Are unpaid internships ever okay?

Legally speaking, yes. But there are some key rules employers have to abide by.

Interns run to deliver a Supreme Court decisions.
(Image credit: AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)

The summer after my junior year of college, I landed an unpaid internship at a women's magazine in New York City. I was over the moon. This was it. I'd made it. I imagined sitting in on meetings where big decisions were made, finding a mentor among the writers whose work I'd read for years, and being given the chance to report articles of my own (articles that would in turn persuade the editors of my eminent hireability).

Then I started my internship. For two weeks, I folded jeans, transcribed writers' interviews, and screened terrible slush-pile short stories that had been submitted for possible publication.

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Alexis Boncy is special projects editor for The Week and TheWeek.com. Previously she was the managing editor for the alumni magazine Columbia College Today. She has an M.F.A. from Columbia University's School of the Arts and a B.A. from the University of Virginia.