January 26, 2012

Employee spotlight - Taylor Rea

Taylor Rea is a writer and data quality specialist and has been with the Eventful family for close to a year now. He attended California State University Long Beach where he threatened numerous administrators until they gave him his degree. He enjoys stale movie popcorn and long, romantic walks in bad neighborhoods. Another interesting tidbit about Taylor is that he also reviews restaurants, bars, and clubs in his spare time. To let all of our users and customers know a little bit more about the people that work here, we decided to ask him a few questions about his side gig.

Taylor Rea

e: Hey, Taylor! How have you been? Did you get that little medical problem you were experiencing cleared up?

Taylor Rea: This isn't going to be a part of the real interview, is it?

e: No way! I'm actually concerned.

TR: Then no.

e: Well your boyish charm and good looks more than make up for it. Let's just get down to the nitty gritty: what kind of places do you normally review?

TR: I've reviewed a number of restaurants in San Diego, mostly in the historic Gaslamp Quarter, but I've also reviewed some bars, clubs, restaurants, and casinos in Las Vegas.

e: Wow, Las Vegas; that must've been fun! I bet some of the bars and clubs there get pretty crazy, especially when you're on the job.

TR: Well, I'm not sure if you should put this in the interview, but part of that assignment was to review a majority of the gentlemen’s clubs in town. I had never really been to a strip club before, so it was an interesting experience. Some places were super laid back and welcoming, while others were wretched hives of scum and villainy that treated their employees like crap. I usually ended up just having drinks with the girls that worked there and learned a lot about the industry. By the end of the trip, I realized that strippers are really just normal people trying to make a living with unique jobs that a majority of society has put a negative label on. This isn't going in the interview either, right?

e: Don't worry about it. It sounds like you're a consummate professional with nothing to be ashamed of -- probably. So what's reviewing restaurants like?

TR: It's pretty amazing! You will never have a more pampered and delicious dining experience than when a chef and their restaurant staff are trying to impress you. I usually bring a friend and end up sampling the place's five most popular dishes, drinking some signature cocktails or other drinks, and interviewing the head chef. I spend more time writing than I do eating, so it takes a couple of hours.

e: That sounds delicious! Maybe you could bring me along with you on your next review.

TR: Uhhhhhhh…

e: Fine. Be that way. What's your main goal when you're conducting and writing these reviews?

TR: It's all about enticing people to visit the restaurant, so I try to paint a picture with words of what the restaurant is like: what colors and decorations are on the walls, how friendly the staff is, and even what the tables look like. If people can imagine the surroundings, then they get more excited about going. It's the same with the food. If you can describe the texture of the food and what different flavors are combining and mixing, then I think people can actually taste the food a bit while reading the review. Sensory adjectives and descriptions are a big part of that.

e: That sounds great, Taylor. I'm sure that the same excellent writing you do for these reviews shines through in your artist and venue profiles on Eventful, as well as your work on The Reel Buzz emails.

TR: Thanks, but I'm just a simple yet ruggedly handsome man doing what he can to make a living.

e: So modest.

Well, that's it for the Taylor edition of Eventful family spotlights. But check back soon to see some of the interesting stuff that other Eventful people do outside of the office.

Posted by wil at 03:10 PM | Comments (0)

January 19, 2012

Eventful Serves More Than Events

Members of the Eventful staff rolled up their sleeves and decided to give back to the community that’s already been so good to us! We got our best planners, our best cooks and our best filler-inners and headed to the Ronald McDonald House.

little vs lot
There were some differing opinions as to the quantities we should cook

We knew that it was our civic duty to donate our time to those in need. But, what was the perfect cause? After some brainstorming on ideas for volunteer work, we decided a great way for us to help would be to serve dinner for children and their families who were staying at the San Diego home while they received treatment. We planned a dinner menu (containing food groups from EACH category of the food pyramid), went shopping and showed up to Ronny McD’s prepared to delight some palates.

Cat
This is about 1/100 of the fried rice that Cat made

Little did we know that there would be more than 180 palates that needed delighting that night!

nose
They asked us to not eat any of the food while cooking – no one knew why

No matter! The more hungry people to show, the more good we can serve up. PLUS there were a few dishes that ran no risk of running out. Bring it on, Ronald!

oranges
Nothing like some home-cooked oranges

water
Or some home-distilled water

The plan was to arrive early – dinner was at 7 o’clock sharp – so we’d have time to get a feel for the kitchen and find out what each of our strengths were. Turns out that we had more people that qualified for the dishwasher role than for that of the cooks.

erin
We put our more serious chefs on the grill

robert
While others of us were given more menial tasks

But, we made do. Each person was assigned a valuable role in the event. There were dicers, slicers, timers, flippers, peelers. Each person was assigned a task. And once that task was complete, an Eventful-ier with actual cooking experience came through and redid the task - but correctly this time. Well-oiled machine. Us.

onions
Crybabies

The line of hungry customers was starting to grow and we were still putting the finishing touches on the meal. There was talk of doing a song-and-dance routine to stall the crowd. The rest of us took a step back when one volunteer claimed to have some knife-juggling experience.

group
Believe it or not, there can be too many filler-inners

Thankfully no flying cleavers were needed. Right at the buzzer, the meal came together and we were ready to serve!

serve
Assembly line via Eventful, Inc

sign
Don’t forget about the oranges and water!

By the time the night was finished, we were all completely wiped out and just shy of 190 people walked away with their hunger satisfied. And we got GREAT reviews for our efforts.

“Best hospital meal I’ve ever had today!” – Anonymous diner

“Is Eventful.com a cooking website? It should be.” – Anonymous diner

“Sure beats a gas station burrito.” – Anonymous diner

All joking aside, all of the “Thanks!” that we received were completely unnecessary. The reason we worked as hard as we did to prepare and serve a delicious and nutritious meal was to make peoples’ lives just a little bit easier during such a hard time. It’s like the old saying goes: A good deed is its own dessert.

jimmy
“These cookies are for dessert. That cookie fell on the floor.”

Posted by wil at 05:22 PM | Comments (0)