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Posted
11 hours ago, Led Lolly Yellow Lolly said:

Way too many Walter Mittys here, both online and offline. Another true story (no really), I was once drinking in Patpong in the mid-2000s with an old member that no longer posts here (hi elsie). It was something like 04:00 HRS. We stumbled into one bar and wound up sat next to a European that claimed to work for the Singha beer company and he said he was at work right now. His role is just just drink in bars and monitor the quality of the beer. . . Now, when I post it here, it sounds like he was joking, but he was completely serious. I could tell you all kinds of stories like this, and it's one of the reasons I avoid foreigners in Thailand. Bangkok is a different matter these days, there are many foreign professionals in the city and the pretenders are easy to spot.

 

i actually know you are not kidding because i have a really good friend in Penang who does the same job but for carlsberg.

 

his job is literally to make sure everyone is having a good time and help the bars sell more (carlsberg obviously) beer. he has this pass that gets him free beer in any bar in penang that is supplied by carlsberg and he's expected to sample, entertain and advise. literally a professional party pass lol.

 

back in the day when the visa run to penang was very much a part of life here we had some very wild afternoons and nights with him and his friends.

 

good times.

Posted
52 minutes ago, big dendrobenaes said:

did you have owt to do with MRCA programme????

In the very early days yes.. wing/undercarriage section. I think that was around 1977
I was in my second year of five apprenticeship years so I was under a mentor doing my training rounds of different departments.
I started in 1976

Posted
11 hours ago, Meat Pie 47 said:

The early types of Automatics ran on cams

Swiss lathes? Where the tool remains fixed and the workpiece moves.

The later auto capstans were peg board set.

 

Quote

it could be useful to "know a man that can" 

Depends of what you wish to achieve.  The saying that a picture is worth a thousand words comes to mind. Also knowing the tools you have could well be useful.

Posted
16 hours ago, CharlieH said:

I have often pondered and considered that there is a wealth of untapped resource amongst the retired community here.

I used to go holidays at times on Norfolk Island in the middle of the pacific ocean. About 6000 residents. They asked your profession on arrival card and I wondered why. One trip I asked a local official and he said sometimes they needed specialised work on the island and sometimes they called upon visitors to help.

  • Like 1
Posted

Now retired but was in my UK days:-

a junior veterinary pharmacologist

a forensic science expert in UK Police Service (London)

a crime and criminal intelligence analyst with a UK County Constabulary.

Whilst living in Thailand:-

a volunteer worker with the Thai Tourist Police, first in Chiang Rai then Khon Kaen.

Now get 3 pensions which provide a reasonable income for a happy and hassle free retirement in Cambodia.

 

 

  • Like 2
Posted
5 minutes ago, JustAnotherHun said:

Well, I'm an ex special forces member. Later I became an investment banker and in a side job I worked as a neurosurgeon.

I'm guessing a Barclay's Banker.

 

Paul Laew

  • Haha 1
Posted
17 hours ago, G Rex said:

I worked as a veterinarian in private practice in rural Australia.  Heaven on a stick - if you don't mind smelling like sh#t most work days!

As my plumber nephew said once " when I smell <deleted>" I smell money ????

  • Haha 1
Posted
5 minutes ago, PoodThaiMaiDai said:

I worked on a fishing boat and became a Master Baiter.

Sounds like your field of expertise.

  • Haha 1
Posted

Accountant / tax advisor of relatively small companies. Make up the yearly accounts file either company or personal tax and vat. Stuff like that.

  • Like 1
Posted
13 minutes ago, PoodThaiMaiDai said:

After high school I joined the USMC and did so well in my class I ended up becoming a Navy Seal.

 

After I retired from the military, I worked on a fishing boat and became a Master Baiter.

 

Since becoming an expat in LOS, I have become an Amateur Gynecologist.

 

Masturbator to gynecologist would be a  difficult progression in your career

  • Like 1
Posted

In Thailand a school teacher for 3 years, in the UK A professional musician, Bass guitar, keyboards, vocals. from age 18 right up until I came to live in Thailand. A private investigator for 10 years, held HGV, PSV, Hackney and Private taxi licenses also.

  • Like 2
Posted

I worked in my parent's businesses.  I also worked in the HK Police, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, Hotels and Restaurants, IT companies, Web Design Agencies, FMCG businesses.

Now I am an investor / tech consultant 

 

 

Posted

Not allowed to continue at school and began an apprenticeship at a local engineering company by the name of Vokes Limited at the age of 15 

Left when i was 18 and made a bad move to Australia with the so called  British Brothers Movement . I was promised that i could continue my training on arrival in Australia . Only job i was offered was at a scrap merchants as the learned Australian realised with my background that i could distinquish between ferrous and non ferrous metal .  Not a person to give up i found gainful employment at a race course . The manager said i could sweep up the pommie leaves and keep the place tidy . 

I then managed to find work at a nickel mine not far from Kalgoorlie . All was going well until i decided to take the bush track with a land rover that i was expected to take to a work shop for repairs .  On the way i managed to get the rover stuck on top of a pipe line . The management was not pleased and was given the tintac . 

Of i go further east to Melbourne and found a job to finish my apprenticeship at the department of mines . 

Anyway i will not bore you further with my career . 

  • Like 1
Posted

In my local bar we have an 81 year old ex professional footballer. Played for Huddersfield Town in the English first division. He played against all the greats in the 60's, Best, Charlton, Greaves etc and he said Bobby Moore was the nicest guy he ever met. 

Myself, very modest career, as an apprentice Lithograph printer in early 70's was instructed to go to the ink store for a long wait...... 

  • Like 1
Posted
1 minute ago, phutoie2 said:

In my local bar we have an 81 year old ex professional footballer. Played for Huddersfield Town in the English first division. He played against all the greats in the 60's, Best, Charlton, Greaves etc and he said Bobby Moore was the nicest guy he ever met. 

Myself, very modest career, as an apprentice Lithograph printer in early 70's was instructed to go to the ink store for a long wait...... 

What about a bubble for a spirit level ? Even longer wait involved 

  • Haha 2
Posted
1 minute ago, itsari said:

What about a bubble for a spirit level ? Even longer wait involved 

I never falled for the tin of Tartan ink one. Many did.... 

  • Like 1
Posted

Emeritus Professor of History and International Programs (taught US undergraduate survey courses in American/European History and directed our city’s “Sister Cities” program). I rather enjoyed a colleague having teasingly introduced me as a bon vivant, raconteur and man about town … but I was much younger then …

  • Like 1
Posted
35 minutes ago, Freddy42OZ said:

I worked in my parent's businesses.  I also worked in the HK Police, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, Hotels and Restaurants, IT companies, Web Design Agencies, FMCG businesses.

Now I am an investor / tech consultant 

 

 

 

 

You don't seem to have been able to keep a job down..................................????

Posted

Daycare teacher (mostly 3 & 4-year olds) in my 20's.  Sold anchors, chains and heavy marine & industrial hardware in my 30's and early 40's.  Graduate school in the second half of my 40s.  Cartographer and GIS analyst in my fifties.  Retired the day before I turned 62.  Moved to Thailand full time ten-years later.

 

 

 

 

  • Like 1

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