- Feb 5, 2003
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Does it last longer than Gorilla glue?
Def try to relax and enjoy your weekend. If you were able to provide examples in your answers and use the STAR method here and there, I'd say you did as expected.Idk man. I prepped myself for a week on typical questions that would get asked, and of course none of them got asked lol. Then I just feel every response I gave didnt seem enough, and I feel that way based on his follow up questions. Idk maybe the guy is just stoic and Im overthinking it all. Im just gonna try and relax and enjoy the 3 day weekend and not consume myself with it.
The correct glue to use and closest to the manufacture glue is Barge Infinity Cement. Check out vids on YouTube since there’s some prep work to itDoes it last longer than Gorilla glue?
Def try to relax and enjoy your weekend. If you were able to provide examples in your answers and use the STAR method here and there, I'd say you did as expected.
I'm in the process of interviewing for 2 open positions at my place. One of the folks who is apart of the interview panel with me almost exclusively asks follow up questions based on the answer the candidate just gave. I find it impressive actually...the ability to engage in conversation flow in that manner is not my strong suit at all...I go to the interviews with a sheet of questions I want to hit (if not answered through the course of the interview).
Pulling for you and it will all work out as it should.
Fresh McDonald's fries..
Black licorice is worse.Licorice is disgusting.
Signed the contract this week for a new job at an HR company as a (Software) Test Engineer.
I’ll be starting next week on the 20th.
I resigned my paid position as head of IT Support and Web Admin at my current workplace but I’m still staying on as a volunteer in my spare time. It’s entirely up to me now to decide how much time I dedicate to it.
I beg to disagree that Nike was already mainstream. Before MJ, which basketball players actually don a Nike shoe? Also, the analogy between Coke and Pepsi is bad since both are known and one is much preferred over the other.I’m 42. Yes other brands were bigger. But Nike wasn’t like a creative recreation. Nike was sold in all major stores people wore them casually and for running and stuff. Nike was a regular brand, not some new unknown brand. Jordan turned up and era of when basketball shoes were becoming popular. CONS was really the first to take off then Jordan just did what it did. That actually kicked off the beginning of signature shoes. He did not make Nike tho. im just saying Nike wasn’t some fledgling company that no one really knew of. Nike was mainstream like coke or Pepsi or any other brand.
If MJ would've signed with some other brand. I don't think his image & shoes would have the same mystique/impact as it has today. Nike and their designers made JB what it is today. You could be a great player, but if your name isn't attached to a big brand you're most likely to fail. Hakeem Olajuwon is a perfect example of that, he's one of the greatest players in NBA history, but when it comes to his shoes they're forgettable (I F with his Etonic joints, but I'm in the minority). Shaq was down with Reebok and after he left the brand his shoes became forgettable. Now, Patrick Ewing is one those rare cases, he left Adidas and made his own brand 'Ewing Athletics' and they're still relevant today, but there's more athletes like Hakeem Olajuwon & Shaq, and even with rappers Master P, Soulja Boy, etc. they came out with their own shoes, but because their names aint attached to a big brand people pay them no mind. Going back to the athletes, ain't nobody feening for Stephon Marbury's 'Starbury' kicks. LaVar Ball tried with his 'BBB' and it failed, his son LaMelo got his own shoes with Puma, but see he needed to have his name attached to a big brand in order to get peoples attention, and take the shoes seriously.
Not necessarily. One must have great appeal to sell the product. If the player has a weak fanbase, it won't matter if the brand is big time. Just look what happened to cp3, wade, Melo, Rust. Their signature lines are pretty much weak.If MJ would've signed with some other brand. I don't think his image & shoes would have the same mystique/impact as it has today. Nike and their designers made JB what it is today. You could be a great player, but if your name isn't attached to a big brand you're most likely to fail. Hakeem Olajuwon is a perfect example of that, he's one of the greatest players in NBA history, but when it comes to his shoes they're forgettable (I F with his Etonic joints, but I'm in the minority). Shaq was down with Reebok and after he left the brand his shoes became forgettable. Now, Patrick Ewing is one those rare cases, he left Adidas and made his own brand 'Ewing Athletics' and they're still relevant today, but there's more athletes like Hakeem Olajuwon & Shaq, and even with rappers Master P, Soulja Boy, etc. they came out with their own shoes, but because their names aint attached to a big brand people pay them no mind. Going back to the athletes, ain't nobody feening for Stephon Marbury's 'Starbury' kicks. LaVar Ball tried with his 'BBB' and it failed, his son LaMelo got his own shoes with Puma, but see he needed to have his name attached to a big brand in order to get peoples attention, and take the shoes seriously.
This is why I don't take interviews too seriously. I won't loose sleep over it nor prepare. Just be honest and have a relax demeanor. Funny part was that hr called me twice a few weeks ago. Couldn't reach them since my phone was on silent and was so busy doing other stuff. Also, my voicemail was full so no idea how to call them back. Surely it's about that job position I applied about a month ago. Could be wasted opportunity but I won't lose sleep over it. Will try reapplying again if the position isn't filled up or look for other ventures and jobs. Always think there is something better for you out there.dont lose hope.Idk man. I prepped myself for a week on typical questions that would get asked, and of course none of them got asked lol. Then I just feel every response I gave didnt seem enough, and I feel that way based on his follow up questions. Idk maybe the guy is just stoic and Im overthinking it all. Im just gonna try and relax and enjoy the 3 day weekend and not consume myself with it.
I’m not talking about just the NBA. As far as that goe Jordan definitely took them to a new level. I’m talking about everyday life. Cortez, af1, blazers etc. we’re pretty common shoes and Nike period in everyday life.I beg to disagree that Nike was already mainstream. Before MJ, which basketball players actually don a Nike shoe? Also, the analogy between Coke and Pepsi is bad since both are known and one is much preferred over the other.
Those players you mentioned may not have the most popular shoes, but they still got a lot more folks that cop & wear their shoes compare to a Hakeem Olajuwon (Etonic), Shaq (Shaq Brand), Stephon Marbury (Starbury), etc.Not necessarily. One must have great appeal to sell the product. If the player has a weak fanbase, it won't matter if the brand is big time. Just look what happened to cp3, wade, Melo, Rust. Their signature lines are pretty much weak.
You can also add Blake Griffin. Hell the GT Cut doesn't even have a signature player but it's treated like an mvp.
If MJ would've signed with some other brand. I don't think his image & shoes would have the same mystique/impact as it has today. Nike and their designers made JB what it is today. You could be a great player, but if your name isn't attached to a big brand you're most likely to fail. Hakeem Olajuwon is a perfect example of that, he's one of the greatest players in NBA history, but when it comes to his shoes they're forgettable (I F with his Etonic joints, but I'm in the minority). Shaq was down with Reebok and after he left the brand his shoes became forgettable. Now, Patrick Ewing is one those rare cases, he left Adidas and made his own brand 'Ewing Athletics' and they're still relevant today, but there's more athletes like Hakeem Olajuwon & Shaq, and even with rappers Master P, Soulja Boy, etc. they came out with their own shoes, but because their names aint attached to a big brand people pay them no mind. Going back to the athletes, ain't nobody feening for Stephon Marbury's 'Starbury' kicks. LaVar Ball tried with his 'BBB' and it failed, his son LaMelo got his own shoes with Puma, but see he needed to have his name attached to a big brand in order to get peoples attention, and take the shoes seriously.
Nike releasing a shoe that was "banned" by the NBA, then releasing a full line of apparel with those shoes, and MJs agent getting all of the other brands he endorsed (ie Gatorade) to prominently display the shoes and apparel in their own ads, MJ breaking out his own shoe and not a shoe worn by all the other stars in the league at that time at the dunk contest with the gold chains did wonders for Nikes popularity and the "air Jordan" brand and changed the shoe and apparel game forever.
Those players you mentioned may not have the most popular shoes, but they still got a lot more folks that cop & wear their shoes compare to a Hakeem Olajuwon (Etonic), Shaq (Shaq Brand), Stephon Marbury (Starbury), etc.
I understand what Hakeem, Shaq & Stephon were trying to do, sell shoes at affordable prices, but unfortunately the masses don't want cheap shoes, they rather kill someone for expensive/popular ones. Ish is messed up. My last JB purchase was the AJ6 'Oreo'. I f with different brands Nike, Reebok, Fila, Ewing, Brooks, etc.