film profile], offering up a dystopian journey through an all-too-real world where working for free is becoming common currency. What lurks behind the obscure word “intern”? What sacrifices must be made by a young person getting started in the world of work and categorising themselves in this way? But above all, can we really describe an unpaid job (because a job it is) which drives many young people into a difficult-to-escape state of precariousness as ethical and respectful of human rights? Through his own personal experience, as documented by Nathalie Berger, and that of other interns who have come close to losing everything, Leo David Hyde guides us through the ins and outs of a parallel universe to which only the lucky few have access.
film profile], offering up a dystopian journey through an all-too-real world where working for free is becoming common currency. What lurks behind the obscure word “intern”? What sacrifices must be made by a young person getting started in the world of work and categorising themselves in this way? But above all, can we really describe an unpaid job (because a job it is) which drives many young people into a difficult-to-escape state of precariousness as ethical and respectful of human rights? Through his own personal experience, as documented by Nathalie Berger, and that of other interns who have come close to losing everything, Leo David Hyde guides us through the ins and outs of a parallel universe to which only the lucky few have access.