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INTERNSHIP MOVIE

SUMMARY:

Salesmen Billy McMahon (Vince Vaughn) and Nick Campbell's (Owen


Wilson) employer goes out of business, and Billy applies for Google
internships on their behalf. They are accepted due to their
unorthodox interview answers, despite a lack of relevant experience.
They are the only interns not of traditional collegiate age. They will
spend the summer competing in teams against other interns in a
variety of tasks, and only the members of the winning team will be
guaranteed jobs with Google. Billy and Nick are teamed with other
interns seen as rejects: Stuart, who is usually engrossed in his smart
phone; Yo-Yo, a Filipino-American who was homeschooled by a
stereotypically overbearing Asian mother; and Neha, an Indian-
American who is an enthusiast of nerd-related kink. The team is led
by Lyle, who constantly tries to act hip in order to hide his
insecurities. Another intern, Graham, bullies Billy and Nick's team.
Mr. Chetty, the head of the internship program, also expresses his
doubts about the older men's abilities. Stuart, Yo-Yo, and Neha see
Billy and Nick as useless during a task focused on debugging and send
them on a wild-goose chase for Charles Xavier at Stanford University
(only to be brutally beaten when they find someone matching the
description). But later, during a game of Quidditch against Graham's
team, Billy rallies his team to a comeback that unifies them as a
team, despite ultimately losing after Graham cheats.
When the teams are tasked with developing an app, Billy and Nick
convince the team to indulge in a wild night out. At a strip club,
Neha admits to Billy that, despite her rich fantasy life, she has no
real world experience and is nervous. With his support, she decides to
stay. Nick gets Yo-Yo to break out of his shell by drinking and
receiving lap dances. Encouraged by Billy, Lyle approaches one of the
dancers, Marielena, who is also a dance instructor at Google on whom
he had developed a crush. She is charmed by him, but another
customer challenges Lyle for her attention and they fight, getting
the team kicked out. Before sunrise, Stuart learns to appreciate his
surroundings while overlooking the Golden Gate Bridge, and Lyle's
drunken antics inspire the team to create an app that guards against
reckless phone usage while drunk. They win the task by earning the
most downloads.

Meanwhile, Nick has been flirting with an executive, Dana, with little
success. When he begins attending technical presentations to impress
her, he develops an interest in the material. While the teams
prepare to staff the technical support hotline, only Billy feels at a
loss. A Google employee, "Headphones," who always wears headphones
and never socializes, approaches Billy and tells him that the way he
interacts with people is special. He tutors Billy on the technical
information. Dana agrees to go on a date with Nick, and she invites
him in at the end of the evening. During the task, Billy is
comfortable with the material, but his team receives no score
because he failed to properly log his calls for review. Dejected, Billy
leaves Google to pursue a new sales opportunity with his former
boss. The final task is announced as a sales challenge. Teams must
sign the largest possible company to begin advertising with Google.
The team is stunned when Nick tells them that Billy has left, and
they declare that they do not want to do the task without him.
Nick convinces Billy to return, and Billy leads the team to show a
local pizzeria owner how Google can help him interact with potential
customers and thereby expand his business, while remaining true to
his professional values.

Chetty is about to announce that Graham's team have won, when


Billy, Nick, and their team arrive to give a dynamic presentation
about their new client. Chetty recognizes that although the pizzeria
is not a large business, its potential is limitless because it is
expanding via technology. Graham protests and is dressed down by
Headphones, who turns out to be the head of Google Search. Nick
and Billy's team win the challenge and the guaranteed jobs. Graham
berates his team, who finally reject him. As the students depart,
Nick and Dana are still seeing each other, as are Lyle and Marielena.
Stuart and Neha have formed a romantic connection as well with
Stuart promising to see her in person rather than texting her, and
Yo-Yo asserts himself to his mother. Billy and Nick toast their
success.
SYPNOSIS:

The Internship is a 2013 American comedy film directed by Shawn


Levy, written by Vince Vaughn and Jared Stern, and produced by
Vaughn and Levy. The film stars Vince Vaughn and Owen Wilson as
recently-laid-off salesmen who attempt to compete with much
younger and more technically-skilled applicants for a job
at Google. The Internshipis the second film with Vaughn and Wilson
in the lead roles, after the 2005 film Wedding Crashers; the two
had also both appeared in the 2004 film Starsky & Hutch. This is
also the second collaboration of Levy, Vaughn, and Stern after the
2012 film The Watch, and the third of Levy and Wilson after the
first two Night at the Museum films.

COMPUTER RELATED TOPIC ( GOOGLE HISTORY )

Google Inc. is an American multinationaltechnology company that


specializes in Internet-related services and products. These
include online advertisingtechnologies, search, cloud
computing, software, and hardware. Google was founded in 1998
by Larry Page and Sergey Brin while they were Ph.D. students
at Stanford University, in California. Together, they own about 14
percent of its shares, and control 56 percent of the stockholder
voting power through supervoting stock. They incorporated Google as
a privately held company on September 4, 1998. An initial public
offering(IPO) took place on August 19, 2004, and Google moved to
its new headquarters in Mountain View, California, nicknamed
the Googleplex. In August 2015, Google announced plans to
reorganize its various interests as a conglomerate called Alphabet
Inc. Google, Alphabet's leading subsidiary, will continue to be the
umbrella company for Alphabet's Internet interests. Upon completion
of the restructure, Sundar Pichaiwas appointed CEO of Google; he
replaced Larry Page, who became CEO of Alphabet.

The company's rapid growth since incorporation has triggered a chain


of products, acquisitions, and partnerships beyond Google's core
search engine (Google Search). It offers services designed for work
and productivity (Google Docs, Sheets and
Slides), email(Gmail/Inbox), scheduling and time management (Google
Calendar), cloud storage (Google Drive), social networking (Google+),
instant messaging and video chat (Google Allo/Duo), language
translation (Google Translate), mapping and turn-by-turn navigation
(Google Maps/Waze), video sharing (YouTube), notetaking (Google
Keep), and photo organizing and editing (Google Photos). The
company leads the development of the Android mobile operating
system, the Google Chrome web browser, and Chrome OS, a
lightweight operating system based on the Chrome browser. Google
has moved increasingly into hardware; from 2010 to 2015, it
partnered with major electronics manufacturers in the production of
its Nexus devices, and in October 2016, it released multiple hardware
products (including the Google Pixel smartphone, Home smart
speaker, Wifi mesh wireless router, and Daydream View virtual
reality headset). The new hardware chief, Rick Osterloh, stated: "a
lot of the innovation that we want to do now ends up requiring
controlling the end-to-end user experience". Google has also
experimented with becoming an Internet carrier. In February 2010,
it announced Google Fiber, a fiber-optic infrastructure that was
installed in Kansas City; in April 2015, it launched Project Fi in the
United States, combining Wi-Fi and cellular networks from different
providers; and in 2016, it announced the Google Station initiative to
make public Wi-Fi available around the world, with initial deployment
in India.

Alexa, a company that monitors commercial web traffic, lists


Google.com as the most visited website in the world. Several other
Google services also figure in the top 100 most visited websites,
including YouTube and Blogger. Google is the most valuable brand in
the world[5], but has received significant criticism involving issues such
as privacy concerns, tax avoidance, antitrust, censorship, and search
neutrality. Google's mission statement, from the outset, was "to
organize the world's information and make it universally accessible and
useful", and its unofficial slogan was "Don't be evil". In October
2015, the motto was replaced in the Alphabet corporate code of
conduct by the phrase "Do the right thing".

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