Worst/Funniest Interview Experiences

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Once we were both alone in his office, he went straight to the very FIRST question...


Interviewer: So why do you want to become a doctor?
Me: Who? Me?



hahaha. That's great... I really hate that as a first question.
 
Interviewer- What would you bring if you came to UC Davis?
Me- My basketball shoes and my snowboard.
Interviewer- (Gives me a weird look)
Me- O shoot, you meant intangibles huh? :laugh:


Ah, he has no sense of humor. That is funny, I would give you serious style points if I were the interviewer.
 
Student Interviewer- If you had an unlimited amount of money and one month what would you do?
Me- Well first I think I would give an "unlimited amount"(with finger quotes) to some charities (pause) then I think I would give some to friends and family, lets make it an unlimited amount (pause) and then I think I would give an unlimited amount to every person in the world...

i was hoping not to get this question but the interviewer ended up laughing hysterically

Result: Accepted
 
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Had a faculty interview with a really old doctor; I think he was at least 90 or something and really famous. I wish I had known before hand who he was! At the end of the interview I was kind of struggling to find something to say.

Me: So I hear Dr. Soandso recently passed away (He was a really famous doctor and there were memorials everywhere during my interview..still, why did I even bring this up?!)

Interviewer: Yes we were best friends, he actually brought me to this university. He had a stroke seven years ago and it's good that passed away.

Me: Oh I'm really sorry to hear that...

Awkward silence....

Interviewer: Alright I think we're done here...

I'm not holding my breath to hear back from this place.
 
wow...this thread has taken me something like three days to read...now i can get back to homework. so worth it! 🙂
 
and for books, i would say "Twilight," although no interviewers have asked me that one yet. i did end up explaining twilight to one of my professors though...that was interesting...

At my last interview, I had a group interview: two older gentlemen, one male M4, and two male interviewees, plus me. We were each asked different questions, but as usual I got the book question.
Me: "Well, right now I have James Joyce's 'Dubliners' in my bag, which is a beautiful collection of short stories."
I1: "Oh, so you enjoy classics?"
Me: "Yeah, I've been trying to read a lot of classics this year, but" (getting really overeager and excited) "I did recently finish the Twilight series, by Stephenie Meyer."
I1,2,3: *blank stares*
Me: "You know? There's a movie coming out soon."
I2: "Oh? So what's it about?"
Me: "Oh well, it's a teenage vampire love story!"

I must've had the biggest (albeit sheepish) smile on my face while saying this. The M4 laughed and the older interviewers kind of smiled like they would at a child... like they thought I was either cute or silly (or both) and there was no help for me.

Later on at work, I had moved on to reading Persuasion (Jane Austen) and my coworker had started reading Twilight. One of the doctors in the office told me to tell interviewers I was reading the former, not the latter. D'oh!
 
I had just finishing telling my interviewer about my experience working in a community hospital and how I felt that community health was a critical part of my motivation for being a doctor.
Interviewer: So what kind of specialty are you looking into to?
Me: Radiology or Neurology.
Interviewer looks really confused
Me: Well I know that I may change my mind as I get experienced and may want primary care or something like that.
Basically I just contradicted my motivation for being a doctor.
 
This one is awful.

I had this total d'bag MS2 interviewing me, he was literally reading down a list of the most awful generalized interview questions you could think of. He was in his 30's, if that makes a difference, and extremely dull.

"What is your greatest achievement?" "Greatest failure" "name 2 weaknesses," etc., etc. There was no conversational style like in all my previous interviews. I was pretty on edge...

Now, I want to preface this by assuring you that I have generally been pretty good in interviews... cracked jokes, maintained a light mood, never been inappropriate in anyway.

Ok, so he asks "Is there a physician that you would try to emulate? Or, a physician that you try to avoid emulating?"

So the second part of the question caught me off guard and I say

me: " well there was this one pediatric specialist I went to once when I was like 16 that..... (Oh no, stop what you're saying, that's not funny). errrrrrm, that I wouldn't want to emulate"

interviewer: Why?

me: Well he's in prison.

interviewer: (looks confused) Really, what for?

me: (don't say molesting patients) Uh, molesting patients (wince).

:scared: He stared at me then put both hands over his face and winced like he was thinking "What is this kid doing?"

interviewer: Yeah, well, you wouldn't want to emulate him.


At that point, I gave up. I answered the rest of his stupid questions as fast as I could and got out of there. I think he was pretty happy to get out of there too.

Result: REJECTED
 
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This one is awful.

I had this total d'bag MS2 interviewing me, he was literally reading down a list of the most awful generalized interview questions you could think of. He was in his 30's, if that makes a difference, and extremely dull.

"What is your greatest achievement?" "Greatest failure" "name 2 weaknesses," etc., etc. There was no conversational style like in all my previous interviews. I was pretty on edge...

Now, I want to preface this by assuring you that I have generally been pretty good in interviews... cracked jokes, maintained a light mood, never been inappropriate in anyway.

Ok, so he asks "Is there a physician that you would try to emulate? Or, a physician that you try to avoid emulating?"

So the second part of the question caught me off guard and I say

me: " well there was this one pediatric specialist I went to once when I was like 16 that..... (Oh no, stop what you're saying, that's not funny). errrrrrm, that I wouldn't want to emulate"

interviewer: Why?

me: Well he's in prison.

interviewer: (looks confused) Really, what for?

me: (don't say molesting patients) Uh, molesting patients (wince).

:scared: He stared at me then put both hands over his face and winced like he was thinking "What is this kid doing?"

interviewer: Yeah, well, you wouldn't want to emulate him.


At that point, I gave up. I answered the rest of his stupid questions as fast as I could and got out of there. I think he was pretty happy to get out of there too.

Result: REJECTED

OMG. Thank you for a much needed laugh. Hopefully you got in someplace and can look back on this and just laugh.
 
This one is awful.

I had this total d'bag MS2 interviewing me, he was literally reading down a list of the most awful generalized interview questions you could think of. He was in his 30's, if that makes a difference, and extremely dull.

"What is your greatest achievement?" "Greatest failure" "name 2 weaknesses," etc., etc. There was no conversational style like in all my previous interviews. I was pretty on edge...

Now, I want to preface this by assuring you that I have generally been pretty good in interviews... cracked jokes, maintained a light mood, never been inappropriate in anyway.

Ok, so he asks "Is there a physician that you would try to emulate? Or, a physician that you try to avoid emulating?"

So the second part of the question caught me off guard and I say

me: " well there was this one pediatric specialist I went to once when I was like 16 that..... (Oh no, stop what you're saying, that's not funny). errrrrrm, that I wouldn't want to emulate"

interviewer: Why?

me: Well he's in prison.

interviewer: (looks confused) Really, what for?

me: (don't say molesting patients) Uh, molesting patients (wince).

:scared: He stared at me then put both hands over his face and winced like he was thinking "What is this kid doing?"

interviewer: Yeah, well, you wouldn't want to emulate him.


At that point, I gave up. I answered the rest of his stupid questions as fast as I could and got out of there. I think he was pretty happy to get out of there too.

Result: REJECTED

Wow... that was awesome :laugh:
 
At my last interview, I had a group interview: two older gentlemen, one male M4, and two male interviewees, plus me. We were each asked different questions, but as usual I got the book question.
Me: "Well, right now I have James Joyce's 'Dubliners' in my bag, which is a beautiful collection of short stories."
I1: "Oh, so you enjoy classics?"
Me: "Yeah, I've been trying to read a lot of classics this year, but" (getting really overeager and excited) "I did recently finish the Twilight series, by Stephenie Meyer."
I1,2,3: *blank stares*
Me: "You know? There's a movie coming out soon."
I2: "Oh? So what's it about?"
Me: "Oh well, it's a teenage vampire love story!"

I must've had the biggest (albeit sheepish) smile on my face while saying this. The M4 laughed and the older interviewers kind of smiled like they would at a child... like they thought I was either cute or silly (or both) and there was no help for me.

Later on at work, I had moved on to reading Persuasion (Jane Austen) and my coworker had started reading Twilight. One of the doctors in the office told me to tell interviewers I was reading the former, not the latter. D'oh!

haha my #1 goal for interviews was to avoid mentioning the Twilight series (which I had been reading at the time). I made sure to think of a reasonable book that I had read earlier 🙂
 
I had seen this question in tons of the interview prep sites but I still f'ed it up bad.
Interview (first question)- So how did you get here?
Me- uhh... (thinking oh gosh what does he mean).... well... umm do you mean how did i get to this point in my life or how did i get to the interview today (stuttering and stumbling the entire answer)
Interviewer- (chuckling at me) well i just meant how did you get to the interview this morning. did you drive in or fly?

haha wow i felt like such a jerk but laughed it off and did ok the rest of the interview i think.
 
haha my #1 goal for interviews was to avoid mentioning the Twilight series (which I had been reading at the time). I made sure to think of a reasonable book that I had read earlier 🙂

Ditto. It was hard, especially since I read them all right before my interview and could not stop thinking about them! I had another book in mind, too, just in case. My dream interview would involve seeing a copy of Twilight on the interviewers desk and getting to talk about Edward the entire time! 😳 /acting like a 16 year old girl
 
Have you guys seen Stephen King's quote regarding Stephanie Meyer versus J.K. Rowling? Its quite true.

I attempted to read that book and got about as much pleasure from it as if I had been hitting myself in the head with it.

Edit:

Stephen King's quote:

'This is the way to do it. He's showing the way.' I think that I serve that purpose for some writers, and that's a good thing. Both Rowling and Meyer, they're speaking directly to young people. ... The real difference is that Jo Rowling is a terrific writer and Stephenie Meyer can't write worth a darn. She's not very good."
 
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Question: "What do you plan to do with this last summer before starting medical school?"

Answer: "Mostly have sex with your youngest daughter."
 
Ditto. It was hard, especially since I read them all right before my interview and could not stop thinking about them! I had another book in mind, too, just in case. My dream interview would involve seeing a copy of Twilight on the interviewers desk and getting to talk about Edward the entire time! 😳 /acting like a 16 year old girl

Boo, Ms. Spurs keeps sending me facebook bumper stickers of twilight stuff 😡
 
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Ditto. It was hard, especially since I read them all right before my interview and could not stop thinking about them! I had another book in mind, too, just in case. My dream interview would involve seeing a copy of Twilight on the interviewers desk and getting to talk about Edward the entire time! 😳 /acting like a 16 year old girl

Actually, that same day, I'd had a one-on-one interview earlier with a physician who participates in a reading group. She *had* in fact read Twilight, which is probably part of the reason I was so excited to bring it up again in my second/group interview.

Honestly, I don't get why it should be a big deal. I was just being myself, and isn't the interview my opportunity to show them who I really am? Are we expected to be serious and mature all the time? That would make for a dull class.

Have you guys seen Stephen King's quote regarding Stephanie Meyer versus J.K. Rowling? Its quite true.

I attempted to read that book and got about as much pleasure from it as if I had been hitting myself in the head with it.

I totally agree that Stephenie Meyer is not a good writer. I don't think you *can* compare her to J.K. Rowling... or Philip Pullman! They are leagues above her. Nonetheless, I enjoyed reading her books. 🙂
 
Ditto. It was hard, especially since I read them all right before my interview and could not stop thinking about them! I had another book in mind, too, just in case. My dream interview would involve seeing a copy of Twilight on the interviewers desk and getting to talk about Edward the entire time! 😳 /acting like a 16 year old girl

2 students that I interviewed talked about Twilight. I applauded their honesty. I rather see someone who is honest and unafraid of telling me about their reading choices than talking to someone who is bs-ing about some classic that they just can't live without.

It does help that I am familiar with Twilight series. Read all 4 books - they are the literary equivalent of stale muffins. But someone's bound to like them. Again, I rather see a gutsy interviewee than a boring "standard" one. Even it it involves a Twilight conversation 🙂

Have you guys seen Stephen King's quote regarding Stephanie Meyer versus J.K. Rowling? Its quite true.

I attempted to read that book and got about as much pleasure from it as if I had been hitting myself in the head with it.

Yeah. 🙂
 
I haven't read "Twilight," but the first time I tried Phillip Pullman I couldn't stand him. I quit about 40 pages into Golden Compass and decided it was a load of rubbish with confusing gibberish words that I didn't care to keep straight. I decided to pick it up and try again this past summer and couldn't put it down. I had to run out to Borders the next day and buy the boxed set, since my brother (during the period when he liked fantasy novels) only owned the first one. I don't know what changed, but I found the series absolutely riveting the second time around. And aside from Harry Potter, I normally hate the fantasy genre.

Sorry for the digression.
 
my first interview so nervous and it was late in the day about 2 oclock after getting there around 730 so i was kinda tired....

I: How could you raise your verbal score on the mcat (considerably lower than the other 2)
Me: (So nervous) i guess throw myself in tough situations and try to work myself out of it because it involves crtitical and quick thinking
I: Hoe about just read a book?

Waitlisted to top choice= bummer
 
my first interview so nervous and it was late in the day about 2 oclock after getting there around 730 so i was kinda tired....

I: How could you raise your verbal score on the mcat (considerably lower than the other 2)
Me: (So nervous) i guess throw myself in tough situations and try to work myself out of it because it involves crtitical and quick thinking
I: Hoe about just read a book?

Waitlisted to top choice= bummer

Why on earth is your interviewer asking how you could raise your verbal score on the MCAT?? 😱

Geez. I'm so glad that none of my schools mentioned my scores at all.
 
i have no idea, he didnt even teach the med students at the university, he taught one of the post-bac classes and was just volunteering....sucks i got matched with him
 
my first interview so nervous and it was late in the day about 2 oclock after getting there around 730 so i was kinda tired....

I: How could you raise your verbal score on the mcat (considerably lower than the other 2)
Me: (So nervous) i guess throw myself in tough situations and try to work myself out of it because it involves crtitical and quick thinking
I: Hoe about just read a book?

Waitlisted to top choice= bummer

Cold! You'd have to have a 2 in verbal to be at the point where just reading a book would change anything.🙁👎 What a jerk!
 
Have you guys seen Stephen King's quote regarding Stephanie Meyer versus J.K. Rowling? Its quite true.

I completely agree with these. I noticed tons of spelling and grammatical errors while reading. It is very simple writing. I just liked her new take on vampires and I am a hopeless romantic, so I was all about Edward.

Boo, Ms. Spurs keeps sending me facebook bumper stickers of twilight stuff 😡

Yes, Mr. MILK didn't seem to like that either! 😛

2 students that I interviewed talked about Twilight. I applauded their honesty. I rather see someone who is honest and unafraid of telling me about their reading choices than talking to someone who is bs-ing about some classic that they just can't live without.

It does help that I am familiar with Twilight series. Read all 4 books - they are the literary equivalent of stale muffins. But someone's bound to like them. Again, I rather see a gutsy interviewee than a boring "standard" one. Even it it involves a Twilight conversation 🙂

I agree they're not for everyone. I'm glad you wouldn't be too quick to judge. With someone my own age I might have owned up to reading them, but not with the 50 year old medicine doc I was interviewing with!

I haven't read "Twilight," but the first time I tried Phillip Pullman I couldn't stand him. I quit about 40 pages into Golden Compass and decided it was a load of rubbish with confusing gibberish words that I didn't care to keep straight. I decided to pick it up and try again this past summer and couldn't put it down. I had to run out to Borders the next day and buy the boxed set, since my brother (during the period when he liked fantasy novels) only owned the first one. I don't know what changed, but I found the series absolutely riveting the second time around. And aside from Harry Potter, I normally hate the fantasy genre.

Sorry for the digression.

Loved those books, too!

Sorry for taking over the thread with Twilight!
 
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If ur referring to not calling her "Dr." X, that's really not a big deal AT ALL.

Yeah but do you know if she's married?

I dunno, s/he wouldn't score any points in my book if s/he called me Mrs. So and So.

Ms. would be a perfectly acceptable error (if an error at all).
 
Then you just follow it up with "I meant Mrs. <my last name>, cuz damn you fine girl. Once I get out of medical school, I'm gonna make you my wife."

Yeah but do you know if she's married?

I dunno, s/he wouldn't score any points in my book if s/he called me Mrs. So and So.

Ms. would be a perfectly acceptable error (if an error at all).
 
Ok, so he asks "Is there a physician that you would try to emulate? Or, a physician that you try to avoid emulating?"

So the second part of the question caught me off guard and I say

me: " well there was this one pediatric specialist I went to once when I was like 16 that..... (Oh no, stop what you're saying, that's not funny). errrrrrm, that I wouldn't want to emulate"

interviewer: Why?

me: Well he's in prison.

interviewer: (looks confused) Really, what for?

me: (don't say molesting patients) Uh, molesting patients (wince).

:scared: He stared at me then put both hands over his face and winced like he was thinking "What is this kid doing?"

interviewer: Yeah, well, you wouldn't want to emulate him.


At that point, I gave up. I answered the rest of his stupid questions as fast as I could and got out of there. I think he was pretty happy to get out of there too.

Result: REJECTED

roflmao
 
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"so what do you like about our school?"

"oh I loved everything... ann arbor seems like such a cool city, and..."

interviewer interrupts, "you're not in ann arbor, you're in pittsburgh."

awkward pause...

"oh that's what i meant..."

...

REJECTED
 
lol😀

Me at a recent interview in december:

Student interviewer: So if you could have 8 million dollars to do anything you wanted what would you do?

Me: " oh well, you know I would buy a big house for two million dollars, you know I cant deny that I want fancy things," wait did I actually say that? " and also invest in a research lab..."

Student interviewer: If you could be any flavor of ice cream what would you be and why?

Me: Oh I would like to be strawberry ice cream because its red

Honestly, I cant believe I answered like that-my nerves definitley got the best of me.

Rejected one month later, nevertheless, i didnt like the school and I think we all agreed it wasnt for me 🙂
 
Interviewer: What is your greatest weakness?
Me: (I blurt out) My difficulty empathizing with patients. (????????????? What??????)

Result: Accepted (somehow)
 
"so what do you like about our school?"

"oh I loved everything... ann arbor seems like such a cool city, and..."

interviewer interrupts, "you're not in ann arbor, you're in pittsburgh."

awkward pause...

"oh that's what i meant..."

...

REJECTED

Oh, nooooo! I read that and immediately thought, "Awww!" Definitely been there. Were you all interviewed out?
 
Oh, nooooo! I read that and immediately thought, "Awww!" Definitely been there. Were you all interviewed out?

yeah, last cycle was real long 😀 Oh well, it's over... can't wait to do it all again in... 2.5 years? 🙂
 
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First question he asked me, which was supposed to be an ice-breaker

I: So, tell me something interesting about yourself that I wouldn't be able to gather from your application.

Me: Long....long...silence. Um. Let me think about this. Well...even though I'm really, really bad at it, I love playing raquetball?

Said it with the question in tone and everything. I mean seriously? That's what's interesting about me? I just didn't expect that question as the first one, so it threw me off. Too bad I kept thinking about the question the whole interview and kept wanting to blurt out something better. Nope...went badly the rest of the time.

Result: Waitlisted.
 
Interviewer: "So tell me something that you excel at."

Me: (inner monologue: "think of something medical, think of something medical...") "Art."

That was it, one word--no elaboration. At least we got around to talking about stress outlets later on and how I really enjoy art but wouldn't want to try to make a career out of it. Hope my other answers outshone that one.

Jury's still out (one of my top choices too). I think my other interviews went better though. :xf:
 
While talking with an orthopedic surgeon about why I want to be a doctor:

Interviewer: Have you thought about what you'd like to specialize in?

Me: I work with [a doctor at the school I was interviewing at] and I really enjoy what we're working on and can see myself in internal medicine/infectious diseases. I really enjoy diagnosis and talking to patients, I don't really see myself focusing on procedures.

Interviewer: Procedures like hip replacements?

Me (mental facepalm): ... Procedures... like hip replacements.

Somehow, I was admitted.
 
While talking with an orthopedic surgeon about why I want to be a doctor:

Interviewer: Have you thought about what you'd like to specialize in?

Me: I work with [a doctor at the school I was interviewing at] and I really enjoy what we're working on and can see myself in internal medicine/infectious diseases. I really enjoy diagnosis and talking to patients, I don't really see myself focusing on procedures.

Interviewer: Procedures like hip replacements?

Me (mental facepalm): ... Procedures... like hip replacements.

Somehow, I was admitted.


That's not a bad answer. If I was a doc interviewing an applicant, the last thing I would want to hear is pandering to me and my specialty of choice.
 
Interviewer: I see that you're a finance major.

Me: Yup. (Proud)

Interviewer: So are you in favor of increased or decreased government regulation to restore our economy?

Me: Uhhhh...increased.

Interviwer: Ok, well what are your thoughts on the Laffer curve?

Me: I've never even heard of that.

easy response - you're a FINANCE major, not an ECONOMICS major.



Last Interviewer of the day: Do you have any questions for me?

Me: I'm all questioned out. Everyone has been asking me if I have any questions and I already used all the good ones up.
:laugh: im gonna use this one
 
Int: How do you respond to criticism? (gives me the stonewall face)
Me: (starts laughing)
Int: (no change in expression)

I was definitely laughing b/c the question was so canned and I immediately imagined all possible answers, which, no way around it, would also sound canned.

In the next nanosecond I realized that laughter can imply so many things.. not sure how I recovered from that one (if I actually did!).
 
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Last Interviewer of the day: Do you have any questions for me?

Me: I'm all questioned out. Everyone has been asking me if I have any questions and I already used all the good ones up.

I said this too, and it's the one school i got into. To me, it seems like a perfectly reasonable thing to say.
 
Interviewer: "Tell me what you've been doing since you've graduated."

Me: "I am taking some classes because I don't like to work so much."


granted this was in Spanish. I was so nervous about how to explain myself that I didn't realize what came out. I was pretty shocked they accepted me 2 weeks later.