S B O J Y GOOF Diane Lindsey Reeves
Acknowledgements Special thanks to Jim Becker, Sarah Cole, Paul Friedrich, and Br...
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S B O J Y GOOF Diane Lindsey Reeves
Acknowledgements Special thanks to Jim Becker, Sarah Cole, Paul Friedrich, and Brett Roberts for sharing the secrets of their goofy jobs. And also to Lacey Reeves for sharing her goofy ideas and Joy Strickland who assisted in researching and writing this book.
Way Out Work: Goofy Jobs Copyright © 2009 by Diane Lindsey Reeves All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or utilized in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage or retrieval systems, without permission in writing from the publisher. For information contact: Ferguson An imprint of Infobase Publishing 132 West 31st Street New York NY 10001 Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Reeves, Diane Lindsey, 1959Goofy jobs / Diane Lindsey Reeves. p. cm.—(Way out work) Includes index. ISBN-13: 978-1-60413-130-7 (hbk. : alk. paper) ISBN-10: 1-60413-130-6 (hbk. : alk. paper) ISBN: 978-1-43812-850-4 (e-book) 1. Job descriptions—Juvenile literature. 2. Occupations—Juvenile literature. 3. Vocational guidance—Juvenile literature. I. Title. HF5381.2.R442 2009 331.702—dc22 2009007054 Ferguson books are available at special discounts when purchased in bulk quantities for businesses, associations, institutions, or sales promotions. Please call our Special Sales Department in New York at (212) 967-8800 or (800) 322-8755. You can find Ferguson on the World Wide Web at http://www.fergpubco.com Text design by Erika K. Arroyo Cover design by Jooyoung An Printed in the United States of America Bang MSRF 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 This book is printed on acid-free paper.
Contents Introduction
4
Goofy Job #1: Candy Maker
5
Goofy Job #2: Cartoonist
8
Goofy Job #3: Clown
11
Goofy Job #4: Comedian
14
Goofy Job #5: Cruise Director
17
Goofy Job #6: Magician
20
Goofy Job #7: Museum Exhibit Designer
23
Goofy Job #8: Summer Camp Director
26
Goofy Job #9: Toy Engineer
29
Goofy Job #10: Video Game Designer
32
More Goofy Jobs
35
Real People, Goofy Jobs
40
Goofy Job Playground
44
Index
46
Introduction You mean you can get paid for goofing off? Candy makers and cartoonists do it. Clowns, comedians, and cruise directors do it too. As a matter of fact, so do magicians, museum exhibit designers, and summer camp directors. Even toy engineers, video game designers, and a bunch of other out-of-the-ordinary professionals get away with some on-the-job fun. Laugh for a living? Play for a paycheck? Sound like something you might enjoy? If so, keep reading because this book is full of ideas about jobs that people do for kicks. Not that a job has to be silly in order for people to enjoy it. But the jobs featured here are, for one reason or another, heavier on the laughs than most. Some are oozing with creativity, some are downright funny, while others are—for lack of a better way to describe them—just plain fun. So what’s it like to have a goofy job, you ask? Here’s your chance to find out. First, get acquainted with 10 goofy jobs. Then check out some more goofy job ideas and stop by to chat it up with real people lucky enough to have unusually fun jobs. Plan to goof around at the end of the book with some activities to find out once and for all what kind of job is most likely to tickle your funny bone.
4
Goof
1 # b y Jo
Candy Maker
Don Stepp dips raspberry fillings in chocolate coating at his candy store, Donells Candies, in Casper, Wyoming. AP Photo/Casper Star-Tribune, Dan Cepeda
Chocolate
kisses,
jellybeans,
and
lollipops are everywhere. The air
Nope. You are a candy maker and it’s just another day at the office.
is scented with the delicious aroma
Candy makers spend their days cre-
of tantalizing sweets. The room is
ating the melt-in-your-mouth goodies
stacked with piles of your favorite
that people in the United States spend
candy bars. Huh? Have you some-
$23 billion a year to enjoy. Some candy
how gotten stuck in a game of
makers, called chocolatiers, specialize
Candyland?
in—can you guess?—chocolate. They
5
make candy bars, truffles, Easter eggs, chocolate hearts, and those candycoated chocolates that “melt in your mouth, not in your hand.” Other candy
Goofy Factor All that candy!
makers, called confectioners, focus on other types of candy like lollipops, licorice, and gummy bears.
work in factories that produce name
Most candy makers work in one
brand products that are sold all over
of three kinds of places. Many work
the world. Others work for novelty
for gigantic candy companies that
candy companies that specialize in
make some of your favorite treats—
treats like sour hard candies or gross-
like Hershey’s or Mars. These people
out candies like monster face suckers and other yucky-looking yummies.
hink? T u o Y o t What D ow tha s? you kn
Did on tree s w o r t ate g Interne e chocol t i r o ll ur fav d out a n i f Use yo o t engine o.” t “caca search u o b a n you ca
Other candy makers work in retail shops, making and selling their own delicious concoctions to customers who walk in from the street. Gourmet chocolate shops—where candy makers get extra fancy with new flavors and products—are especially popular right now.
WOW!
The one ingredient that all candies have in common is sugar. And the one thing that makes them different is heat. Hot temperatures make hard candy, medium heat will make soft candy, and cool temperatures make chewy candy.
gooFy Jobs
Go For It If. . .
You have a sweet tooth.
No matter if they sell gazillions of products around the world or dozens of treats in a neighborhood shop, candy makers learn to follow what are often super-secret recipes very carefully—measuring, weigh-
You’d be tempted to eat everything you make!
forget about it If. . .
ing, and mixing different ingredients to create new and exciting treats. They also use special equipment and machines to heat, mold, and package candy. When it comes right down to it, there’s only one word to accu-
Whether they work in a factory, in a commercial kitchen, or at the mar-
rately describe a candy maker’s job: sweet!
ble countertop of a shop in the mall, many candy makers get their start by attending special cooking schools, where they learn the secrets of making good desserts. Others work with master candy makers as apprentices or helpers—learning by doing and watching pros in action.
Go Online to Find Out More! Find out where chocolate comes from at http:// ecandy.com/ecandyfiles/ cocoa_farming.pdf.
C a n dy M a k e r
2 # b y Jo
f o o G
Cartoonist
Matt Groening poses for a picture with the Simpsons, the main characters from his hit cartoon series. Douglas Kirkland/Corbis
Beep! Beep! Beep! It’s 7:30 A.M. and
Before you know it, some of your
your alarm’s going off. But, unlike
favorite animated characters have
most other days, you don’t hit the
you sitting on the edge of your seat
snooze button and hide under the
wondering what’s going to happen
covers. Instead, you jump out of bed
next or laughing your head off at their
and dash into the living room. Time
crazy antics. These TV pals you (and
to go to school? No way! It’s Saturday
millions of other kids) visit with each
and time for your favorite cartoons!
weekend are brought to you compli-
8
Goofy Factor Thinking like a cartoon.
cartoons and comics, often amassing huge collections of comic books as kids and constantly covering their textbooks and homework with doodles and sketches. It’s a good thing that so many
ments of the vivid (and sometimes
cartoonists really enjoy what they
zany) imaginations of cartoonists.
do because the job isn’t as easy as
Of course, television is just one
it may look. Take animated car-
place you’ll find cartoonists’ work.
toons, for instance. The cartoons
You’ll also find their work in comic
you see on television involve film-
books, graphic novels, video games,
ing a sequence of images so quickly
and Web sites. And don’t forget the comic strips in newspapers! Cartoonists are artists who, some would say, have never grown up. They see the world through the eyes of the characters they create and tell stories using an entertaining mix of words and images. Many cartoonists admit to a lifelong obsession with
hink? gy T u o Y o What Du think technoloat
th o yo e way h How d t d e ich ang e? Wh has ch d a m e g ns ar —usin n u cartoo f e r ons or be mo o t d l r a u c o w reate rs to c e t hand? u y p b m o m c ing the sketch
WOW!
Walt Disney is the world’s most famous cartoonist. His studio produced the first full-length animated musical film, Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, way back in 1937. Even though Disney died a long time ago, children everywhere still enjoy his creative handiwork in movies, books, and at the amusement parks named for him and based on his ideas. Cartoonist
9
Go For It IF. . . Your homework is covered with one-of-a-kind doodles. You don’t “get” cartoons.
ForGet about It IF. . .
how many images it takes to make an animated show? Hint: It takes a lot! For example, it took 370 people (including 43 animators) to create the 1,295 painted backgrounds and 120,000 drawings featured in the Disney movie Beauty and the Beast. Succeeding as a cartoonist takes more than a knack for drawing funny characters. In many cases, such as cartoonists who create comic strips for newspapers or political cartoonists who use cartoons to poke fun at society, cartoonists need to have
that it looks like the characters and background scenes are moving in a lifelike or natural way. For instance, to animate the process of running, a
something to say as well. Their art becomes a way to communicate ideas, to make a statement, or simply to entertain their fans.
cartoonist starts with a drawing of the character standing still, followed by one of the character starting to take off, showing first the right leg moving forward and then a drawing of the left leg going forward, and so on, until the character reaches its destination. Can you even imagine
10
gooFy Jobs
Go Online to Find Out More! Learn how to create your own animated cartoons at http://www.kidzdom. com/tutorials.
3 # b o J y f Goo
Clown outrageous costumes, and ridiculous makeup. You run around in your gigantic shoes, juggle a few plates (oops!
you
dropped
one!),
drive
around in a tiny car, chase a pretty lady, make fun of a bald man, and act out a variety of silly skits. Today you are performing in a circus. Tomorrow you may be in a hospital ward cheering up sick children or at someone’s home making a kid’s birthday party extra special. Other, more daring clowns actually perform A clown waves to passersby during the 11th Clown Congress in Mexico City, Mexico. Xinhua/Landov
in rodeos—doing crazy things to distract angry bulls and bucking broncos when riders fall off and make a
You’ve been hit in the face with a pie,
run for safety. Of course, bulls are a
your pants fell down around your
tougher audience than kids. They’d
ankles, and you got squirted in the
rather throw the clown for a loop
face with a plastic flower. To top it all
than laugh!
off, everyone is laughing at you. Are you having another bad day in the school cafeteria? Nope! You are a clown and you are doing what clowns do best: making people laugh with zany antics,
k? n i h T u o Y What DWo hat is it abouut Ha ha! kes yo a m t a th ? clowns e most h t h g lau
11
Goofy Factor Pies in the face!
Getting dressed for the job is almost as much work as the performance itself. When it comes to clown costumes, anything goes! But gigantic shoes, wild hair, and outlandish outfits are a must. Make
Go For It IF. . .
You are the class clown.
You take yourself a little too seriously.
ForGet about It IF. . .
sure to leave lots of time to put on the makeup—it can take nearly two
in the rink. Oh, and one last thing:
hours to put it on and an hour to take
Don’t forget the goofy grin!
it off! There’s a real art to applying
How do clowns learn to put on their
clown makeup. Maybe it’s a stark
crazy makeup and costumes? Hate to
white face with stars on the cheeks,
break it to you, but even clowns go
or maybe it’s super-sized lips with
to school. Clown schools are places
a fake red nose (honk!), topped off
where these funny folks meet other
with a crazy purple wig—whatever
clowns, learn tricks and jokes, and
it takes to morph from regular per-
refine their acts. There, clowns take
son on the street to hilarious clown
classes in things like character devel-
WOW!
Everyone loves a clown—or do they? Some people are downright scared of clowns. Those with a fear of clowns are said to have “coulrophobia.”
12
gooFy Jobs
opment, classic clowning, eccentric dance, and clown therapy. They are taught how to do slapstick antics safely, how to make balloon animals, and even how to coax smiles out of the crankiest kid.
Go Online to Find Out More! Make your own clown face at http://www.clownkevin. com/games.htm.
C l ow n 1 3
Goof
4 # b y Jo
Comedian
Moscow Circus veteran Gregory Popovich conducts a classroom of dogs during his Comedy and Pet Theatre performance. AP Photo/ The Express-Times, Joe Gill
14
Making people laugh is what come-
financial rewards for many aspiring
dians do for a living. Most comedians
comedians are no laughing matter.
start out doing stand-up comedy rou-
Most find it difficult to support them-
tines in small nightclubs and gigs at
selves on the starting pay, so they
parties—yukking it up with fun-lov-
work day jobs to make money and
ing crowds; sometimes “laying eggs,”
work the comedy circuit for fun on
as they call it, when a joke flops; and
the side.
trying to remind themselves that
Of course, a lucky few like Jay
laughs are the best reward. This last
Leno, Adam Sandler, and Whoopi
part is especially important since the
Goldberg eventually make it to the
Goofy Factor Trying to keep a straight face while everyone else is laughing.
funny, it still takes a lot of hard work and putting up with plenty of rejection to make it to the top of this profession. All comedians—even the famous ones—seem to suffer from the same recurring nightmare: telling a joke in a room full of people and
big time, hosting late night television shows, starring in television sitcoms, and making Hollywood movies. The hope of following in these stars’ footsteps keeps many an aspiring comedian at it day after day. What does it take to become a comedian? At the top of the list of job requirements are a quick wit and sense of humor. It’s not easy to keep the jokes coming for a 20-minute routine, and being funny is not something most people can fake. You either are or you aren’t—it’s as simple as that. It also helps to have thick skin because, even if you are outrageously
nobody laughs. Oh, and by the way, it’s not enough to be able to tell a good joke. Comedians have to be able to write them too. Is there a giant Comedians “R” Us somewhere that sells funny stories? Nope! They pay attention to
k? n i h T u o Y , What Duop whether “Knochky
“W osse?” or r e It’s a t h t ?” s who’ e road , h t k c s o s n o k cr t to star hicken c y e a h w t s did ou e st fam o m an com e c h u o is t y See if ch line n u a joke. p w h a ne . up wit of them h t o b r fo
WOW!
Laughter is the best medicine—literally! Some medical studies say it can even help prevent heart disease, so get giggling!
Comedian
15
Go For It IF. . . You know how to make your friends and family crack up. You always forget the punch line when you try to tell a joke.
ForGet about It IF. . .
1
gooFy Jobs
life. Sometimes all it takes to spark a great joke is eavesdropping on other people’s conversations while riding on the subway or peoplewatching while waiting in line at the supermarket.
Go Online to Find Out More! Catch up on all the best jokes at http://www.scatty.com.
5 # b o J y f Goo
Cruise Director every time you turn around? Join the conga line wending its way down the beach? Wait a second…Conga line? Pretend you are a passenger on a cruise ship enjoying an onshore excursion for the day. Thanks to the efforts of the cruise director, there is always plenty of fun to be found. In fact, boredom is simply not allowed. Who has time to be bored anyway with pools, and games, and endless activities, and all that food? When they advertised “fun in the sun,” they weren’t kidding!
A cruise director stands on the deck of a ship. Getty Images
Cruise directors are in charge of keeping things hopping on a
When you are a kid, lying on a beach
cruise ship by organizing all kinds
and appreciating the beautiful scen-
of entertainment options for pas-
ery is fun for about 30 seconds, but
sengers of all ages. On board there
what do you do after that? Poke at
is everything from kids’ clubs to
crabs scuttling across the sand? Build
Broadway-style
a sandcastle that gets washed away
sports competitions, contests, and
plays.
There
are
17
Goofy Factor ‘Round-the-clock fun and games.
supplies of energy. Out-of-the-norm stamina is especially important since cruise directors work very long days (often starting before the sun comes up and quitting long after it goes down). Due to the nature of cruising,
an endless array of fun and games. For days when the ship is docked at some new exotic port, they plan offshore activities like scuba diving and snorkeling, and they take passengers on sightseeing tours. Every day it’s something new, with impres-
when your “office” is floating around the ocean for days, weeks, or even months at a time, cruise directors don’t get many days off when they are at sea. Instead, they tend to work straight through an extended period of time, say one to six months, and
sive lists of daily activities delivered to passenger’s rooms in plenty of time to schedule oodles of fun for every member of the family. How do cruise directors pull this off? Three secrets tell the story: great organizational skills, a talented staff, and a people-pleasing personality. Oh, and one more thing: endless
hink? T u o Y o e to do k i l What D u o ould y uise
r w me a c What o c e B e day’s uise? r h c t t a u n o o an to and pl r o t rkeling c o e n s dir r y, from imbing. itinera ain cl mount
WOW! Long before ships had access to the kinds of fancy navigation technology that cruise ship captains use today, they followed the stars to find their way. Can you find the Big Dipper? 18
gooFy Jobs
Go For It If. . .
You are always the life of the party.
You get seasick just thinking about living onboard a ship.
forget about it If. . . then take off for a nice long vacation before starting the process all over again.
One of the best things about being a cruise director is that it offers a wonderful chance to see the world. Luxurious ships travel everywhere—from Alaska to the Mediterranean and Australia to the Caribbean Islands. Some even go for ‘round-the-world voyages. Ahoy, matey!
Go Online to Find Out More! Captain your own cruise ship at http:// freeonlinegames.com/ arcade-games/easycruise.html.
C r u i s e D i re c t o r 1 9
6 # b o J y f Goo
Magician
A magician poses with his saw after using it to cut his assistant in half in a magic trick. B. Bird/zefa/Corbis
“Abracadabra, Hocus Pocus,” and…
their lives entertaining others by
Poof! A white bunny rabbit sticks its
doing illusions and magic tricks. They
head out of a black top hat. But where
perform anywhere a spark of mystery
did that bunny come from? It’s like he
is needed, from kids’ birthday parties
just appeared out of thin air! Every-
and nightclubs to cruise ships and
one wants to know how tricks like
million-dollar television extravagan-
this work, but only a magician knows
zas. In some big cities, magicians can
for sure.
even be found teasing passersby on
Magicians
are
super-secretive,
super-talented people who spend
20
street corners (don’t forget to leave a tip!).
Goofy Factor All those rabbits and wacky tricks.
stances (like being underwater!). Or, more recently, the famous duo of Siegfried and Roy, who integrate white lions and tigers into their act. How do magicians learn the tricks of the trade? After all, most people
Most people think of a magi-
find that they can’t just stick their
cian as someone walking around
hand inside a hat and grab a rabbit!
in a black suit and top hat, sawing
The truth of the matter is that many
pretty ladies in half, and performing
magicians get started when they are
card tricks. But these days, not every
kids. They get their hands on a book
magician works with the same bag
full of magic tricks at the library, try
of tricks. The most successful (and famous) magicians find a way to set themselves apart. Take one of the most famous magicians in history, Harry Houdini, as an example—he became famous as an “escape artist,” able to free himself from locked boxes, handcuffs, and chains under all kinds of outrageous circum-
hink? c T u o Y o What nD’t call them magici is
o ag They d hing. M t o n ng r o ”f r tricki o , “tricks n o i in ut illus ething m o s all abo g n ei do you into se e w l o p H o e . p ay rted w s do it? n a disto a i c i g a think m
WOW!
The bullet-catch trick is the most dangerous magic trick of all and has killed more than a dozen magicians. The stunt involves firing a marked bullet at the magician, who, if all goes according to plan, is supposed to catch it—with his teeth! Of course, it goes without saying—DON’T TRY THIS AT HOME!
Magician
21
Go For It IF. . .
You’re always trying to make your homework disappear! You stink at playing hide-and-seek.
ForGet about It IF. . . a few, and are hooked. Those who stick with it and eventually decide to try magic as a career may enroll in a magic school, where professional magicians share their secrets. It may
22
gooFy Jobs
not be Hogwarts, but it’s a school for real-life magicians. Every magician has a different trick up his or her sleeve (literally), but they all have something in common: confidence! Magicians head out into the world to prove to everybody that magic really does exist. The question is—do you believe?
Go Online to Find Out More! Learn a bunch of magic tricks at http://www. funology.com/abracadabra/ index.htm.
Goof
7 # b y Jo
Museum Exhibit Designer
Two museum exhibit designers assemble a working six-foot-long mechanical model of a Tyrannosaurus Rex skeleton that illustrates skeletal movement. AP Photo/Stephen Chernin
Hey everybody, it’s time for a field trip
be either an awesome adventure or
to the museum! When you hear those
a complete dud. But what makes one
words, what’s your first reaction? Do
museum so exciting and another so
you want to shout for joy or groan
dull?
in misery? Everybody knows that
Museum exhibit designers ask
there are two types of museums in
themselves the same question all the
the world: really fun ones and really
time in their quest to make muse-
boring ones. Depending on which
ums more interactive, interesting,
one you’re heading to, a visit could
and, most important, fun for people
23
signs used to guide visitors through
Goofy Factor
the exhibit are carefully considered. When all the pieces comes together
so many wild ideas.
just right, stepping into an exhibit area should be like stepping into
of all ages. Who wants to stare at a picture of a T-Rex when you could hear it roar and see it jump instead? Today’s technology is making the well-earned “don’t touch” reputation of stuffy museums a thing of the past. “Hands-on” is the new rallying cry for museums everywhere. Getting visitors to actually do things instead of just look at them means that visitors don’t just have more fun, they learn more too. (Shhh, don’t tell the kids!) Exhibit designers must imagine everything from a visitor’s perspective. No detail is too small to escape their
attention.
Everything
from
the way artifacts and activities are arranged to the printed materials and
another world. Of course, exhibit designers don’t do everything themselves, as talented as they may be. Putting together a major museum exhibit requires teamwork: architects to design the displays, craftspeople to construct them, educational experts to define the content and come up with age-appropriate activities, and graphic designers and artists to make it all look good.
ink? h T u o Y What Duoseum have you
? m What ecently r t s o m ng visited teresti n i t i s i or our v ? Why Was y g n i n i terta and en ot? why n
WOW!
Museums aren’t all about science or history, you know. The most popular type of museum is a zoo!
24
gooFy Jobs
have contracts to create exhibits for a
Go For It If. . .
variety of museums. Museum exhibit designers are limited only by their own creativity. If
Curiosity is the name of your game.
they can imagine something, someone can help them build it—whether
You are allergic to learning.
it’s a pirate ship or a display like the one in London’s Natural History
forget about it If. . .
Museum, where the entrance is filled with the figures of mythical monsters, like Medusa and Cyclops. To reach the main exhibit, guests have
Sometimes they also work with historians, scientists, or other experts
to ride an escalator into the earth itself!
in order to get their facts straight and make the exhibits as realistic as possible. Some
exhibit
designers
work
on the staff of a museum and are responsible for managing a constantly changing stream of exhibits. Others work for design firms that may
Go Online to Find Out More! Visit an online museum and play games at www. childrensmuseum.org/ games/grades_6-8.htm.
M u s e u m E x h i b i t D e s i g n e r 2 5
8 # b y Jo
f o o G
Summer Camp Director
Summer camp directors have a picnic with their campers. Getty Images
Are you one of those kids who can’t
is a big difference between going to
get enough of summer camp? Lazy
camp as a kid and running one as an
days paddling across the lake in a canoe, splashing with friends in the pool, riding horses, practicing archery, taking nature hikes, singing songs around the campfire, roasting marshmallows...Who says you have to give it up when you grow up? Summer camp directors get to go to camp for a living! Of course, there
2
ink? h T u o Y o g ampin What D c n e e orite ve b
fav If you’ s your a w t do a , wh , what t o n before f I d out it? like an d l u o part ab uw ink yo eeping l s t u o you th b most a stars? e dislike h t r e d out un
Goofy Factor Looking like an adult, acting like a kid.
strategies for dealing with homesick kids. Bottom line, the director is the “boss” of the camp, and it’s his or her job to oversee everything that happens and manage everyone who works there. Spending time as a happy camper
adult. When you are a camper, your
is one of the best ways to prepare
number one job is to have fun. When
for being a camp director. That way,
you are a camp director, your number
camp directors know exactly what
one job is to make sure that everyone
a good camping experience is all
else has fun. Shucks. You probably
about. As a matter of fact, many camp
knew there had to be a catch some-
directors started going to camp as
where, didn’t you? But have no fear,
kids, worked as camp counselors as
there’s still a lot of fun to be had as
teens, and grew up to become camp
the fun-maker in chief.
directors as adults. Of course, they
But first, there are a few details to
needed some training and experi-
attend to. The camp director is head
ence along the way. But the “I love
honcho of the entire camp and has to
camping” bug often “bites” at a rather
make sure that everything—and that
young age.
means everything—runs smoothly.
Don’t make the mistake of think-
Everything includes cabin (or tent)
ing that camp directors spend all their
assignments, meals, games, and even
time sitting behind a desk, though.
WOW!
Homesickness is an ailment known to strike many firsttime campers. There’s no fever or barfing involved, but symptoms often include a few tears and a lot of whining. Good thing that most symptoms subside within a couple of days!
s u m m e r C a m p D i re c t o r
2
Nothing could be farther from the
comes to being a camp director,
truth. Look for the fun and listen for
there’s something for everybody. For
the laughs and you’ll usually find the
instance, there are resident camps
director right in the middle of what-
where campers live at the camp for a
ever is causing the ruckus—whether
week or more at a time, often bunk-
it’s a crazy skit, a rousing game of
ing together in cabins. There are also
Capture the Flag, or a joke-filled clos-
day camps where campers come for
ing ceremony.
certain hours during the day and then American
head home to their families (and the
Camp Association, about 10 million
comfort of their own beds) to sleep.
children attend camp each year in
Other camps have themes attached
approximately 12,000 camps nation-
to them, like sports camps, perform-
wide. Which means that, when it
ing arts camps, or science camps.
According
to
the
There are even surf camps out there
Go For It IF. . .
You’d rather be camping than doing just about anything else you can imagine.
Your idea of a camp-out is sleeping in a tent under the dining room table of your nice, comfy house.
ForGet about It IF. . . 28
gooFy Jobs
(though only along the coast—sorry, Oklahoma)! Some camps have more serious themes, like camps for children who have cancer and for those with disabilities. No matter the circumstances, all camp directors work to achieve the same goal: Kids just gotta have fun!
Go Online to Find Out More! go camping online at https://www. gocybercamp.org.
9 # b o J y f Goo
Toy Engineer
Isao Mihara, an engineer from Toshiba Corporation, works with a prototype pet robot at the company’s Corporate Research and Development Center in Japan. Toru Yamanaka/AFP/Getty Images
Plenty of people grow up to become
right? First, someone (like a toy engi-
doctors and lawyers, but only a few
neer!) has to imagine an idea for a
get to be toy engineers. Toy engi-
new toy. The process generally starts
neers make toys for a living. Thanks
something like this: “Wouldn’t it be
to them, being a kid today is more fun
fun if…?” Then they sketch out ideas
than ever before!
of how the toy might look and think
You realize, of course, that toys
through all the ways it might work. If
don’t just pop up out of nowhere to
the idea still sounds good on paper, a
appear on the shelves at Toys “R” Us,
toy engineer might round up some toy
29
Goofy Factor Work time equals play time.
that toy engineers can actually “print” 3-D models of their designs in much the same way that you print out your homework. Next, toy engineers have to figure out what kind of materials to
“experts” to get their opinions. These
use—recycled plastic or stainless
experts are not famous scientists or
steel? Organic cloth or durable clay?
talented designers. Nope. They are
They also have to come up with very
kids who know how to play and can
detailed plans on how the toy will be
spot a fun toy a mile away.
made, put together, and packaged.
Once an idea passes the kid-
This often involves programming
pleasing test, the real work begins.
elaborate machines and even robots
Toy engineers rev their imaginations
to manufacture each piece of the toy
into high gear and start figuring out how to turn that idea into a best-selling toy. Their preliminary sketches are fleshed out into full-fledged designs so that everyone involved in the manufacturing process clearly sees exactly the same thing that the toy engineer envisions. Computers make this part of the job especially interesting now
hink? f T u o Y o o rite toy What D o v a f r cial you
is so spe t i What s e k e magin hat ma i W n a ? l c l a ou e See if y ? u rs wer o e y e n i to g oy en y what t en the h w g thinkin ed it. creat
WOW!
Monopoly is the best-selling game of all time, with more than 100 million copies sold since its invention in 1936. It’s been sold in 80 different countries and translated into 26 different languages, including Braille. 30
gooFy Jobs
Go For It If. . .
You want to always be a kid at heart.
You don’t like to color outside the lines.
forget about it If. . . in a logical way. All this planning, designing, creating, and manufacturing takes a lot of time! It typically
safety. Before a toy can be sold in stores, it must pass some very stringent tests. Only after a toy has been officially approved can it make its way into your toy chest. A sense of fun and a great imagination are great assets for toy engineers, but those aren’t all they need. Toy engineers need to be really good at math and science, and they usually go to college, where they study subjects like engineering, calculus, and (gulp!) physics. The job is kind of like being one of Santa’s elves…with a college degree.
takes a year (or more) for a toy to go from the idea stage to the finished product. One of the biggest challenges a toy engineer faces is making sure that the toy is safe. Toys that hurt children are no fun, which is why there are very strict laws about toy
Go Online to Find Out More! Blast to the past with this look at the history of toys at http://www.history.com/ content/toys.
Toy E n g i n e e r 3 1
10 # b o J y Goof
Video Game Designer have you grumbled that it’s just not fair—you’re having fun, developing quick reflexes, and saving the world, all at the same time! Well, next time she tells you to turn off the game, tell her that you’re training for your future career! Some people get paid to play video games. Of course, they have to design and program the games first, but they still get a paycheck for doing what lots of people would gladly do for free. There’s a lot more to creating video games than you might imagine. Just because video games come in small packages doesn’t mean they aren’t
Legendary Nintendo video game designer Shigeru Miyamoto plays a guitar solo in Wii Music using the Wii Remote at a media briefing. Getty Images
How many times has your mother told you to turn off the video game and come to dinner? How many times
32
ink? , h T u o Y e What oDuor all-time-favoeriot
id is y ing-it v What y a l e p top kes th a m t can’t-s a h hy? W W le? ? e m ga resistib r i o s game
Goofy Factor getting paid to play video games.
with energy and pizzazz. Sound or audio designers create the special effects that make all the fun noises and integrate the character’s voices into the action. Once the creative work is done, the programmers add their high-tech
full of gigantic ideas and humongous
magic to computerize the game. For a
technological ingenuity.
complex game, this can involve writ-
In fact, a good video game is so
ing millions of lines of “code” that tell
complex that it takes many talented
the game what to do when a player
people to make one. Each person
does certain things. When the game
on a video design team is talented
is ready for action, it is turned over to
in different ways. Some designers,
what some gamers consider the luck-
those with the wildest imaginations,
iest person on the team: the video
work as storyboard artists, creating
game tester. It’s this person’s job to
the plot behind the game and fig-
spend hours and hours playing and
uring out the rules. Others work as
mastering the game, identifying any
character artists, giving each char-
glitches and working out any kinks.
acter its unique and consistent iden-
It’s a tough job, but somebody has to
tity. Graphic artists create the cool
do it!
visual look of the game environ-
If all this sounds like a lot of work,
ment, using their talents to infuse it
it’s because it is. Video games can
WOW!
If you like video games, you are in good company. An estimated 72 percent of people in the United States play video games. Look around—that means nearly three out of four people you see are video game fans!
Vi d e o g a m e D e s i g n e3r 3 3 3
Go For It If. . .
You eat, sleep, and even dream video games! You have no idea who Mario and Luigi are.
forget about it If. . .
stake, it’s important to make sure the game is as good as it can get before turning it loose on the video gamer world. So where do video game designers learn how to make best-selling games? School, of course! Did you have any idea that you can actually get a college degree in video game design? How cool is that? It’s just one way to prepare yourself for a spot in the video game industry—an industry that, by the way, is raking in more
take up to three years to develop,
than $31 billion a year!
even with the most talented team on earth working on them. Since there is so much competition out there, only the very best, most creative, totally amazing video games make it to the best-seller lists. With so much at
34 goofy Jobs
Go Online to Find Out More! Play along at http://www.kidscom.com.
More Goofy Jobs Here are some more goofy jobs that
bid prices ranging from a mere $200
will either tickle your funny bone or
to more than a whopping $80 million
make you scratch your head in won-
per item!
der at some of the goofy things people do to make a living.
Auctioneer
Buyers browse through the catalogs and come early to the auction house to take a look at the merchandise. Once the auction starts, hold
Better not scratch your nose at an
on to your hats (and your bidding
auction or you could become the
paddle!), because it’s fast paced and
proud owner of a brand new cow or
exciting. Listen closely, because the
a big box of lightbulbs or—how did
auctioneer talks fast, fast, fast—get-
you get yourself into this mess?—a $1
ting buyers bidding against each
million painting. Auction houses are
other to get the best price, and mov-
where auctioneers sell all kinds of
ing through hundreds of items at
unusual items. It might be livestock,
lightning speed.
such as farm animals. It might be second-hand office furniture or high-
balloon Artist
end luxury cars. In some cases, like
Have you ever been at a birthday
at the famous Christie’s in New York
party and seen a balloon artist twist
City, the auction house may publish
and turn a single balloon into a dog,
catalogs listing some of the finest art
a hat, or even a sword? Have you
and photographs, along with some
ever wondered how they do it? You
fabulous jewelry and collectibles with
can bet it takes a ton of practice and
35
plenty of popped balloons to turn a
want to get the same dining expe-
skinny tube of air into a two-headed
rience that anyone coming into the
dog, giant insect, or pirate hat.
restaurant would enjoy. After all, if ones
the restaurant owners knew that a
who get to have fun with balloons,
food critic would be writing about
although plenty of them keep this skill
them, they would be tempted to roll
up their sleeves. Some people take
out the red carpet and favor the critic
their ballooning so seriously that they
with extra care and better service
do what it takes to become a certi-
than the average customer would
fied balloon artist—earning this cre-
receive.
Clowns
aren’t
the
only
dential requires, among other things, passing a four-hour hands-on test.
It goes without saying that food critics eat very well. With their
Once they learn how to do it, it’s
employer picking up the bill for the
time to bring on the fun—at birthday
meal, there is no need to scrimp. A
parties, festivals, fairs, Christmas par-
typical meal starts with a nice appe-
ties, restaurants, museums, theme
tizer, followed by a lovely salad,
parks, and even zoos! Balloon artists
topped off with a tantalizing main
work any place where people are in
dish—will that be steak or lob-
need of a smile.
ster, ma’am?—and don’t forget the
Food Critic
dessert. Heaven help the restaurant that
Instead of singing for their supper
serves lousy food or provides grumpy
like little Tom Tucker in the popular
service! While a good review can
Mother Goose nursery rhyme, food
turn a new restaurant into an over-
critics write for theirs. They sneak
night success, a bad comment can
into the town’s finest restaurants
ruin one.
and hole-in-the-wall diners looking for delectable stories to report about
golf ball Diver
in newspaper columns or magazine
What happens when a golfer goofs up
articles. Why do they sneak? They
and, instead of landing on the green,
3
gooFy Jobs
his or her ball ends up in a pond? Does
those you see holding signs in high-
the player have to jump in and get it?
way construction zones, play the job
No, thank goodness, the game rules
pretty straight. All they do is stand
don’t add insult to injury with that sort
there and change the sign from
of humiliation. Do specially trained fish
“stop” to “go” depending on the flow
putt it back up to the surface? A golfer
of traffic. Although they may feel
might wish that would happen, but in
kind of goofy standing there all day,
reality the golf ball is a goner. It sits at
their job is fairly serious. After all,
the bottom of the pond, waiting in the
doing it wrong can be hazardous to
murky depths, until an enterprising
drivers’ and construction workers’
golf ball diver hops in to pick it up.
health.
That’s right—golf ball diver. These
But another kind of human sign,
people actually put on wetsuits and
called sign twirlers, is a different
scuba gear and dive into golf course
story. The goofier they act, the better.
ponds to gather lost golf balls. These
Twirling, flipping, twisting, spinning,
ponds tend to be anywhere from 10
tossing,
to 50 feet deep. While some of these
of their antics are designed to get
ponds are pristine little pools of water,
passersby to notice them and bring
others are slimy and dirty, and more
attention to the business they are
than a few are infested with snakes,
advertising. It might be a cell phone
leeches, and even alligators. Despite
store, a sandwich shop, or a going-
the dangers, golf ball divers go after
out-of-business sale, but the sign
the sunken treasure. In this case, the
twirler has one goal, and that’s to
“treasure” is buckets and buckets of
“make ‘em look.” As if all the gyra-
golf balls—as many as 5,000 balls on
tions weren’t goofy enough, some
a good day.
sign twirlers also wear crazy cos-
Human sign Twirler
catching,
bouncing—all
tumes too. It’s a bird! It’s a plane! No, it’s Superman, and he’s pointing
There are human signs and then
to that comic book store across the
there are human signs. Some, like
street!
M o re g o o f y Jo b s
3
Ice Cream Truck Driver
what they say they do. Whether it’s bad breath or b.o. (body odor), experts find
Nothing says summer like the jingle-
ways of “sniffing” out the answers—
jangle of an ice cream truck mak-
literally! Sometimes it involves getting
ing its way through a neighborhood.
up close and personal with the bad
Somehow their drivers seem to know
smell. Just to be clear here, up close
just where to find hot and sweaty
and personal often means taking a
people, and the happy music blaring
sniff of someone’s armpits or getting
from their colorful trucks promises
a good whiff of someone’s breath.
sweet relief. Sun lovers everywhere
By the way, did you know the
know that nothing in the world can
stinkiness in human flatulence is
cool you off like an icy cold Popsicle
mostly caused by hydrogen sulfide?
or a slurpy snow cone.
How did scientists find out this fasci-
Which is why no one is quite as popular as an ice cream truck driver
nating fact? You really don’t want to know!
when summer temperatures start to soar. Whether they show up down the street or at the beach, kids and
sports Mascot Awesome! The home team is win-
adults alike come running with dol-
ning and the crowd is going wild. And
lar bills.
there in the middle of all the mayhem
odor Judge
is a gigantic, furry creature in a team uniform and ball cap stirring every-
Is your deodorant doing its job? Does
one up. Did the new quarterback or
your cat litter live up to its hype? Is your
pitcher forget to shave? No, it’s the
breath really kissably fresh? Only the
team mascot, and “it” is the team’s
nose knows for sure. When it comes
number one fan.
to odor, judges are actually scientists
It’s the mascot’s job to get the
who run experiments to find out if the
crowd cheering, to tease the play-
products their employers sell really do
ers and referees, and to poke good-
38
gooFy Jobs
natured fun at the opposing team.
team mascot often gets as much of a
The job takes a good sense of humor,
workout as the team itself. But being
lots of energy, and all the right moves!
a team mascot is the ultimate job for
Those costumes can get heavy and
sports-loving goof-offs!
very hot, so you can be sure that the
M o re Go o f y Jo b s 3 9
Real People, Goofy Jobs Goofy people or goofy job? Decide for
lenging science experience or all the
yourself when you read about what
gear a kid needs to build some sort
some of these fun-loving people do
of handy gadget (like a digital door
at work.
alarm to keep pesky siblings out of
PeoPle Profile #1: Jim Becker, Book-Plus Producer
your stuff). No matter what the “plus” component is, Becker says his goal is
“Professional Eight-Year-Old.” That’s
always the same: to stop kids from
what the sign outside Jim Becker’s
complaining about being bored! He
office says. Becker’s job is to create
and his staff sit around twice a week
book-plus products for kids, and he
brainstorming ideas for new prod-
says the only way he knows how to do
ucts. The only rule for the process
that is to pretend to be a kid himself.
is that there are no rules. Any idea
So far his plan must be working since
goes, no matter how silly or stupid
his company, Becker and Mayer, cre-
it seems at first. You never know
ates about 100 cool new kid-friendly
when a goofy question like “What if
products a year.
you could play video games in the
Book-plus means that a product includes a book plus some sort of
bathtub?” might lead to a bestselling product.
toy or gizmo that makes the whole
So how did a guy with a col-
thing more fun. Sometimes the
lege degree in biomedical engineer-
plus is stickers or puzzles or paints.
ing end up making toys when he
Sometimes it’s a nifty interactive
was trained to make artificial hearts
format. Still other times it’s a chal-
and kidneys? The answer is simple:
40
He wanted a job where he could be
exhibits opened, Cole didn’t have
creative and think like a kid. Take a
to think twice before saying, “Yes!”
look at Becker’s company Web site
Since then she’s been busy planning,
(ht t p://w w w.becker mayer.com/
creating, and managing awesome
juvenile.html) to find out if he got
new exhibits—rolling out new ones
what he wanted.
every three to six months. One of her favorites so far is called Comic Book
People Profile #2: Sarah Cole, Manager of Special and Temporary Exhibits
tion of over 19,000 comic books (bet
No one ever told Sarah Cole that she
worn by actor Christopher Reeve in
could work in a museum when she
the Superman movie, and the Batmo-
grew up. The idea never occurred to
bile from the latest Batman. One of the
her, even though she started playing
perks of being in charge of the exhibit
in the children’s museum she now
was helping drive Batman’s “ride” into
works in when she was only two
the museum—even though she had
years old. She actually went to col-
to do it at 4:00 in the morning (yawn!)
lege to get a degree in biology. It just
so that the streets and museum were
so happened that the Indianapolis
empty of cars and people.
Heroes. The exhibit featured a collecthat’s more than you have!), the cape
Children’s Museum needed someone
“Fun,” “fast-paced,” “fresh,” and
to work part time in their science
“exciting” are words Cole uses to
gallery at the same time that Cole
describe her work. She says it gives
needed a job. She says it was a clas-
her a chance to meet amazing peo-
sic case of being in the right place at
ple—like the MI6 agent she met when
the right time but is really glad that
putting together a spy exhibit and the
she stumbled into this type of work.
underwater explorer she met when
For a few years she enjoyed pro-
organizing an exhibit about maps.
viding informal science education
She also says it’s the perfect job for
experiences for kids. But when an
people who like to learn or, as Cole
opportunity to move up to work with
puts it, “Discovery Channel people.”
R e a l Pe o p l e , Go o f y Jo b s 4 1
toon characters. As it turns out, the
People Profile #3: Paul Friedrich, Cartoonist
paintings became very popular and
All his life people told Paul Friedrich
Friedrich is known for his colorful and
it couldn’t be done. In middle school,
quirky art featuring his most famous
when he told his home-ec teacher
character, Onion Head Monster.
are now widely collected. These days,
that he wanted to be a cartoonist
But Friedrich is getting the last
when he grew up, she told him to
laugh about achieving his other goals
“face reality” and asked him what he
as well. He has published several
was really going to do. In college, his
books and magazines. He even got
art professors told him that cartoons
his wish for his own comic strip, con-
weren’t a valid art form, that there
tributing lots of laughs to an alterna-
was no future in cartoons, and that
tive newspaper called The Spectator
trying to become a cartoonist was a
for nine years.
waste of Friedrich’s talent. Ouch! to pursue his lifelong ambition to
People Profile #4: Brett Roberts, Comedian
become a cartoonist. And guess
When people grow up, they usually
what? His teachers and professors
pick a job that already exists—doc-
were wrong!
tor, lawyer, teacher, and the like. Not
Friedrich disagreed and decided
Friedrich’s approach to making a
Brett Roberts. He made his up. First
living as a cartoonist is as creative as
he looked for clues about the kind of
his art. He graduated from college with
job he might like.
two goals in mind. One was to publish
Hmmm…
comic books and cartoon magazines.
He had always enjoyed theatre.
The other was to do a comic strip for
And he had been interested enough
a newspaper. Realizing that he wasn’t
in child development to earn a col-
likely to get rich quick with either of
lege degree in it. Then he noticed that
these pursuits, he made money by
there were comedians and there were
selling paintings based on his car-
kids’ entertainers, but nobody had put
42 goofy Jobs
the two together to be a kids’ come-
And to think all this would have
dian. Aha! That was exactly what he
never happened if it weren’t for Ker-
wanted to do! Now Roberts is one of
mit the Frog.
only a handful of kid’s comedians in the entire world.
Roberts explains that a childhood encounter with the famous Mup-
The short supply of kids’ comedi-
pet changed his life forever. It was
ans must explain why Roberts is so
when Roberts was in the fifth grade
busy. Roberts estimates that he does
and happened to watch The Mup-
more than 300 shows a year. Some-
pet Movie. In the film, Kermit rode
times he does as many as 12 shows a
a bicycle and Roberts couldn’t help
day. Other days he stays at home all
but wonder how that was possible.
day and sleeps! He performs at fairs
He eventually found out that the
and festivals as well as at schools
producers used a radio-controlled
and libraries. Sometimes he is the
Kermit to do the stunt. Even so, he
only “act,” and sometimes he works
was hooked for good on using pup-
with other performers like magicians,
pets and humor to entertain—and to
puppeteers, and other children’s per-
educate—children.
formers as part of a big show.
R e a l Pe o p l e , Go o f y Jo b s 4 3
Goofy Job Playground You’ve read about goofy jobs that
do you think? Could you do it? Would
other people do. Here’s your chance to
you dare? (Oh, and by the way, if this
play around with the idea of having a
book doesn’t belong to you, please
goofy job yourself someday. So what
use a separate sheet of paper.)
Watch out, goofy Job, Here I Come First, imagine that you’re all grown up and ready to tackle a goofy career…
Would you Do It? Candy Maker Cartoonist Clown Comedian Cruise Director Magician Museum exhibit Designer Summer Camp Director Toy engineer Video Game Designer
44
Can’t Wait to Try It someday!
Maybe—If I Ever get The Nerve!
Not A Chance!
Mirror, Mirror on the Wall…
What’s your idea of a totally goofy
Which of these jobs is goofiest of
job? Can you invent one so absolutely
them all?
hilarious that people everywhere will
t Auctioneer
laugh their heads off when they read
t Balloon Artist
about it?
Pretend that a comedy magazine
t Food Critic t Golf Ball Diver t Human Sign Twirler t Ice Cream Truck Driver t Odor Judge t Sports Mascot
Help Wanted: GoofOff for a Goofy Job
Hot Off the Press!
thinks your job is so funny that they want to feature you on the front cover. They ask you to write a short story about what you do. Include lots of behind-the-scenes information, and don’t forget to include some of your best jokes!
One More Thing…
Take your pick of the goofy jobs listed
Here’s some room to list any good
above and pretend that you’ve been
books or interesting Web sites you
named king or queen of fun and
find to further explore goofy job
need to find someone to help you out.
ideas. You can use a search engine
Quick, make up an ad that will get the
like http://kids.yahoo.com to search
goof-offs laughing all the way to your
for information by typing in the name
employment office! Be sure to weed
of a career you’d like to know more
out the wannabes from the real thing
about. Or ask your school media spe-
by emphasizing the special “talents”
cialist or librarian for help in finding
it takes to get the job done.
some books.
Go o f y Jo b P l ay g ro u n d 4 5
Index Note: Bold page numbers indicate a photo.
A
animator 8–10 artists balloon artist 35–36 cartoonist 8–10, 42 game designer 33 auctioneer 35
B
balloon artist 35–36 Becker, Jim 40–41
C
camp director 26–28 captain, cruise 17–19 career selection 44–45 cartoonist 8–10, 42 children. See kids, jobs about chocolate maker 5–7 circus clown 11–13, 36 code writer 33 Cole, Sarah 41 comedian 14–16, 42–43 coulrophobia 12
D
designers exhibit designer 23–25, 41 video game designer 32–34
4
Disney, Walt 9 Donells Candies 5
e education. See training engineer, toy 29–31, 40–41 event planners camp director 27–28 cruise director 17–18 exhibit designer 23–25, 41
f
food jobs candy maker 5–7 critic 36 ice cream truck driver 38 Friedrich, Paul 42
G
game designer 32–34 golf ball diver 37 graphic artist 33 Groening, Matt 8
H
Houdini, Harry 21
i
ice cream truck driver 38 illustrator, cartoon 9–10, 42
J
joke teller 14–16, 42–43
K
R
Roberts, Brett 42–43 robot programmer 30–31
kids, jobs about balloon artist 35–36 camp director 26–28 cartoonist 8–10, 42 circus clown 11–13, 36 comedian 42–43 exhibit designer 23–25, 41 game designer 32–24 ice cream truck driver 38 magician 20–22 toymaker 29–31, 40–41
S
M
team mascot 38–39 technology game designer 33 toy engineer 30, 40 toymaker 29–31, 40–41 training balloon artist 36 cartoonist 42 clown 12–13 comedian 42–43 exhibit designer 41 game designer 34 magician 21–22 toy engineer 31, 40–41 tricks, magic 20–22 truck driver, ice cream 38 TV cartoonist 8–10
mascot, sports 38–39 Miyamoto, Shigeru 32 The Muppet Movie 43 museum educator 41
N
Nintendo designer 32 nose, professional 38
O
odor judge 38
P
performers balloon artist 35–36 clown 11–13 comedian 14–16, 42–43 magician 20–22 sign twirler 36–37 sports mascot 38–39 Popovich, Gregory 14 puppeteer 43
scientists exhibit designer 23–25, 41 toy engineer 29–31, 40–41 ship worker 17–19 sign twirler 36–37 The Simpsons 8 special effects, creating 33 sports mascot 38–39 storyboard artist 33
T
W
writers cartoonist 42 code writer 33 food critic 36
I n d e x 47