Working girls Trixie & Katya's guide to professional womanhood

Trixie Mattel

Book - 2022

"Trixie Mattel and Katya Zamolodchikova took the world by storm with their Guide to Modern Womanhood, a book of expert advice on beauty, homemaking, and relationships. Now they're tackling an even bigger challenge: finding success in the modern workplace. In Working Girls, Trixie and Katya dole out both savvy and satirical advice for every stage of working life, from choosing a career path to sailing into a blissful retirement, in step-by-step guides, quizzes, the world's most bizarre aptitude test, and more. Searching for the perfect interview outfit? Agonizing over how to get that raise? Suspicious that your colleague doesn't really hope their email "finds you well"? Trixie and Katya have got you covered. The...y also share personal stories from their own remarkable careers and their philosophies on everything from mastering office lingo to getting fired with dignity, all alongside hilarious, gorgeous photos. Witty, beautiful, and packed with wisdom, Working Girls is the ultimate guide for the working woman"--

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Subjects
Published
[New York] : Plume [2022]
Language
English
Main Author
Trixie Mattel (author)
Other Authors
Katya Zamolodchikova, 1982- (author)
Physical Description
209 pages : color illustrations ; 24 cm
ISBN
9780593186114
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Drag queen superstars Trixie Mattel and Katya Zamolodchikova, former competitors on the wildly popular and award-winning RuPaul's Drag Race, continue their quest for world domination with their second book. While the queens' first book was a general guide to womanhood, this second entry focuses on women in the working world. Advice ranges from tongue-in-cheek to surprisingly helpful, as CEO and workaholic Trixie cannot help being serious (at least occasionally) about employment. But don't worry, this genuinely useful advice is sandwiched between lists of #girlbosses and the history of how Sally Field and Marie Curie helped kickstart the Industrial Revolution after some apples fell on their heads. As with Trixie and Katya's previous work, there are also tons of both gorgeous and hilarious photographs of the two, highlighting what they do best: use makeup and wigs to their utmost advantage. Witty, stunning, and unexpectedly practical, this is for anyone who hasn't yet invented Post-Its, but they're on their way.

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

In this hysterical sequel to Trixie and Katya's Guide to Modern Womanhood, the drag queens pontificate on finding success in the professional world. Aiming to "extend a petite and perfectly manicured helping hand" to readers with big career ambitions, the RuPaul's Drag Race stars share their unique perspectives on everything from careers in the service industry to climbing the corporate ladder and, perhaps most significantly, the necessity of "dressing for success," which they illustrate in impeccably styled workplace ensembles (as well as others that are decidedly NSFW)--"Call me broken, call me dark-sided," Mattel opines, "but I love nothing more than walking into an establishment and being greeted by a lacquered-up hourly employee." Elsewhere, Katya offers advice on taking a gap year ("the first and easiest way to avoid entering the workplace"), sexy thesis topic suggestions ("The Male Gaze and Erotic Pleasure of Riverdale"), and raucous reflections on retirement ("You Better Not Work!"). While the humor is lewd and the expletives are aplenty, the authors also dive into serious business, like exposing the less glamorous aspects of fame ("Drag, like show business, was never meant to be a get-rich-quick scheme and should be viewed as more parallel to hard drug use"). This bawdy manual slays. Agent: Thomas Flannery Jr., Vigliano Assoc. (Oct.)

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

Picking up where the duo's New York Times best-seller Trixie and Katya's Guide to Modern Womanhood left off, drag queens Trixie and Katya offer advice to workers that no person should take, and look amazing (and delusional) while they do it. Sprinkling in tidbits from their "boy drag" lives alongside the identities and histories of their blonde drag personas, the comedy duo (featured on several seasons of RuPaul's Drag Race) offer satirical wisdom on career choices, interviewing, "girlbossing," illicit professions, and becoming a drag queen. (On the latter, they advise: "Don't.") For fans, this will feel like an extended episode of Trixie and Katya's podcast, but with a little less interaction between the two. For those unfamiliar with the Drag Race stars, this work offers a look into what each drag queen is known for, with enough of a shared comedic voice to make this an easy, fun read. Of course, full-color photographs (over-the-)top it off and make up about half the page count. VERDICT For librarians serious about building up both their modern humor sections and their selections of books written by drag queens, this sequel is a must.--Diana Rocha

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

What Kind of Job Do You Want? Service Work Edition By Trixie and Katya Are you a fierce fucking diva who lives to serve? Well, take a number, bitch, and welcome to the club, because we are, too. Most of the jobs we've worked have been in the service industry, which probably had something to do with the fact that we became such fierce divas who can't stop serving. Before we run down the list of potential service work, how about you take a quick personal inventory to see if you've got what it takes to serve it like a big wet fucking diva, completely soaked to the bone with nasty, gushy, fierceness. Are your giant, oily hands peppered with patches of matted hair and thick, impenetrable calluses? Good. Does your glossy forty-eight-inch ponytail detach easily? Are your hooves so riddled with bunions that you can only shop for shoes at the Boot Barn? Got any teeth? Where the fuck is your aunt Trudy? These are all important questions, and while there may not be any important answers, let's go ahead and secure our hairnets anyway. It's time to serve, you fierce fucking fat* bitch! *fat = fabulous and talented Katya: Cleaner Let's face it, people are really fucking gross. We, as a species, are morally and socially compelled toward an unachievable state of cleanliness that is betrayed by our innately repulsive physiology. As a professional cleaner, you confront the harsh and undeniable evidence of humanity's contempt for itself. Any previous subscription you may have had to a recognizable code of ethics has been long abandoned and replaced by the chaos of unbridled aggression, violence, and endless suffering. The sheets are soaked in blood. The walls are speckled with viscera. The stench of death is a fetid fog that follows you at all times, ubiquitous and unavoidable. You were once a corporate lawyer who got into some questionable activities on an extended vacation in Mexico City, but now you're a cleaner for the cartels. It all happened so quickly; during brief moments of peace you struggle to recall just how you got yourself mixed up in something so dangerous, so destructive, so . . . delectable. Ahh, there it is. That's when you remember. It wasn't just your cast-iron stomach and indifference toward dismemberment but your surprising newly awakened taste for fresh blood and meat. Suddenly the pieces of the puzzle begin to line themselves up. When the other children would chase the ice cream truck through the neighborhood streets, you would slink away to the woods to rip the skin off rabbits and chew their innards. You didn't just get mixed up with some bad guys or fall into the shadows by mistake. You are and always have been the pure, unadulterated essence of evil. Like a volcanic eruption straight from the bowels of Hell, you were spewed directly out of the mouth of the beast and into some innocent woman's uterus, like those tubes they used to have at the bank drive-through. But you are not merely just evil; you are evil's nefarious enabler. You remove the carnage of lowly grifters, criminals, and monsters to allow their hideousness to grow and spread into ever more indescribable viciousness. And while all of that is objectionable, loathsome, and abhorrent, when push comes to shove and some dumb bitch spills her cabernet on my silk rug, you'd be the first person I'd call to save the day. On the off chance you happen to be, like, a regular house cleaner, you'd be the second person I would call, especially considering it's just a matter of time before cleaner number one is tidily disposed of one day. Trixie: Server Serving in a restaurant is the hardest job there is. Go ahead and process that controversial yet brave proclamation . . . I'll wait. The only people who don't think servers have it hard are people who have never been a server themselves. In Los Angeles, there are a shocking number of people who do not tip and who believe that people who have menial positions such as servers have somehow "brought it on themselves." Karma has apparently kissed them because they are deserving of love and light and their waitress should have taken night classes if she didn't want to be a waitress. These are also typically people who have familial wealth and have never worked a job because they needed it. When the servers start poisoning the Coke Zero, these people will go first. Serving is so much more than bringing food: knowing the menu, cleaning the tables, rolling silverware, processing payments, having full-on screaming matches with kitchen staff across a language barrier, and crying in the freezer are just a few of the lesser-known duties. The other less-mentioned trauma of this job is that each table has a different definition of what good service is. Some people want to be left alone almost entirely. They want to order, eat, and leave without even hearing your name or remembering you were there. Meanwhile, some people need fellatio, a personal anecdote, and a good cry before they can even think about appetizers. Reading the energy of a group means going full Sybil Dorsett from table to table and is an essential customer service skill. On top of all that, you are dealing with food. Everyone's preferences, diets, and allergies are being thrown into the nightly off-Broadway performance of Pretending to Care About People: The New Musical, and you are also expected to roll 350 silverware sets before the dinner rush. This is all done in the hope that the customer remembers that they are solely in control of your salary that day. When all the customer service world agrees to participate in the Purge, servers will be at the head of the pack: Mad Max-style renegades who have been hardened into cold warriors by lunch specials and singing "Happy Birthday" to strangers. The next time you are seated in a restaurant and you insist on ten separate checks, remember that you could be incurring the wrath of a long-overdue revolution. Every waitress packs her apron with Braveheart face paint and a butterfly knife. Your food isn't late; it's done already, dehydrating under a heat lamp. Because you were just a rude bitch. Katya: Nanny There's nothing quite like looking after rich folks' kids. Whether you are a magical Englishwoman who rides an umbrella to work or a mouthy brunette with a love for pattern problems and teased hair, there's no doubt about it--the nanny is where it's at. Can you think of another job where you get to horse around with well-behaved children for a couple hours a day and in return, you get to wear the mom's clothes and have all the sex you want with the dad? You also get to live rent-free in a beautiful nanny nook out back, where all the utilities are fully paid for. Now, I know what you're thinking: sounds boring. But what if I told you that being a nanny isn't just about sex, money, and giggling? If you're in the market for something a little more dangerous, there's always The Hand That Rocks the Cradle school of childcare. This exciting nanny position requires no experience, although it does help if you've been recently pregnant and widowed. All you have to do is choose a fake name, infiltrate the loving home of a beautiful couple, and methodically destroy that home from the inside as the unsuspecting nanny. You also get to do fun side activities like killing the mom's nosy best friend when she inevitably gets hip to your scheme. If all of the above sounded nice to you but you live abroad, guess what? You could be an au pair, which is basically just a nanny who wears a beret! Ooh la la! Trixie: Retail Time is a beast of absolute meter. An eight-hour shift at any job is eight hours--unless it's a retail shift. In retail, time manspreads on the subway bench of life in a way that defies possibility. Even a three-hour shift at the wrong store in the wrong mall on the wrong day can creep by with impressive restraint. You check the clock after what you are sure has been twelve hours to find that you haven't even made it to your fifteen-minute break. Sure that you are looped in some sort of time-space redundancy, you sprint to Health and Beauty, where you burn your inner thigh with a hot curling iron to reset reality. Time sadly doesn't reset and you must limp over to the sale gondola and begin refolding the denim. Folding, refolding, and re-refolding are just a few of the dynamic tasks that retail offers. Retail also offers the unique opportunity to be a conduit of undiluted hate. At least servers are needed. I think in most stores, customers wish that the employees didn't exist. They'd rather thumb through used vinyl without you asking, "Looking for anything specific?" to which they must provide a banal "I'm just looking." The phrase "I'm just looking" is Navajo for "Leave me alone, you fucking cunt." Customers don't really ever need help--and if they do, they'll find you and scream at you like a rehomed parakeet. The customer values the part of shopping where they have to find their item. I once heard that at the Buckle, the employees are encouraged to interact with the customer three times before they leave the store. I would rather be hit by a car in the parking lot than be asked to open a store credit card. Excerpted from Working Girls: Trixie and Katya's Guide to Professional Womanhood by Trixie Mattel, Katya 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.