MiTT3NZ wrote: There's always gonna be nob eds tryna make your life difficult in the workplace.
They werent even paying me, I never technically worked there, I was just an intern. Hell I even cut my own hours at my real job and changed my availability so I could do that internship, I was taking a pretty big hit financially between food gas and missing work every week, I was bending over backwards for them and thats how they repay me? Nah, i'll just work my regular hours now at my actual job and keep all that extra money and wait to hear about the new club opening up where I'll actually be making money.
QWERTY wrote: AnimeGamer183 wrote:I quit my internship at the night club
WTF? An internship at a nightclub? Jesus H Christ. What is there to particularly learn at a nightlcub anyway? It doesn't take a rocket scientist to serve drinks, collect glasses or work on the door.
You think thats all there is to it? I was hooking up all the audio equipment and DJ euipment on 3 different stages each night, 2 CDJs and a mixer on each stage, all going through power condensers, and other sound boards that adjust highs mids lows to the right frequencies so the stages sound awesome, also setting automatic bypasses on these equipments so the DJ doesnt clip and go into red and blow speakers or fuses from too much power consumption.
Also had to monitor all those thigns through out the course of the night (from 10PM to 5-6AM), and solve any misc. problems on the fly that happened through out the course of the night aka lose sound, have to reset the stage, turn off all the audio equipment and turn it back on after flipping the breaker. Also any music/audio person knows the protocol for how to hook up, turn on, confirm signal, sound check, get the first DJs equipment running on our audio system, also think we have about 8-12 DJs that have to be switched over, over the course of the night.
Then there is all the lights lasers projectors and video feeds you have to keep up with, put the logo of the DJ thats playing on the projectors, setup stage props, manually control the lights and do light shows for the audience. Even setting up the lights is an art form in itself. It takes alot to make a good party happen, there are different hurdles every night.
You would be completely lost looking at the sound boards and power condensers, much less the mixer and CDJs, a regular person cant even setup the stage without that knowledge. Its alot more complicated than you think, remember I have made and recorded music in an professional environment, I have interned at a recording studio and now at a night club in ATL. Next step is actually getting paid to do it all and im ready for it, I havent spent the last 5 or 6 years slowly aquiring all this knowledge for nothing, my time will come, I have no doubt.