The world's worst assistant

Sona Movsesian

Book - 2022

"From Conan O'Brien's longtime assistant and cohost of his podcast, Conan O'Brien Needs a Friend, a completely hilarious and irreverent how-to guide for becoming a terrible, yet unfireable employee, and getting away with doing the bare minimum at work"--

Saved in:

2nd Floor Show me where

791.45028092/Movsesian
1 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor 791.45028092/Movsesian Checked In
Subjects
Genres
Autobiographies
Biographies
Humor
Published
New York : Plume [2022]
Language
English
Main Author
Sona Movsesian (author)
Other Authors
Conan O'Brien (writer of foreword)
Physical Description
xiv, 254 pages, 16 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations (some color) ; 22 cm
ISBN
9780593185513
  • Foreword / by Conan O'Brien
  • Introduction
  • Effort
  • Professionalism
  • Authority
  • Stress
  • Epilogue.
Review by Booklist Review

Movsesian became Conan O'Brien's executive assistant when she was 26, extremely driven, and eager to manifest a fruitful career in the entertainment industry. She hit it off with Conan and shot for the moon. Somewhere along the way, though, Movsesian realized that life isn't all about the hustle and grind. She had a good job working for a boss whom she respected and genuinely enjoyed being around--so she stopped trying so hard all the time. In letting go, Movsesian discovered space for enjoyment and relaxation. By the time she reached her thirties, she was enthusiastically napping at work and confidently failing to complete tasks. But her fierce loyalty and kindness toward O'Brien never wavered. This book is a hilarious memoir of a Hollywood insider. It's also a galvanizing permission slip to stop sweating the small stuff, encouraging readers to approach work with abundant perspective. Movsesian and her boss share a droll rapport and their anecdotes are a gas to read, a testament to the success of the "world's worst assistant."

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Movsesian debuts with a hilarious look at the past 13 years she's spent "not great at my job" as comedian Conan O'Brien's personal assistant. As O'Brien succinctly puts it in the book's foreword, when the two began working together in 2009, "Sona had the capacity to be 'terrible,' but she needed... a boss so outrageous, childish, and nonsensical that together we could create an insane dynamic." Oscillating between raunchy remarks and self-deprecating wit, Movsesian's narrative brings that unique partnership to life on the page. Among entertaining tales of misadventures on golf carts, starstruck introductions to former presidents, incognito stalkings, and murder fantasies, her narrative offers a refreshing departure from the traditional assistant horror stories of pleasing a tyrant boss who, Movsesian writes, "won't take kindly to your refusal to not eat shit." Indeed, many of her recollections exemplify Conan's good-natured capacity to find humor in train wreck scenarios--often caused by her knack for forgetting his requests (her mantra: "It'll come to me eventually"). Movsesian also doesn't hold back in disclosing embarrassing personal experiences (like the time she dated a guy "who forgot my name in the middle of the date"), acknowledging that, despite the discomfort they've brought her, they've provided great material for her boss. Brimming with heart and humor, this story of failing upward is a hoot. (July)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

In this career memoir, Movsesian (the long-time assistant to comedian Conan O'Brien, and co-host of his podcast Conan O'Brien Needs a Friend) wonders, "Am I the World's Worst Assistant because I'm terrible at my job, or do I hold that title because I chose to reject every preconceived notion of what it means to be someone's assistant?" "If you bought this book specifically for the foreword [written by O'Brien], I don't blame you," she tells readers. "Perhaps what has kept me employed all these years has been that I'm an endless well of material." That being said, Movsesian endearingly pulls her own comedic weight in this narrative, whether she's attempting to break Robert De Niro's assistant's record for the number of Friends episodes binge-watched in four days while at work (55), stalking Leonardo DiCaprio at a gala, or getting O'Brien's children stuck in a hole on a golf cart on the Warner Bros. backlot. But Movsesian truly shines when she discusses her Armenian heritage, her dating life, and winning a college national speech championship. VERDICT Conan O'Brien fans will find much to love here.--Denise Miller

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Conan O'Brien's longtime personal assistant dishes on the career she never saw coming. Growing up, Movsesian couldn't get enough TV, from Sesame Street and Mister Rogers to TGIF programming on ABC. "I eventually made it to HBO," she writes, "and from there, any dreams of a more 'productive' hobby were over." After an adolescence spent egging houses and not doing homework, she decided her future was in TV. While a student at USC, Movsesian was hired as an alternative programming intern at NBC without knowing "what the fuck" the job entailed. That experience gave the author her first, most invaluable lesson about work: "Never ask questions and always pretend like you know what you're doing." She also learned that bosses mistreating their employees was the norm. "I've seen people mistreat others because they themselves were mistreated," she writes, "and think it's a rite of passage to treat someone like garbage." At age 26, when a random joke landed her a job as Conan O'Brien's personal assistant, everything changed, and their mutual "juvenile tendencies" began to feed off each other. As he made fun of her and her unadulterated lust for junk food, Movsesian struck back. O'Brien recalls that she retaliated with "ingenious time-sucking distractions"--like watching TV and napping at work--that revealed her "unquenchable thirst to stick it to The Man," which, in this case, was O'Brien himself. Nonetheless, as he reveals in the foreword, even though he calls Movsesian the "World's Worst Assistant," he also praises her as "one of the most honest and really caring people I know." This lighthearted, often amusing book, which also includes black-and-white line-drawn comics, will have greatest appeal to fans of Movsesian (who has appeared on several of Conan's shows, including a special filmed in her ancestral Armenia) and of Conan himself. Playfully surreal reading about the comedy of human foibles. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Effort In this chapter we're going to explore the idea of "effort." What you put into your job can dictate how much you get out of it. So what happens when you put in just enough, but not too much? When I was first hired, Conan was still in New York in his final season of Late Night with Conan O'Brien. I started working for him in the beginning of January of 2009, but he wouldn't wrap up the show until February. He eventually moved to California in March of that year, and I spent my first three months as his assistant working remotely. I remember finding an empty office at NBC and taking meticulous notes for the ways I could help him and his family transition their lives from New York to California. The day after I got word that I'd be working for Conan, I met him at a Peet's Coffee in Brentwood with a booklet about Los Angeles that I made myself and a notepad to take notes. I handed the booklet to Conan at our meeting-a lifelong Angeleno handing over all her knowledge to the new kid in town. It was so important to me to make a good impression that I'd spent all day fastidiously putting together essential information about Los Angeles, and then took it to Kinko's to get it laminated and bound. Conan had lived in Los Angeles sixteen years prior, but I thought it would be good to show him how I would go the extra mile. During our coffee meeting, I remember telling Conan that I wanted to work on something that inspired me and that I was proud to be a part of. His humility and decency were what really struck me. Right after I left, I met up with my brother and sister-in-law at a restaurant in Toluca Lake, and I was noticeably shaken. I'd known that taking this job would change my life forever, but I hadn't realized how nice of a person Conan would be. That first meeting made me want to work harder for him. A couple days after I got the job, Conan's wife, Liza, wrote me the nicest email introducing herself and telling me a little about their family and sent me a photo of their kids, Neve and Beckett, who at the time were five and three. I have to admit that before I got to know Conan and his lovely wife a little better, I had been most worried about Liza. Was she going to be a trophy wife who would abuse me or be stereotypically awful? Was she going to yell at me if I forgot to tell her about a change in Conan's travel itinerary? Would I be asked to pick up her dry cleaning in the middle of a workday? What I learned very quickly was that Liza is not only brilliant and kind and decent, but also my most important ally. She became a sounding board whenever I felt like I was having a tough time with Conan. I often say that my favorite thing about Conan is Liza, and that is a sentiment that only gets truer as time goes on. So why am I saying all this sappy stuff? Because when I first got my job, I wanted to do the best I could. I needed to make sure that this very nice man and his wonderful wife were happy. I was now a part of their lives. Assistants get close to the people they work for, and I knew that over time, the O'Briens would become very important figures in my life. I was right about that. Reminiscing about those early days-back in a time when I enthusiastically went to Kinko's to bind and laminate a homemade booklet in hopes of being helpful-it's hard to say when my relationship with Conan went from being professional to the dysfunctional mess it is now. It could've been when, three months into my job, I was speaking Armenian on the phone with my grandmother and Conan asked if I was arguing with Dracula. It also could've been a year later, when he told Rolling Stone magazine that I floated to this country in a basket while my father was in the midst of a goat attack on the island of Armenia (I was born in Los Angeles, my father is not a goat herder, and Armenia is landlocked). All I know is that something happened, or gradually happened, to make me go from the girl who makes booklets to the girl who occasionally slips a marijuana edible into her lunch. Conan became the second older brother I never wanted. The dynamic shifted, and so did my work ethic. I'm happy to take most of the blame for my gradual decline in any willingness to work. But doesn't my boss deserve some credit? Wouldn't the World's Worst Assistant need to be enabled by the World's Worst Boss? Neve and Beckett used to always say that Conan melted half my brain. When asked what happened to the other half, they would say that other half was already melted before I met him. I have never heard a better description of me. Am I proud of what I've become? Yes. I get paid to do the bare minimum. Is this where I saw myself ? No. But then again, everything I've been fortunate enough to experience has been a pleasant surprise. Would I try harder at another job? Yes, without a doubt. So when Conan retires, please hire me. Until then, I will proudly take my place on the Mount Rushmore of terrible assistants . . . alone. I know there are other bad assistants out there-I'm sure of it-but I refuse to share my title as the worst in the world. The One When I Binged Friends We all have heroes. In 2009, a young boy from Singapore named Joseph Schooling met his hero Michael Phelps. Seven years later, Schooling would beat Phelps at the 2016 Rio Olympics in the 100-meter butterfly. Naomi Osaka grew up in Long Island, New York, idolizing Serena Williams. At twenty, she would compete against Williams in the US Open and win. When I heard Robert De Niro was suing his former assistant for, among many other things, watching fifty-five episodes of Friends in four days while at work, I can only imagine I felt the same thing Schooling and Osaka felt when they first saw their heroes excel . . . Fifty-five episodes? In four days? While at work? I had never been so in awe of anyone. A small piece of me thought, "Fifty-five episodes? I could do better than that." Luckily, one of our writers thought that it was an excellent idea that I should devote my week to beating De Niro's assistant's record. Each episode of Friends is about twenty-two to twenty-three minutes long. To watch fifty-five episodes, you'd have to allot 1,265 minutes of your life, or a little over twenty-one hours. To watch fifty-five episodes, you'd have to watch about 5.5 hours of Friends per day for four days straight. To make things even more difficult, my workday starts at 10 a.m., and I would have until we taped at 4:30 p.m. to watch as many episodes as possible. That's 6.5 hours of time I had to watch 5.5 hours of TV just to keep up with De Niro's assistant. I cracked my knuckles and got to work. For four days, I binged. I laughed. I cried. I started forcing my friends to meet me in coffee shops. I would move sofas with unwilling pals just so I could yell "Pivot!" I stopped giving the middle finger and started pounding my fists together. I became the living embodiment of Friends. At the end of the four-day timeline, I had watched fifty-eight episodes. Like a motherfucking champion. As a gift from Conan for beating De Niro's assistant's record, I got all fifty-eight episodes I watched on VHS, a basket full of marijuana edibles, and six puppies named after each of the main characters on Friends. I guess I should rewind a bit and explain how I became so brazen about watching TV at work. When I first started interning at NBC, I noticed that everybody who worked there had a TV either at their desk or in their office. When working in television, wouldn't it make sense to have a television at your disposal? It's there to watch the shows you're working on-to watch edits of various episodes and keep up with the content you're distributing globally. It's also to keep up with whatever is going on in the world. Is someone from a show you're working on stopping by The View? Then you should watch the interview on your TV. Is Extra going to do a special segment on the show you're adapting from a popular novel? Then here's your TV to stay in the know. Somewhere down the line, I noticed no one ever cared what you were watching. It's not like they could keep up with how every show was being promoted, and they could never say something you were watching wasn't pertinent to your job because no one ever really knew, so I made it a habit to have the TV on all the time. When I was the events and operations coordinator, my desk was in the common area in the middle of all these offices, and the TV I watched was affixed to the wall. That's when I learned I could watch Jerry Springer every day at a very high volume. I can't imagine how annoying it was to everyone I worked with, and I'm shocked no one ever said anything about it. I do remember a lot of the office doors remained closed throughout the entire day, and now I wonder if my regularly scheduled programming might have had something to do with it. Regardless, passively watching television for work eventually became just watching television because it's there. And that's how they thought of me for this segment-through my brazen and widely known disregard for office etiquette and my unapologetic attitude toward watching TV at work. Anyway, the day after I beat the Friends binging record, I forced Jeff Ross's assistant, David Hopping, to come with me to all the locations on the Warner Bros. lot where they shot Friends. The following week, I took all the photos and footage I shot visiting the locations on the lot and edited a movie in iMovie with the Friends theme as the background music. I uploaded it to Instagram, but it was taken down within five minutes because of copyright infringement. The locations were fine, but I couldn't use the theme song. So I enlisted David again, this time asking him to drop everything he was doing so we could figure out a way to get around the copyright infringement issues with the theme song. I decided the best thing to do would be to sing it myself with David as the backup (the "clapper"). How much time did I waste? We already know that from Monday to Thursday, I watched almost twenty-three hours of television. We spent about five hours on Friday going to all the locations on the Warner Bros. lot. I spent another two hours editing the video and another hour dealing with the Friends copyright infringement debacle on Instagram. All in all, I calculate thirty-one hours of my workweek were completely wasted on this Friends binge challenge. Additionally, if you factor in the breaks I take for the bathroom and lunch and doing the crossword puzzle and socializing, then I'm actually in overtime. I got paid my regular work salary, plus overtime, plus appearance fees for the show, so I made a nice profit from watching TV at work and doing no real work. Plus, I stole David away for a few hours to help me with the photo shoot and Instagram post. I don't have any Olympic medals, and I've never won a Grand Slam title, but I'm sure whatever Schooling and Osaka felt when they beat their idols is a fraction of the joy I felt when I beat Robert De Niro's former assistant's binging record. Like her, I was fortunate enough to find my purpose and excel at my goals. Like her, I will be remembered forever. This is my legacy. Excerpted from The World's Worst Assistant by Sona Movsesian All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.