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Saturday, November 28, 2009

Homeless blogger reminds us what internships are

fashion.elle.com

fashion.elle.com

A hullabaloo arose this week over news that Elle magazine has hired a homeless blogger as an intern, paying her less than minimum wage.

Brianna Karp was hired this week by Elle to blog about being homeless and her future, reportedly making $150 a month for 24 hours of work. The amount is less than California 's minimum wage, which made some people accuse Elle of getting good publicity on the cheap. (Karp lives in Orange County.)

But, in email comments to columnist Tommy Christopher, Karp said she doesn't feel exploited.

"This is an internship. Most internships, as I’m sure you know, are unpaid," she said. "The whole point of an internship is that it is unpaid and opens doors for the intern which would not have previously been a possibility, and I accepted the internship offer assuming that it would be unpaid, before any sort of money was even mentioned, because I know how much this could help me down the line."

Internships certainly do open doors. I expect Karp has a promising future, provided that she maximizes the benefit of this assignment. Some key tips for interns for getting the most benefits out of their gigs:

* Ask for a recommendation. Get your boss or other leaders to agree to be a reference for you. Perhaps one would write you a recommendation on your LinkedIn profile.

* Keep in touch with coworkers. Send cards periodically or have lunch every few months. These people could be great sources for career advice and job leads.

* Keep good notes on all you learned and achieved.  Use these to update and tailor your resumes sooner rather than later, when you might have forgotten some of what you accomplished.

For more, watch this clip from "ABC News Now," featuring my discussion with Tory Johnson about internships.

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From the Community…

Comments 1-5 of 5
  • Angel's Avatar
    Posted by Angel Thu Sep 3, 2009 12:52pm PDT

    Really if she has a trailer she isn't totally homeless... There are a lot of people out there who would love the "luxury" of a trailer as opposed to a tent in a park or under a freeway overpass...

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  • TAY's Avatar
    Posted by TAY Thu Sep 3, 2009 1:56pm PDT

    So true Angel.

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  • Dory Devlin, Shine staff's Avatar
    Posted by Dory Devlin, Shine staff Thu Sep 3, 2009 2:35pm PDT

    I was going to post about this today, Tom, so I'm so glad you did. Sure, it is a great opportunity for Brianna Karp, who has had her share of bad luck. And I'm hoping good things will come from it, professionally, for her--especially since it is bringing Elle and her a lot of publicity. But I have to agree with this post by Marshall Kirkpatrick on ReadWriteWeb (and many others) who say she should at least be paid the minimum-wage hourly rate for her 24 hours a month. Too few bloggers are paid as it is, and so many bloggers are not paid enough. Sure, many internships are unpaid, but if you are going to pay, pay a fair wage. As Kirkpatrick writes: "Cinderella 2.0 ought to be paid at least the legal minimum hourly wage in California by a famous fashion magazine, ought she not?"

    http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/exploitation_elle_mag_hires_homeless_blogger_for_p.php

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  • Sunny 4's Avatar
    Posted by Sunny 4 Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:19pm PDT

    there are so many people close to being homeless, some just a pay check away. its sad !!!!! i was at the library one cold night, a homeless man was there. the librarion told him to leave. i asked her why she told him to go. he was just trying to warm up. and then she got a little mad at me lololol. where do thay go? where i live theres no place for them. no shelters. and this is the U.S.A

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  • Maggie's Avatar
    Posted by Maggie Sun Sep 6, 2009 8:48am PDT

    I hate to say it but working in the ER I see a lot of sad cases come through that door and the thing that keeps running through my head is..."They are living the consequences of their own choices". Its easy to feel sorry for someone who you believe has fallen on hard times and has worked very hard to try and maintain...but then you get to see, or in my case even live for a moment, the inside story. Every choice they make brings them to where they are today and sometimes that means they choose the fifth, or the dime bag over eating that day. We are the product of our decisions and in the end we have to learn to take responsibility for our own actions.

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