The 'Bla Bla Bla' E-Mail Heard Around the World

Collapse

Recommended Videos

Collapse
X
 
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • Skins4Life
    MVP
    • Jul 2002
    • 2286

    #1

    The 'Bla Bla Bla' E-Mail Heard Around the World





    (Feb. 19) - Two weeks ago, newly minted young Boston attorney Dianna Abdala e-mailed a prospective employer, William Korman.


    "The pay you are offering would neither fulfill me nor support the lifestyle I am living," she wrote, turning down his job offer.
    Korman was not happy.


    "You had two interviews, were offered and accepted the job (indeed, you had a definite start date)."


    He'd already ordered her stationery and business cards, and set up her office computer and was amazed she conveyed her second thoughts by e-mail.


    "It smacks of immaturity and is quite unprofessional," he wrote.
    Abdala's response? "A real lawyer would have put the contract into writing and not exercised any such reliance until he did so," she wrote.


    "This is a very small legal community," Korman responded. "Do you really want to start pissing off more experienced lawyers at this early stage of your career?"


    Abdala finally answered, "Bla bla bla."


    An ordinary office spat? Nope. Korman forwarded the exchange to a friend … and it spread throughout the Boston legal community -- and then to the Boston Globe, to the International Herald Tribune, to ABC News' "Nightline."


    It was the "bla bla bla" heard round the world -- making Abdala the most famous, perhaps notorious, 24-year-old lawyer in America.

    E-Mail Gaffes


    E-mail never has been more immediate, intimate and indelible -- whether FEMA director Michael Brown's e-mail jokes during Hurricane Katrina about being "a fashion god"; or disgraced lobbyist Jack Abramoff e-mailing about his clients, "These mofos are the stupidest idiots in the land"; or the executive of the drug company that made the banned weight-loss treatment Phen-Fen e-mailing, "Do I have to look forward to spending my waning years writing checks to fat people worried about a silly lung problem?"


    Earlier this week in congressional hearings about Katrina, it came out that neither Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff nor Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld use email.


    Our first response? Smart men.
  • HealyMonster
    Titans Era has begun.
    • Aug 2002
    • 5992

    #2
    Re: The 'Bla Bla Bla' E-Mail Heard Around the World

    has this helped her or hurt her. you would think shed be tossed to the side, but it sounds like the publicity isnt all that bad.

    Comment

    • Skins4Life
      MVP
      • Jul 2002
      • 2286

      #3
      Re: The 'Bla Bla Bla' E-Mail Heard Around the World

      Originally posted by Renegade44
      has this helped her or hurt her. you would think shed be tossed to the side, but it sounds like the publicity isnt all that bad.

      Personally I think it hurts her.

      I can only imagine that she is going to be blacklisted from every law office in the United States, or damn close to all of them

      Comment

      • Herbsinator
        All Star
        • Sep 2003
        • 4573

        #4
        Re: The 'Bla Bla Bla' E-Mail Heard Around the World

        how is this news?

        Comment

        • Fresh Tendrils
          Strike Hard and Fade Away
          • Jul 2002
          • 36131

          #5
          Re: The 'Bla Bla Bla' E-Mail Heard Around the World

          Originally posted by Herbsinator
          how is this news?
          Stop asking questions.



          Comment

          Working...