Football_Bat
Well-Known Member
Under our old publisher we didn't print a paper Christmas Day or if Christmas fell on a Sunday like this year, we didn't print the following day. He retired this summer, and under our new publisher, no day off.
I know dozens of reporters who wink wink get Christmas off and New Year's off, on their timecards at least. Everybody just works and pretty much donates the time to the corporation to keep their jobs. No overtime, you know.
Seriously, who works Christmas or New Year unless they are covering a game or team preparing for a bowl game? And who wouldn't pay them if they did work those days?
That's how newspapers continue to put out the product day after day. 80 percent of the workers have it brainwashed into their heads that they are lucky to just be employed with benefits. You can bet newspapers would love to strip their employees of benefits but haven't stooped that low, yet.I often whine about working holidays but then remind myself how grateful I am that I'm not on the other side of the gurney.
That's how newspapers continue to put out the product day after day. 80 percent of the workers have it brainwashed into their heads that they are lucky to just be employed with benefits.
80 percent of the workers have it brainwashed into their heads that they are lucky to just be employed with benefits. You can bet newspapers would love to strip their employees of benefits but haven't stooped that low, yet.
As a teacher, I've got you all beat.
Everybody has a price.Had I not decided to teach a winter mini-mester (it's not a trivial amount of extra money), my last obligations of the fall semester would have been on Dec. 10 (when I donned my oh-so-studly gown and tam for commencement). My first day back would have been on Jan. 18.
To all my haters ... do you really think any of your sports writers who covered games on Christmas Day at home, especially on the road, got paid for their work that week? I mean the exact hours worked? Of course not, they dutifully wrote in 40 hours on their timecards and that was that. They'll get to make it up during the offseason, wink wink. Sure they will. Not exactly. They sign that they worked 40 so the company pays 'em 40. Tell them you want pay for 60-70 hours, bye bye.