It's been a bit since I've posted any of my kids' music, so here's Norah covering Elle King's Ex's and Oh's (one of my winter-break highlights).
Here's what I read the past few weeks:
Do you like what you read? Receive updates two different ways:
Subscribe to the feed or register for free email updates.
According to a scathing report by The New York Times, employees nationwide are accusing Planned Parenthood of engaging in rampant pregnancy discrimination.Do you like what you read? Receive updates two different ways:
Subscribe to the feed or register for free email updates.
Do you like what you read? Receive updates two different ways:
Subscribe to the feed or register for free email updates.
Do you like what you read? Receive updates two different ways:
Subscribe to the feed or register for free email updates.
- The Murdering Manager — company owner hires two men to rough-up a handyman who was not doing his job, and they accidentally kill him.
- The Sexist, Racist, Xenophobic, Oh My! — plant manager calls foreign-born employees "terrorists" and women "bitches," and tells the only black employee that her husband should work in a cotton field with a rope around his neck.
- The Supervisor Supremacist — supervisor begins morning staff meetings by saying "White Power" and giving the Nazi salute; when African-American employee complains, he finds himself hanged in effigy.
- The Tasering Torturer — company owner disciplines employee by threatening to kill him, lighting fires near him, and repeatedly shocking him with a taser.
Do you like what you read? Receive updates two different ways:
Subscribe to the feed or register for free email updates.
Today is your last day to vote for the Worst Employer of 2018. The polls close at 11:00 pm tonight. I'll announce this year's big winner tomorrow.Do you like what you read? Receive updates two different ways:
Subscribe to the feed or register for free email updates.
Hall v. Edgewood Partners Ins. Center (6th Cir. 12/14/18) [pdf] asks a question that we see arise often in litigation with former employees over restrictive covenants—can an employer limit an employee's access to customers, clients, or other contacts that the employee had prior to the employment.Do you like what you read? Receive updates two different ways:
Subscribe to the feed or register for free email updates.