I just saw the following job posting:
Job Description
Bunchland, a family culture e-zine reaching 10,000 influencer parents twice weekly, is hiring a twintern. WTF is a twintern? It’s an intern whose sole responsibility is to man our Twitter account. Read: You’ll tweet for us. All day. You will share relevant links and have conversations with our 3,500+ followers. If we like you, we’ll let you hang out with our 750+ Facebook fans as well.
I find this interesting from a number of points of view.
First of all, the word twintern, which as far as I can determine is about a year old, possibly invented by Pizza Hut. ("Influencer" might strike you as new, but according to the OED has been around since 1664, though perhaps not as a modifier.)
But I really find intriguing the use of WTF in a job posting.
It's not just the use of a text messaging abbreviation, as clearly this ad is trying to be self-consciously hip and is, after all, about the "Twitterverse".
Perhaps the job applicants will get extra points for writing sentences in their cover letters like this:
"OMG, I am so wanting this job. TTYL."
But it's the casual use of a profanity (even an abbreviated one, but everyone knows what that "F" stands for) that strikes me as truly remarkable.
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