Babies: who knew they could be so
profitable cute??
Living in France (general)
Wednesday 15 February 2012
Reason Number 718 Why I Love France: Paternity Leave!
By Baron von Rupp on Wednesday 15 February 2012, 15:57
Monday 26 December 2011
French Fashion Faux-pas: A Style-handicapped American Takes His Revenge
By Baron von Rupp on Monday 26 December 2011, 15:40
Being an
American man in France is challenging in many ways, but perhaps nothing is more
unsettling than being surrounded by men who seem to have been born with the
ability to match a silk scarf to their socks. And everything else in between.
Still, even these guys have a few things to be embarrassed about. It's time to
speak out.
Wednesday 26 October 2011
Health Care in France, Continued: A Concrete Example
By Baron von Rupp on Wednesday 26 October 2011, 14:35
One
hears a lot of yap about the French health care system in America these days,
most of it misinformed: in my continuing effort to explain how doctoring works
over here, I thought I'd give an account of my recent visit to a French
hospital, from the initial consultation to post-op care. In any case I'm stuck
here, legs elevated under mountains of ice, with nothing else to do...
Wednesday 13 July 2011
Bastille Day: five things you didn't know you wanted to know
By Baron von Rupp on Wednesday 13 July 2011, 11:42

No, the Eiffel Tower has not been blown up: that's just what
we do here to celebrate Bastille Day, a (very) rough
equivalent to Independence Day in the United
States. This particular excuse to blow things up, however, is a
different animal altogether.
Saturday 15 January 2011
The Rectification of Names
By Baron von Rupp on Saturday 15 January 2011, 15:59

This is not a monkey.
This is not a monkey.
This is not a monkey.
This is not a monkey.
This is not a monkey.
This is not a monkey.
This is not a monkey.
This is not a monkey.
This is not a monkey.
This is not a monkey.
This is not a monkey.
This is not a monkey.
This is not a monkey.
This is not a monkey.
Monday 6 September 2010
French what??
By Baron von Rupp on Monday 6 September 2010, 22:55
The
English language is full of things allegedly French. How did that happen? How
real are they? Enquiring minds want to know.
By the way, if this topic does not instantly remind you of the foreign-exchange student scene in Better Off Dead you need to stop what you're doing and re-watch it. Right now.
Monday 16 August 2010
Ode to August 15th (in France, anyway)
By Baron von Rupp on Monday 16 August 2010, 18:05
In fact,
let's make it an ode to the entire month of August which, from the
getting-things-done angle, might as well not exist here. For most people,
August is a time to be Somewhere Else doing anything besides work; for those of
us employed by evil foreign companies that don't offer unending weeks of paid
vacation to their employees it's more like a month in a gloriously quiet city,
a ride through the trough of a sine wave that bottoms out on the fifteenth
before slowly climbing back up to normal urban life in September.
Tuesday 13 April 2010
Health care in France
By Baron von Rupp on Tuesday 13 April 2010, 16:04
Throughout the health care reform debate currently
raging in the United States, parties on all sides have made regular, oblique
references to the French health care system, framing it as either a pinnacle of
progress or a dire cautionary tale. The problem seems to be that these
references, ranging from Michael Moore's glossy and biased homage in
Sicko to Rush Limbaugh's equation of French health care with French
inadequacy in World War II, are never based on any real assessment of the
system. As an American who has lived under and sought care from both
systems, I thought it might be useful for people to read an unbiased, factual
account of how health care here actually works. While I have my opinions on the
subject—after all, you know what they say about opinions—for this post I will
keep my politics to myself and stick to the facts as I have lived them.
Friday 5 March 2010
Working in France
By Baron von Rupp on Friday 5 March 2010, 11:12
Working in France can be complicated, even for French people. As foreigners, we are presented with an additional set of challenges; however, we also have certain advantages that we can use to level the playing field, or even tilt it a bit in our favor. In this post I will go over some basic attributes of the French workplace that may differ from what you are used to, and then mention a few ideas for finding gainful employment, even in a tight job market.

