SoftBank’s Pepper the humanoid robot has held a variety of odd jobs over the past few years, but a gig at the Smithsonian may be its most prestigious yet. Starting today, visitors can interact with Pepper at six Smithsonian locations to inquire more museum information, play games, or ask it to pose for a selfie. It even has its own security badge.

Come say hi to Pepper at our Castle building, @NMAfA, @NMAAHC, @SmithsonianEnv and @hirshhorn. Pepper was created by Softbank Robotics, who provided us with a number of Peppers as part of this pilot. #SmithsonianPepper #MeetPepper pic.twitter.com/lbRfDPN6RW — Smithsonian (@smithsonian) April 24, 2018

Unlike a few other commercial locations, the Smithsonian didn’t actually buy Pepper robots for the museum. SoftBank donated 25 humanoid units as part of an experimental program to attract people to “under-attended galleries,” which the company believes can help boost visitors’ engagement with artwork and help give docents an interactive tool for educating their tour groups. SoftBank says more Pepper robots will be deployed in additional Smithsonian locations over the summer, because nothing says a summer job in the city like unpaid work.

The last time a robot made headlines in DC, it threw itself into a water fountain shortly after starting its job as a security guard, so hopefully Pepper survives the stress of working in the nation’s capital. Pepper’s track record for being good at its job and being likable is a little mixed; earlier this year, it was fired from a supermarket job for “incompetence” after it confused and freaked out customers instead of providing useful shopping information. In 2015, a drunk man kicked Pepper over after he found its attitude displeasing.

What can I say — the service industry is tough, Pepper! Maybe you’ll get something worthwhile after putting the Smithsonian on your resume.