• Potatos_are_not_friends@lemmy.world
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    5
    arrow-down
    2
    ·
    edit-2
    6 months ago

    I’m kinda mixed about this. Not against drag queens. But just at work entertainment in general.

    If a company hired a bunch of comedian podcasters who lean hard into anti-woke territory, I’d be pretty peeved. I wouldn’t attend, but I’d be annoyed that company dollars went to that.

    I went to a workplace event at the shooting range and remember the vegans being pissed at the idea we can shoot photos of animals. Totally understand their perspective.

    And another time, I went to a work event where the main event was to watch classic cowboy movies and I noped because those movies bore me.

    Not really sure of the answer. Maybe workplace events are just impossible to satisfy anybody.

    • CharlesDarwin@lemmy.world
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      2
      ·
      6 months ago

      Agreed. We’ve had lots of “team building” types of things that might have otherwise been fun (and mostly were), but ours always get turned into something super-competitive. It can’t be just “get out and do something as a group”, it has to have a set of winners. So our activities always get skewed to something like that. So the actual activity is the very opposite of “team building”.

      But I guess thing is that the very idea of a “team” at work is total bullshit anyway, at least as far as any company I’ve ever worked for. Ever notice people don’t get compensated as a team? Hell, people don’t even know how others are compensated and if the “team” has a success, it’s not usually as if they all share in the rewards equally, or even merit-based. It’s all gut-feel, combined with who has what title, no matter how much time/effort someone puts in. So someone who was only just added to a “team” weeks before a major initiative is finished gets showered with praise, money, benefits - if they are an executive or at least have the right title/relationship with people making such decisions.

      I think workplace events (or offsite ones) just tend to annoy nearly everyone in the actual trenches, if you want to be honest. Add in something that is political in nature and I think it only gets worse.