Pandora Young is a super-skinny
17year old. At 5ft 8in tall she looks almost anorexic and yet is one of those
teens who can stuff vast amounts of all-you-can-eat into their mouths without
gaining an iota of fat. This instantly makes some of the larger ‘constantly-on-a-diet’
women in our office hate her.
Their jealousy soon
dissolves when they realise that Pandora, or Panda as she likes to be known is completely
bat-shit crazy. A whirlwind in her own right Panda has more colours of mood
than a psychedelic rainbow. She possesses a shorter attention span than a kid
with ADD on a sugar and caffeine rush, less common sense than a schizophrenic
on LSD and all the subtly of a badly aimed brick.
In fact the only way we
could get her to stand still to capture an inexpressive pose was to lie and pretend
we were shooting an advert or modelling campaign. Thankfully one blank sash was
sufficient enough to convince her we were professional agency scouts. We had
prepared a lie and decided to tell her that our non-existent logo would be
added to the sash after processing but she never questioned the fact that it
was blank.
Needless to say then that
Panda loves to pose and heartily indorses her daddies shoe company. She works
in advertising and has written a book about shoes called ‘extended wardrobatics.’ It dismays us that any reputable publisher
would allow such a thing to print but realise that the amount of money her daddy
offered was probably too good to refuse.
In the seconds it took
anyone to process that thought Panda got distracted and dashed off to change
outfit. She returned all silly grins girlish twirls and spiky pigtails with a
different hair colour. We wanted to ask how she managed to switch the colour so
swiftly but before anyone could utter a word the girl went off on another
random tangent. This is also about the
point our employees switched off and stopped making notes.
To summarise the notes
made, Panda is energetic, excitable, fun and friendly but also extremely
forgetful, most of her thoughts evaporate in seconds. She is rather manic, a
nice but nuts persona who although mad as a box of frogs does mean well. Panda
is completely indecisive and utterly annoying. Her short attention span and
lack of any sentient memory means she finds it particularly hard to retain
information. We mean ANY information, its fairly frustrating to try and create
a portrait whilst the subject keeps asking for the water fountain, then forgets
where it is, or where she is, then laughs and sits and stands and sits and
finally asks again, ‘where is the water fountain?’ I think a few employees went
home to drink themselves into normality after meeting her.
We’ve had so many
miserable, dead-pan and cold-fish occasions with other interviewees that we
never dreamed we’d revere those moments. Honestly, there is no way to shut this
girl up.
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