London, Sept 2: A newly recruited call centre employee was fired even before his first day started at work, after he claimed in his Facebook post that his interview felt like 'having phone sex'.
John Gibbs, who was hired by West Sussex county council contact centre in Bognor Regis, was asked not to come to the office after the council bosses spotted a series of posts about immigrants and sex on his social networking page, Metro.co.uk reported.
In his post, Gibbs said that the interviewer's voice was the sexiest and he was aroused by her.
After securing the job, Gibbs warned that the immigrants should lookout as it.
John Gibbs, who was hired by West Sussex county council contact centre in Bognor Regis, was asked not to come to the office after the council bosses spotted a series of posts about immigrants and sex on his social networking page, Metro.co.uk reported.
In his post, Gibbs said that the interviewer's voice was the sexiest and he was aroused by her.
After securing the job, Gibbs warned that the immigrants should lookout as it.
- 9/2/2013
- by Leon David
- RealBollywood.com
William Friedkin's 1975 interview with Fritz Lang
If you happen to be in the market for Fritz Lang Christmas ornaments, they do exist, though they don't come cheaply. At any rate, much of the third issue of Movie: A Journal of Film Criticism (the successor to Movie, the print journal Ian Cameron edited from 1962 to 2000) is given to the second part of its Fritz Lang dossier featuring — and I should mention before you start clicking that these are PDFs — Stella Bruzzi on Fury (1936), Vf Perkins on You Only Live Once (1937), Edward Gallafent on The Return of Frank James (1940), Adrian Martin on Scarlet Street (1945), Peter William Evans on The Big Heat (1953), Deborah Thomas on Human Desire (1954) and Peter Benson on Moonfleet (1955).
Also in this issue: Christian Keathley on Otto Preminger's Bonjour Tristesse (1958), Alex Clayton on Hitchcock's Psycho (1960) and Gus Van Sant's 1998 remake and John Gibbs on Jamie Thraves's...
If you happen to be in the market for Fritz Lang Christmas ornaments, they do exist, though they don't come cheaply. At any rate, much of the third issue of Movie: A Journal of Film Criticism (the successor to Movie, the print journal Ian Cameron edited from 1962 to 2000) is given to the second part of its Fritz Lang dossier featuring — and I should mention before you start clicking that these are PDFs — Stella Bruzzi on Fury (1936), Vf Perkins on You Only Live Once (1937), Edward Gallafent on The Return of Frank James (1940), Adrian Martin on Scarlet Street (1945), Peter William Evans on The Big Heat (1953), Deborah Thomas on Human Desire (1954) and Peter Benson on Moonfleet (1955).
Also in this issue: Christian Keathley on Otto Preminger's Bonjour Tristesse (1958), Alex Clayton on Hitchcock's Psycho (1960) and Gus Van Sant's 1998 remake and John Gibbs on Jamie Thraves's...
- 12/24/2011
- MUBI
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