I got a text off my friend Susie, telling me that the shop we both worked in had been taken over by administrators. And just like that, I knew my job would be gone.
The truth is, it was actually eight months later that my job finally went, but it did go, in the same way a terminal illness sucks the life out of a human. Long, slow, arduous.
I worked in Zavvi, previously Virgin Megastore, in Cardiff. I started out as a Saturday girl, and when I graduated university and still didn’t know what to do with my life, I went full time. I’m not looking at it with the rose-tinted spectacles of time, but I loved that place. I loved the fact I was surrounded by music all day. I loved that I worked with strange, beautiful people, who liked all the same stuff I did. If they ever read this, they may laugh, but that shop was the first place I ever felt like I belonged somewhere. I did a lot of finding out who I was while I was there. And let’s face it, as full time jobs go, mine was a complete doss. Maybe I was just lazy. But there was always time to stand around, debating over what music went on next, gossiping about the last night out you had, sleeping off your hangover in the stockroom. It was a wonderful place.
There were tell-tale signs for ages. Little things that, had I been more clued up on life, might have made me realise what was coming. Overtime stopped getting paid, less Christmas temps, problems ordering new stock, etc etc etc. I remember there being rumours of trouble, talking about it behind the tills. But when I got that text off Susie, I felt like I’d been smacked in the face. And so I reacted in the way any rational person would. I cried all the way home on the train and then I drank two bottles of rum with my friend Brett. I don’t have very good memories of Christmas 2008.
When I went back to work, on December 27th, I wasn’t sure what to expect. To this day, that shift is still the worst eight hours I have ever had. That day I realised how selfish and horrible other people can be. We all got to work and there was a grim determination in the air. It was like none of us wanted to be there, but we would get through it together. Then trading started, and all I remember is being shouted at by angry people who couldn’t use their gift cards. If you know anything about companies who go into administration, you will know that gift cards immediately become invalid. It is not the choice of the staff. Let me say that again. IT IS NOT THE CHOICE OF THE STAFF YOU ARE SHOUTING AT.
If you are the kind of person who would get angry about that, then think about this. You have just lost your £10 gift card. The person you are screaming at has just lost their livelihood. You may not think there are many people who would be that thoughtless; I certainly didn’t. But for the following six weeks, it’s all I can remember. We had people who were very understanding, kind, and sorry for us. But my overriding memory, sadly, is not of our regulars who came to offer best wishes, but the many people who were angry at us for their loss. I understand the frustration, but I was too busy worrying about how I would pay my rent or find a job in January to be too sympathetic.
So Zavvi remained for a further six weeks. In that time, administrators tried to find buyers for the company as a whole, and then as parts. Smaller shops were closed and their stock passed to bigger stores like ours. It was like bucketing water out of a sinking boat, except it wasn’t water, it was people and their children and their mortgages and their homes and their ability to support themselves.
Finally it came down to the last day. We learned from our manager, a long-haired jumpy character named Pete who loved caffiene and flowery shirts, that there was a potential buyer for our shop. He was buying five other Zavvis; turning them into his own company, and he wanted ours. But there were negotiations first, and we were reminded it might not happen. So we had to pack up the shop. Literally everything had to be put into boxes and taped up. Every single shelf cleared; every corner of every stockroom emptied. It was the most depressing day ever. I remember wanting to cry, and being really glad my friend Jess was there. She ran the book department and I don’t know what I would have done without her in those few weeks. After work I went to the cinema with my housemates. When I came out of the cinema, I had a text.
‘We’re bought!’
Someone had bought Cardiff Zavvi! I still had a job! The next day we rushed back to work; signed new contracts, and unpacked the boxes. We were trading by the afternoon under the name Head Entertainment. It was amazing! Back to the pub, this time to celebrate.
But the joy didn’t last long. The following seven months were a stark lesson for me in just how underhand and ruthless some people are in business. It’s quite shocking really. I won’t ramble on with the many, many details of how the whole Head Entertainment mess began, but a basic description would be: evil man buys out desperate shop; evil man screws desperate staff about; desperate staff realise they will lose jobs and also any redundancy entitlement. Evil man wins; desperate staff lose.
It’s a long, complicated story, that I don’t understand entirely, even now, but suddenly, less than a month after we were bought out, we found ourselves in the awful position of knowing that our jobs would end, and that we wouldn’t get any money at the end of it. Somehow it was even worse. And for the months leading up to summer, we all worked, not knowing if we’d have a shop to come to the next day. But we had to work. I couldn’t find another job. Some people left. But the ones who remained were all in the same position. Stuck. Helpless. When the final cut came in July and we learned we were closing for good, it was almost a relief. We had to pack the shop up again. We all walked to the pub and had our last lunch together. Then we spent the whole night drowning sorrows. It was nice in a way, the whole thing bonded everyone quite tightly. Some of those people are still great friends of mine, and I hope they will remain as such. But really it was terrible.
It would be another month before I finally found a new job, this time in HMV. I didn’t want to go, and true enough, I hated every day I worked there. I don’t know why. I made some great friends there, people who became a big part of my life at the time, and we had some amazing times together. But I was utterly miserable, and less than a year later, they cut my hours down to one day a week, with 24 hours notice, essentially making me redundant again. And the old feelings returned.
In a society that is built on debt, when you spend two months out of work, and you have credit cards and rent and an overdraft to pay, you can easily be defeated. I had to admit defeat. I moved home — more experienced, maybe wiser, but completely broken. It took me a long time to pull myself back together. It took even longer to get the redundancy money owed to us by Head Entertainment. A two-year court battle between us and the owners, entirely put together by our incredible floor manager Ev (a wonderfully funny, eccentric man, with a love of birds and woolen hats). He took them on, at an incredible cost to himself, and he won us the money in the end. But he shouldn’t have had to.
At the end of the day, you can rant for hours about the government, and corporate companies and business and management. You’d probably be right. None of it is fair. People are screwed over all the time; just because they are small and the companies are big. Companies go under all the time because of mis-management and greed and power-hungry egomaniacs, and the people who suffer most are the people who started off at the bottom anyway. They just get trampled. But ranting doesn’t change anything. Neither does blogging about it. Because now HMV is in trouble, and if they doesn’t find a buyer, that’s another 4,000 jobs gone, and whatever you read or write about on the internet isn’t going to change that.
Except it’s not 4,000 jobs. It’s 4,000 people. 4,000 families. 4,000 homes. Just like when our shop went under, it was me and my credit card bills. Jess and her mortgage. Dan and his kids; Tony and his retirement plans. People’s lives thrown into absolute chaos. It’s the scariest thing that ever happened to me, and probably to a lot of them, too. I hope people realise that in the future, when they realise their closing store won’t accept their gift vouchers.
Aspiring writer Caitlin Leyshon blogs at A Barefoot Girl, and tweets here.
***
Spiels From “Them Below” is our new series of columns written by “them below”; the thousands of readers who comment tirelessly, or tirelessly read, Gizmodo UK. Have you got something to lament? Extol? Ponder? Get in touch at kat.hannaford[at]futurenet.com. Disclaimer: Spiels From “Them Below” doesn’t necessarily reflect the opinions of Gizmodo UK or its editors.
Image Credit: Angela Sharpe / EDP24













MP Accuses HMV of Theft Over Gift Voucher Sales
The Companies Jumping on the HMV Gift Vouchers Bandwagon (Updated: HMV Will Accept Them)
Malware Disguised as iTunes Gift Voucher Darkens Black Friday
commenter name?
nickname even
Well written article, have been in the position where I’ve need to find a job asap just to pay rent and counted myself lucky when i did.
You lost my interest at “in Cardiff”
Massive douchebag
I get your point but the reason many people feel very aggrieved about the £20 gift voucher being worthless is that the voucher was bought as a Christmas present probably a week or two earlier when Head Office KNEW they were going bust and so in effect the company took the money with the knowledge that it would be worthless very shortly afterwards. That is obtaining money through deception, otherwise know as fraud.
Should customers take it out on floor staff, of course not but unless the Head Office staff turn up then the sales staff are all the public see. It’s a shame but it’s human nature.
And this is exactly why I hate gift vouchers. It’s like cash but with 100s of downsides (having an expiry date and being voided are just two of them). I don’t see how giving money as a gift is any less impersonal than giving a gift voucher. At least with money the person can spend it on whatever they like.
You won’t believe but in UK alone, companies pocket £240 million a year from unspent/unclaimed gift cards (http://www.thisismoney.co.uk/money/news/article-2228891/Stores-pocket-240-million-gift-cards-shoppers-fail-spend.html)
I for one, will never ever buy another gift card in my life
I make this point to my family every Christmas, yet I still seem to receive them!
Of course, I understand the frustration completely. I was not intending to debate the rights and wrongs of the whole gift card saga. I’m simply pointing out that when it is taken out on staff, it’s taken out on people who have been hurt in a much bigger way than you, and some perspective is needed. When people are rude, and aggressive and abusive towards completely innocent people, that is not simply human nature, it’s just wrong.
Exactly, my viewpoint exactly. People have every right to be pissed off, hell, I’d be pissed off, but they have no right to take it out on the staff.
Could I please make a couple of points.
Firstly, this is supposed to be a “series of columns written by “them below”; the thousands of readers who comment tirelessly on Gizmodo UK”. This is the second column where that claim has been, to put it mildly, dubious. I understand that you may not be getting good enough submissions from commenters (No, I’m not bitter about it) but it rather ruins the point of the series if you are getting outsiders in.
Secondly, can someone write about something other than shops closing. It’s bloody depressing.
agreed although I’m not volunteering at this point
I’m not sure I understand your point — we have just over 8,600 registered commenters, and many more readers. While ideally I’d love to see “known” commenters writing columns for us, you’re going to have to expect you see columns submitted from commenters you’re not familiar with (I know you live and breathe in our comments field, but not even you can remember 8,600 commenters, Darrell), and occasionally I’m going to open it up to a reader who doesn’t necessarily comment, but does the read the site. This is one of those times.
And agreed, I’d love to see some columns about something other than closing chains — that’s why when we tweeted and Facebooked the link to this column 45 minutes ago, I said the following:
https://twitter.com/GizmodoUK/status/294794848442138624
http://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=535351686498822&set=a.365444770156182.90860.260381697329157&type=1
Agreed. Just because we’re a vocal bunch in comments, it doesn’t meant that we are any good at making decent articles.
That said, I’m going to try my hardest to write something a bit more positive and get it in Kat. This world needs some positivity!
I agree about the fact Kat may not be getting good enough stuff from commenters, but saying it’s a column for commenters and them bringing in outsiders is disingenuous. However Kat has now explained that “commenters” means “readers and commenters” and I assume will amend the spiel that accompanies the “spiels” so that’s alright.
You are one pedantic bastard.
Yep and as such I should point out I was born within wedlock.
Apologies Kat,but you should of made it clearer. Saying “it’s a column for commenters” and then saying “it’s a column for readers and commenters” are different things and likely to cause confusion. As for remembering 8,600 Commenters, I only have to remember 4,300 as the others are all me under different aliases.
Like I said in my other reply to you, you are one pedantic bastard.
Like I said in my other response as such I should point out I was born within wedlock.
He can’t be that that pedantic, he said “should of” instead of “should have”.
*sigh*
Hoist by mine own petard.
No problem, just pretend you stutter.
that’s Darrell?! I wondered where he’d got to…
You once claimed to be me from the future. If so you would have known this. I am therefore having serious doubts about your story.
Rumbled….
I’m trying to start a business at the moment – perhaps if that works out, I’ll write an article about it for you in an attempt to be less depressing.
PS: It’s a tad bit arrogant to imply that just because you don’t recognise Jessieops, Bhenn or Eadingas’ commenting names, they must be “fictional” people, or whatever you’re purporting here.
PPS: Still waiting for your second column pitch!
Bhenn and Eadingas are very recognizable, the other two not so much to be fair.
Like I said, over 8,600 commenters, dude.
Hennifer Lopez isn’t a dude, she’s a spicy Latin singing sensation.
Don’t be silly Kat, Bhenn and Eadingas are known to me. But given that I have only just learned that by “commenters” you meant “commenters and readers” you should understand my dubiousness about someone I’ve never heard of. If you can provide me with a link to any comment Jessieops made before the article you will have proved your point.
Second column pitch was written, but you wouldn’t have liked it, so I saved you the trouble.:-)
Third one germinating.
Maybe I will write one about how tacos and burritos have shaped the Silicone Valley.
Stop it! You’re making me hungry!
Ok I won’t even mention a juicy Byron burger then
I was just in a Byron the other night, funnily enough…
My ‘spiel’ wasn’t entirely about shops closing to be fair. More about what might happen after/is happening. It just happened to fit in with what was happening at the time.
Agreed; yours was about music! Meant to include that in my response to Darrell.
..Though it did indeed start with a bit about HMV
You were just making it topical
Would you be at all interested in a post about the technology that keeps my uni going – I recently ran into the Sysadmin, and while I’m sure he wouldn’t want me mentioning anything specific, it might be interesting to some to see how bloody complicated it is to run these things.
Hey Eddy,
This actually does sound really interesting! Can you please email me on kat.hannaford[at]futurenet.com? Many thanks!
Agreed. But all the other three were, but also to be fair Eadingas was the first and showed an overview, jessiops his side, this one the same side as jessiops but with more drama and yours was a great tutorial and for me (not a musician) a great insight on how one can be creative and promote their band.
Apologies Bhenn, didn’t mean to lump you with the depressing ones. I did really enjoy your spiel.
The comment you made with regard to the definition of “commentors”, speaks more of the failure of people who frequent this site. Bringing in outside people, means that certain quality levels can be met. Because by god, they wont likely find a decent article out of you bunch of trolls. Purely based on your posting style and content, it’s people like you that suck the life out of these sites. Sadly I won’t look back on this post, that would make me as bad as you and your F5 key in the comments.
Please get down of that high horse, Tesco need it for burgers.
Actually, I think micrighteous has a good point — he just wrapped it in an aggressive-looking bun.
I absolutely agree with the part about “Bringing in outside people, means that certain quality levels can be met”. Absolutely, no question about that, never have had. If you think anything else in his post is valid I would be very interested to know.
Frankly, this whole thing has been blown out of all proportion. Initially, I made a couple of (I thought) perfectly valid points. They were not attacks or even especially criticisms. This is your site, you do what you want with it. Perhaps with all that is going on in my life, I need to take a break from commenting.
Like I said to Darrell (Someone Else), you actually have a fair point.
I suffered the same fate, started in the days of Our Price, before the rebranding to V Shop, then Virgin Megastores, and finally Zavvi.
It was a pain in the ares to first day back after christmas. I was the store manager at the time and the amount of people shouting at us about gift vouchers. Some staff were getting visibly upset about it, so I~ told them to direct all people to me. I went out the back printed off some copies of a notice about them explaining the situation and just asked for patience.
On the whole most customers were great when everything was explained to them, although there were still people who were very aggressive and one even tried to take a swing at me (security were also aware and I always had one near me when explaining the situation).
But as the commentator said, there were mumblings about it before – in fact several years before. We often had issues with suppliers not being paid, and at one point used wholesalers who charged more. Then we switched over to EUK as the main supplier for everything who were owned by Woolworths. But when Woolies went, that was the end. The stores went in the end as the main supplier went, and the other main distributers (Golds, TEN, BMG, etc) wouldn’t deal with us due to past management issues.
I loved that job, but in the end it gave me the kick up the arse to start my own business which is doing fine at the moment, and I know I am responsible for what happens, I’m not relying on some idiot in an office somewhere who thinks he understands a business when he has never set foot on a shop floor.
A pain in the Ares?!?!!?!?!? Must be a lot of pain to hurt the God of War
Not really – he was just a pretender. Everyone knows the real god of war is God himself in all carnations. Almost all wars go back to him being the cause.
I defeated Ares with my super power of inflicting pain by doing kareoke
I challenge you to a karaoke-off!
That is a shame, I really can’t understand how they went bust…
“as full time jobs go, mine was a complete doss. Maybe I was just lazy. But there was always time to stand around, debating over what music went on next, gossiping about the last night out you had, sleeping off your hangover in the stockroom. It was a wonderful place.”
See my comment above.
I was going to say that… beat me to it. As a business owner I cringed when I read this open admission – we work bloody hard just to stay afloat – any business that engenders this sort of culture deserves:
a. to fail, and
b. zero sypathy
If its true then that person deserved to lose his job, and so did his management for not doing their job properly.
I think maybe I should have worded my comment about my job being a doss slightly differently. I never intended to make myself or my collegues look lazy or indifferent to our employment because nothing could be further from the truth. We were a hard-wroking bunch, but we also enjoyed our work, and there were moments where we had fun. I think you can comment on that if you have never had a minute in your work where you didn’t give 100% or a have laugh with your friends. I very much doubt you can. I now work in hospitality, and I find it much more fast paced and pressurised than working in retail. In comparison, my shop job does seem easier.
Also, to imply that a business went bust because of this is both ignorant and misguided. To imply that I deserved to lose my job is even more ignorant, insensitive and utterly ridiculous.
I’m really sorry if some of the commenters have been a bit insensitive or even offensive, Cait — most have been pretty sympathetic!
Amen on the selfishness of people. I worked at a Motorbike shop that went bust. One customer was told that because of the delays the administrator was imposing, his bike would be ready a couple of days later than we’d planned. His response was to:
“come back and cut me”…
He didn’t understand he was one of the lucky ones, his bike still had profit in it. One guy had just dropped £5K in cash on his and was due to lose the lot. Interesting times for sure.
Maybe it’s just me but I can’t imagine knowing that my company was on the rocks; in a sector that was in decline and NOT making provisions to put myself to use somewhere else.
I understand that the job described is fairly unskilled and that camaraderie and the desire to work somewhere with a good vibe is important; but if I was a teenager working at somewhere like HMV right now; I’d be getting my CV into somewhere where you know there is demand; like a coffee shop or similar.
If you see that you’re on a train heading straight for a brick wall and that the chances are that you’re going to get mangled in the wreckage…jump off!
I’ve got to be honest this was also my thoughts about the whole situation, if you know that it;s on the rocks then get your CV in order and get out there…
This is true, in an ideal world. The fact of the matter was simply that there were no jobs. In the months between January and August, when we finally went bust, I honestly applied for over 1000 jobs. I regularly went to the job centre on my days off, was signed up to three different temping agencies and hand delivered my CV to any shop/restaurant/office I knew. In the current climate, when so many people are redundant, there are literally hundreds of people applying for every single position, and it’s not as easy as just ‘getting your cv out there’.
Oh great, another one about how high-street retailers are rubbish at adapting and so go out of business.
No doubt some of the highlights of the next few weeks will be:
Comet – A tail of astronomic mismanagement
JJB Sports – Relegated from the High Street
Past Times – A store resigned to history
Barratts – Footwear specialist given the boot
MFI – Furniture retailer packed up for good
MFI have closed?!
Great article. Keeps the Giz relevant and balanced I think. I’d like to see more of this.
Ouch at going from Zavvi to HMV! Just be careful not to go to Argos next
Might I ask what degree the author is a graduate of?
I would also like to know what degree the author got too, seems a bit of a waste of a degree going from one doomed retailer to the next.
Unless it was in media studies – in that case, they are doing amazingly well for themselves.
LOL and agree
I have a degree in English Literature, from Cardiff University. It is indeed a waste of a degree, but thats how life is. I was young, didn’t know what I wanted to do with my life, and then got stuck in this situation. I know many people in a similar position. Might I ask what your degree is in?
International Business Management (although to be fair I’ve never used it either so it also was I suppose a bit of a waste of a degree
)
Ev sounds like a great guy, Wooly hats not withstanding.
What do you do now? You say you graduated, but didn’t know what you wanted to do with your life; found it yet? Sorry to ask, I just like a happy ending.
I liked your article, it felt like a retail version of Batman (best Michael Caine voice: Woy do we fow down, Mostar Waaayne?).
I’ve emailed Caitlin to say the column went up today (wasn’t sure if it’d be today or next week, depending on a few other people I’m speaking to), but I think she’s at work or something, so hopefully she’ll be along later to respond…
Ev is an amazing guy, one of the coolest people I’ve met, even in his wooly hats!
Currently I am head receptionist at a five star hotel. It’s not what I want for a career, but it’s a stable job, and a great learning experience. Ideally I want to be a freelance writer, which is something I am beginning to pursue. When I leave the hotel, I have a blog/book (not sure what format it will be yet) about it I hope to publish. Fawlty Towers was quite close to the truth, so I decided to write about that!
Ah cool, I get it does have a purpose if it serves up a basis for your writing! Look forward to reading it
I couldn’t agree more with what Lester__Bangs said, I left Virgin Megastore in Bristol around 2006 and that was already going down the pan then, in fact there was plenty of noise to indicate it was heading that way some time before that, I just find it quite odd that 2 years later someone was actually shocked that the company went bust.
I also loved that job, in fact there has never been a job since that gave me such pure joy every day, but that’s because it was really just a social event with the occasional bits of actual labour mixed in.
Like others have said, no place is going to last when so many of it’s staff see it as a “complete doss”, which from memory it really was! There were so many days that I remember where more than one person did literally no work or slept off a hangover.
i bet brett had a christmas to remember after them 2 bottles of rum tho
I guess with all of these arsey comments in this post and many other posts by a 8,600 strong force of commenters at least shows us we’ve got quite a little community on this blog…..
Quite the community, but after speaking to some of our more “well-known” commenters about contributing some words to this series of columns, even they are scared of the commenters’ reactions. Do wish people could just be nice and respectful of one another, but I know that’s wishful thinking.
Tis the way of the interwebs, one day it’ll change. Although Google’s plan to have real names on Youtube hasn’t exactly worked as hoped.
When I wrote articles for a semi popular gaming site I had a fair few attackers claiming my grammar was poor (which it was and is) but found that the vast majority of people just got over it and engaged with what I had written. I guess the same can be said for Caitlin’s post, you have a few idiots that will pick at it, for any reason, to feel superior.
I enjoyed the article and had no problem with it at all, despite my request for less doom and gloom in future. My problem was with what I perceived as deception. The series was said to be written by commenters and 2 of the series had been written by people who, as far as I and others are aware have never commented before. Look at it this way. If you were playing in an pub football league you’d be a bit pissed off to find that that league had allowed Manchester United to join, since i goes completely contrary to the point of the league (Much as it would be great for you to be able to play against such famous and skilful players).
However Kat has explained that the spiels include submissions from readers rather than just commenters and I have no problem with that AT ALL and am certainly not going to be asking future writers to prove they have read Giz.
So all that swotting up I’ve been doing in anticipation of a quiz was wasted then? Drat.
I don’t understand why you’d be pissed off? This isn’t a competition; this is free content for you to read? Give me a call when you have something interesting to pitch for this column series, but in the meantime, stop trying to turn this place into the blog equivalent of Soho House.
With the greatest respect I couldn’t give a toss. I don’t care if it was said to be written by commentators, I come to this site to read, learn and be entertained.
But that’s just my opinion and I totally respect that you, and many others, feel differently. But remember, if it’s that much of a problem you don’t have to read Gizmodo. After all it’s free!
Anyways, toodle pip and all that, It’s Friday!
Yeah, sometimes I think commenters like feeling special and don’t want anyone else to join their ranks, so they deter potential newbies by being right arses.
Yeah, down with this sort of thing.
Who are you?
Where is Darrel?
Can you change your display name?
Why am I naked?
All questions I have been wondering myself, but according to the name he is Someone Else, oh and as of late pedantic
I rather enjoyed reading this spiel, pretty tragic, but well put together piece. Bit misleading to say the spiel is from ‘them below’. Maybe ‘Spiels from our Gizmodeons’ would have been more appropriate! Nevertheless, I look forward to more original written pieces!
to be honest i feel totally ripped off that they all aren’t written by steven spielberg. the posts are mainly about his collection of antique film spools, in the fantastic new series: ‘spiels from spielberg: a spool sample’.
As you may’ve seen my replies to Darrell (Someone Else) above, I wasn’t setting out to “deceive” anyone — a laughable attack, to be honest. Ideally I’d love for these columns to be written by “known” commenters, but unless you can send me a minimum of 600 words by next Thursday, jpxdude, I’m going to have to occasionally open it out to actual readers — you really think we only have 8,600 readers? (The number of commenters we have.)
One more thing — internally, we refer to readers and commenters alike as “them below.” Other sites have far worse names, believe me.
Fair enough, I wasn’t being mean, it was just an observation. 8600 is quite an achievement!
I think whoever wrote this column would have had a better time if they’d used their degree and got a proper job. Retail is shit; don’t work retail.
Some people don’t have a choice, though — not everyone can find jobs within their chosen sector after a degree.
i’ve got the feeling you don’t have a degree.
This article is brilliant, I totally understand how she’s feeling.
This commenting section however.. does someone have a suture so I can repair my sides? Brilliant haha, long live gizmodo.
I have only read half the replies . But the facts are all the hard earned workers rights that took 50 years to get have been taken away in the last decade or so . Because the magority of the population belive the rich should get richer and the poor should get poorer . Please do not take my word for it google your history and stop moaning stick together and do some thing we might not have the best democracy in the world but the majority can still win.
How have I moaned about anything!?
Think your reply to Farrance is a bit over-the-top…!
Did i everr tell you about the time my mate drove a Ferrari to school one day (6th form) well a replica . we was 17 and the girls went WILD !
Wading through some of the negative comments, I have to say this is probably one of my favourite articles Gizmodo has published to date, I genuinely feel for Caitlin and am glad that at least in the end you got some money you were owed from a terrible situation.
Amen!
I really feel for you Caitlin – the thing a lot of people don’t understand about working in retail is that a large portion of the general public are complete twats. The problem is that they see the person behind the counter as directly responsible for decisions of the company and therefore deserving of earful for their problems. I might have enjoyed my time working for Blacks were it not for my insane employers and the idiot customers we’d get.
You could replace “working in retail” with “working on Giz,” and “general public” with “some commenters”…sigh.
Ev is an amazing guy, one of the coolest people I’ve met, even in his wooly hats!
Currently I am head receptionist at a five star hotel. It’s not what I want for a career, but it’s a stable job, and a great learning experience. Ideally I want to be a freelance writer, which is something I am beginning to pursue. When I leave the hotel, I have a blog/book (not sure what format it will be yet) about it I hope to publish. Fawlty Towers was quite close to the truth, so I decided to write about that!
I thought that this column was well written and showed the human side of what happens when a shop fails and goes into administration. It touched me and I wish the author well in their efforts to become a freelance writer. I have been reading Gizmodo for months but this is the first I article I have read that I wanted to really make a comment and registered.
Well Done Lady_Cait
I’ve actually just done the same.
Well done Caitlin, I genuinely enjoyed reading that and am glad you’re back on your feet.
Kat, you are a champ.
As for Williz stating that anyone with a degree should use it and not work in retail? What a dick. I have a degree, I work in retail, I love my job and the guys I work with. Retail has nothing to do with my degree but I figure if I’m going to work for 70 years of my life I may as well enjoy what I do.
Seriously starting to wish I hadn’t introduced my boss to Giz so I could get you guys something positive. May just try anyway, for the lulz on the comments.
Really pleased you enjoyed Caitlin’s column; thanks for the kind comment.
And if you do want to write something for us, I can keep you anonymous if you’d wish?
Glad you enjoyed the column, and that it sparked you to leave a comment. Thanks!