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#Work In New Zealand
buzzessays · 2 months
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New Zealand Visa Sponsorship Jobs 2024 | Apply Now!
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credasmigrations · 1 year
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If you are looking for work opportunities in New Zealand, then it's important that you are well aware of the work visa requirements in the country. The work visa permit in Germany has specific requirements which must be fulfilled to be able to work hassle-free in Germany.
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iclegalnz · 2 years
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Discover more about some of the most popular NZ visas for individuals and families, including New Zealand Permanent Resident & Citizenship, study, temporary work, partnership, skilled migrant category, green list and work to residence visas.
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tinystepsforward · 5 months
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saw a news article today and i
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dimeadoesnt · 2 years
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Wearing a ski mask while soaked cannot be comfortable
(With both brown and black hair, for whichever side of the Spy Hair Color debate you fall on!)
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huariqueje · 7 months
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Black and white   -   Peter Siddell , 1982.
New Zealander, 1935-2011
Oil on board , 60 x 44 cm
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theother-will-grayson · 4 months
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Well the class is over and I doubt a few years after wrap anyone is still under NDA so let me finally tell this story.
I just finished a stage combat SPT class (bear with me I'm about to drop a few fun facts but all of this is relevant info I promise) -- I was getting my certification in smallsword which for anyone not in the know is the smaller, faster, fancier son of the rapier -- the weapon of choice for dueling among nobility and the predecessor to modern day sport fencing. It was used around the time of the golden age of piracy. Think the Jack/Will fight in Pirates of the Caribbean.
Well if you hear that description, you might be like me and think "Oh like Our Flag Means Death" as well. (You have to also have a scene around the fight to get your SPT because they judge your acting as well as your technique.) So on the day we pitched scenes, I walked in and told my instructors I wanted to do the Izzy/Stede scene in Our Flag Means Death.
Instructor A gets this goofy little smirk on his face and turns to Instructor B and goes "I suppose you'll be coaching them on that one, then." (NOT a direct quote but it was something like that).
I go "Why."
A goes, "Oh because he worked on that scene."
WHAT
I never got full clarification whether he actually choreographed it or if he was just the style/technique coach but apparently he worked with Con O'neill for approximately 5 hours on smallsword technique and with Rhys Darby approximately 2 hours (because apparently Stede didn't need to be super good at it which is HORRIBLE practice for safety reasons. Like...the actor still needs to be good at it lmfao). He says he told Con that he's gonna teach him to wield a smallsword but they would undoubtedly give him a rapier because it's very common for Hollywood to just merge the two. He was like "I guess they'll explain it as he was trained in smallsword but the rapier would be whatever they could find laying around on a pirate ship which doesn't make sense because he's supposed to be this super skilled swordsman...I don't know." From what I can gather fight directors are generally perpetually tired.
Let me tell you as a fan that 5 hours SHOWS because Con definitely looks like a skilled swordsman. But half of that has to be Con himself because 5 hours is also in the grand scheme of things NOT THAT MUCH TIME especially for what I can attest to be a very difficult weapon. And also the additions this gives to Izzy's lore because he's so skilled a dueling with that weapon specifically...
Anyways if I ever get my hands on the video of me doing the scene I'll post it. Also this is not a homestuck cop story. I live in Los Angeles and all of my professors have been industry professionals. If I wasn't afraid of doxxing the guy I'd post proof. But the way my mind blew in that moment.
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heavenbarnes · 3 months
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Older bf Simon with a ballerina gf who's the principal dancer of the national ballet company and he's so proud, always the loudest to cheer for her after a performance and throws the most flowers on stage
(how’d you know i was a classically trained ballerina for over ten years?)
no matter what you did, older bf!simon would support everything- front row whooping and hollering for you 🫶🏼
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personinthepalace · 20 days
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I like your outfit, and it reminds me of Daphne from Scooby Doo - Paul Williams, Taskmaster NZ 5x09
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thecandlewasters · 5 months
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Celebrating 10 Years of NMTD 🦩🥭
Join the Much Ado About Nothing crew as they navigate high school in New Zealand at the height of superwholock. It's 2014 and you've got nothing much to do...
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albatris · 2 months
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ok so I had my first auslan lesson yesterday! I can now (very slowly) fingerspell and know a few basic phrases
the toughest part for me is I instinctively want to mirror the teacher when I'm copying her and I've gotta really think about using the correct hands and movements the right way around
also I sent a terrifying email today
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genericpuff · 11 months
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Sorry for the racist anon
I dunno how it works for Native Americans, but In Australia, those with Indigenous bloodlines are considered First Nations, no matter their skin tone of ethnic features.
This is largely due to ethnic genocide and colonisation, which I’m guessing Native Americans also experienced(of course), so to see a Indigenous person cry that someone’s “too white” to be First Nations is sickeningly ignorant.
aha I appreciate that <3
And I actually can totally relate to that because my bloodline falls under First Nations labelling! Except instead of being Australian, I'm Canadian haha I don't know if it was the same in Australia but it was practiced for a long time here (I think up until the 80's?) that if you were a First Nations woman who married a non-First Nations man, you'd lose your status as a First Nations woman. So my grandmother, who was raised in a residential school from a very young age, lost her legal status after marrying a French man and that passed on to her children and even her grandchildren. So I actually wasn't legally considered First Nations until around my preteens/teenage years when we were able to contest our status and bloodline with the government and get it back. Colonization unfortunately runs very deep in my family across the generations going back to my grandmother, much of my father's side of the family are strictly Christian (like, I'm talking "women aren't allowed to wear pants" type Christian) and I was raised as someone who was visibly different in a community of predominantly French/Irish people, but no one had the tools or resources to tell me why I was different without giving me an extremely whitewashed version of events. It makes me really upset for past me because being different really alienated me from a culture I didn't understand and didn't want to bother understanding at the time - I didn't want to be First Nations, because being First Nations was "weird" and "different" and I wanted to fit in.
Thankfully now I'm an adult and I've learned that my culture isn't something to be ashamed of, but proud of. Sometimes it makes me a little sad to feel like a foreigner to my own peers, where I'm learning about traditions and norms that many already had from childhood, but it's been a fun learning experience and it brings me so much joy to reconnect to a history and culture that was almost wiped out with my grandmother. I'm glad I learned about my culture and what was almost taken from me before it was too late.
It's frankly why it really shocked me in that previous ask, hearing "eh, you're not brown enough to be Indigenous and you should stfu" because I was literally picked on and singled out - even by my own white-passing family members - for being brown and "the odd one out" growing up. Being called a "cracker" was definitely a new one for me, I've been called every other manner of name for being darker-skinned and having visibly native features but never a name for not being dark-skinned enough ?? Like man, that's wild. Unlocking some whole new side content right here LMAO
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credasmigrations · 1 year
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How to Apply for A Work Visa in New Zealand?
New Zealand is becoming one of the preferred destinations for work and pursuing higher education. The island country welcomes people from across the globe to work by granting them a valid work visa. A work visa in New Zealandallows you to work in the country legally without having permanent residency.
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New Zealand provides more than 80 visas that allow one to work in New Zealand. In this blog, we are going to discuss everything about work visa in New Zealand, the documents required, the application process, and more!
Who is a New Zealand Work Visa Designed for?
A New Zealand work visa is designed for people who meet the following requirements:
Have a job offer from a New Zealand resident.
Visiting New Zealand for work-related purposes.
Belonging to a country with a special work scheme.
Studying in New Zealand and want to work here.
Necessary Work Requirements for New Zealand Work Visa
As we mentioned above, New Zealand provides 80 categories of work visas with unique conditions and requirements. Some common requirements for all work visas in New Zealand are given below:
A valid Real work account is required, serving as your profile with the New Zealand Immigration Department for official communication.
Recent identity and character proofs are necessary.
Obtain medical certificates demonstrating physical fitness.
If documents are originally in a native language, provide English translations.
Carry an official passport or certificate of identity along with two acceptable visa photographs.
Submit proof of good character and evidence of being bona fide to the New Zealand work visa consultants.
How to Apply for a New Zealand Work Visa?
The application process for a New Zealand work visa is simple and easy. All you have to do is follow these simple steps to get your work visa:
Fill out the application form on New Zealand's Immigration website.
Alternatively, you can send the application form, along with all necessary documents, to the designated site or center as specified.
Depending on the type of visa you applied for, you will receive instructions regarding whether you need to submit your passport or if you will be issued an e-Visa.
Wait for the processing time, which is 3 to 7 months, for the work visa to be ready. Be in constant touch with work visa consultants to know the status of your visa processing.
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mjhartwork · 7 months
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I made a background for an animation in class, the prof said we could do any style, so I experimented!
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clingylilhoneybee · 7 months
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Yall ever think about the lives you almost lived?
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arthistoryanimalia · 1 year
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For #WorldPenguinDay:
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Eileen Mayo (1906-1994) Yellow-eyed Penguin, 1976 gouache on paper Museum of New Zealand / Te Papa Tongarewa
The Yellow-eyed Penguin (Megadyptes antipodes), known also as hoiho or tarakaka, is a species of penguin endemic to New Zealand.
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