This reminds me of when my company’s software had something called Work Order Groups. It’s a very lengthy term so we tended to shorten it to WOG all over the place. Then we had an Australian customer politely let us know that wog is a racial slur in the commonwealth, so we had to change it everywhere.
 
There's a similar situation in the subreddit I mod, we talk about "word of god" a lot (ie statements from the creator of a fictional work, such as George Lucas for Star Wars or JRR Tolkien for LOTR), and people tend to shorten that to WOG a lot, except there's an automated filter that catches comments slurs like "wog" and removes them, so then the mods have to go back and manually approve every comment.
 
There's a similar situation in the subreddit I mod, we talk about "word of god" a lot (ie statements from the creator of a fictional work, such as George Lucas for Star Wars or JRR Tolkien for LOTR), and people tend to shorten that to WOG a lot, except there's an automated filter that catches comments slurs like "wog" and removes them, so then the mods have to go back and manually approve every comment.
You know it's not often I come across a slur I've never heard of, figures it would be the British.

To me the word just means a frog. I think specifically a tadpole.
 
I just applied for a new position at work. It's for a Trainer position, training new hires. I enjoyed helping training new hires last year, so now I have experience and references to give ne a good word.

I doubt I'll get it, but I'm crossing my fingers. Wish me luck, folks!
So, update on this situation: I have an "interview" next week.

I say "interview," because they're doing this differently. Rather than a straight interview, I have to role-play as a trainer on the first day of training. I even had to set up the meeting, myself. They sent me some documents as a guide for the process.

As nervous as I am, it's a really neat idea. I'm going to practice for it, and might ask some friends to maybe do a video call with me to let me practice.
 
Last edited:
"Ooh, you rolled a critical failure for your first interaction as a trainer. You reach out to shake the new hire's hand but miss, and you end up accidentally squeezing his junk instead."
 
I know right?!? I was surprised too when I learned that back when I left school and first started working. Prior to that I always greeted new people by giving their spaghetti and meatballs a good ol' honk honk!
 
Top