Wood.
MaroonStain said:
Reading this thread, I am trying to sing a Taylor Swift song in my head and keep churning out Katy Perry songs.
BassCowboy33 said:
I can't tell if this board is laughing at the idiots who believe this or lamenting the lapdogs who don't understand Taylor Swift is a super cereal psy op.
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Influenced by the principles of Gustave Le Bon's mass psychology, Bernays believed that human behaviour could be effectively manipulated, if purportedly independent symbolic figures were manipulated to play upon unconscious aspirations and fears: in the name of health, a hearty breakfast recommended by Dr. A.L. Goldwater or, in the name of equality, cigarettes smoked by feminists. Soon Bernays would expand this 'third-party technique' (employing a third, opinion-leading party as the mouthpiece for the client's interests) using a PR tactic which at that time was novel but has since become common. He began to field 'front groups', that is, seemingly independent organisations which profess to support concerns of the common good
As if it weren't apparent enough in public and at the local grocery stores in 2020 and 2021. You could tell who the absolute b*tches were. Had a string bean white liberal "man" audibly scowl at me for wearing mask below my mouth in a grocery store in Santa Fe NM in June of 2020. I just stared at him with a threatening "do not F with me or I will make you one with the pavement" look and he cowered away like the white liberal atheist b**** that he was. I kind of miss those times. Was fun to F with the terrified godless evil liberal vermin. Fear was their god.Some Junkie Cosmonaut said:Fat Black Swan said:Stat Monitor Repairman said:
Folks sure raged when this issue was brought up a few months ago.
No denying that fact.
He delves into some background in a reply below that tweet. The lady works for a defense contractor that received millions in DOD funding to combat COVID disinformation on the internet.
Fund the Wuhan research then fund the censorship of any discussion on the results of that research to where the entire internet has the same level of discourse as the TexAgs COVID board.Ask yourself why a government-funded social media censorship org — specifically censoring Covid dissidents — would draw its funding from the DOD’s Minerva Initiative.
— Mike Benz (@MikeBenzCyber) March 17, 2023
Minerva Initiative is DOD’s program to fund the science of psychological operations. pic.twitter.com/v0UoVKBnFK
Congrats, Covidians!!
You are the easily manipulated sheep we all thought you were!!!
Here!BassCowboy33 said:
the idiots who believe this
This is ESG to a Tee. LGBT+ as well.Fat Black Swan said:BassCowboy33 said:
I can't tell if this board is laughing at the idiots who believe this or lamenting the lapdogs who don't understand Taylor Swift is a super cereal psy op.
The Third-Party Technique has been used for psychological manipulation of the masses since Edward Bernays.
"The most useful method in a multiple society like ours to indicate the support of an idea of the many varied elements that make up our society. Opinion leaders and group leaders have an effect in a democracy and stand as symbols to their constituency."
"If you can influence the leaders, either with or without their conscious cooperation, you automatically influence the group which they sway"Quote:
Influenced by the principles of Gustave Le Bon's mass psychology, Bernays believed that human behaviour could be effectively manipulated, if purportedly independent symbolic figures were manipulated to play upon unconscious aspirations and fears: in the name of health, a hearty breakfast recommended by Dr. A.L. Goldwater or, in the name of equality, cigarettes smoked by feminists. Soon Bernays would expand this 'third-party technique' (employing a third, opinion-leading party as the mouthpiece for the client's interests) using a PR tactic which at that time was novel but has since become common. He began to field 'front groups', that is, seemingly independent organisations which profess to support concerns of the common good
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Heloo fellow humans. I am boyfriend of celebrity 298-J33 ...
Stat Monitor Repairman said:Quote:
Heloo fellow humans. I am boyfriend of celebrity 298-J33 ...
We have rules!William K. Klingaman said:MaroonStain said:
Reading this thread, I am trying to sing a Taylor Swift song in my head and keep churning out Katy Perry songs.
Katy Perry is actually hot.
BassCowboy33 said:
I can't tell if this board is laughing at the idiots who believe this or lamenting the lapdogs who don't understand Taylor Swift is a super cereal psy op.
Stat Monitor Repairman said:Quote:
Heloo fellow humans. I am boyfriend of celebrity 298-J33 ...
That video should be a part of a sticked thread on F16.Fat Black Swan said:
Here's a few on Bernays. He and Jung have always been fascinating to me regarding the dynamics of crowds and the masses.
https://academyofideas.com/2017/07/edward-bernays-group-psychology-manipulating-the-masses/
https://www.historytoday.com/miscellanies/original-influencer
https://theconversation.com/the-manipulation-of-the-american-mind-edward-bernays-and-the-birth-of-public-relations-44393
Mattias Desmet came up with idea of mass formation to explain the rise of totalitarianism during COVID. Seemed like a decent explanation for how you could have a majority Democrats, as late as January 2022, supporting the ideas of forcing the unvaccinated into concentration camps and removing their children from their homes.
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It turns out that the nastiest expressions of youth culture are manna to an industry ravenous for anything authentic to sell.
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They spend their days sifting through reams of market research data. They conduct endless surveys and focus groups. They comb the streets, the schools, and the malls, hot on the trail of the "next big thing" that will snare the attention of their prey--a market segment worth an estimated $150 billion a year.
They are the merchants of cool: creators and sellers of popular culture who have made teenagers the hottest consumer demographic in America. But are they simply reflecting teen desires or have they begun to manufacture those desires in a bid to secure this lucrative market? And have they gone too far in their attempts to reach the hearts--and wallets--of America's youth?
FRONTLINE correspondent Douglas Rushkoff examines the tactics, techniques, and cultural ramifications of these marketing moguls in "The Merchants of Cool." Produced by Barak Goodman and Rachel Dretzin, the program talks with top marketers, media executives and cultural/media critics, and explores the symbiotic relationship between the media and today's teens, as each looks to the other for their identity.
The thing I find funniest about this ridiculous “Taylor Swift is a DOD PSYOP” thing is the notion that DOD could run a PSYOP as effective as Taylor Swift.
— Dr. Jonathan Schroden (@JJSchroden) January 11, 2024
I mean, have you *seen* the state of information operations in DOD?
(Hint) pic.twitter.com/86xohk5afw
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Dollars aside, her cultural impact might be just as significant. There are now ten college courses decided to the study of Swiftology including one at Harvard. After she started dating Kansas City Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce, there was even a marked increase in television viewership for Chiefs games all the more remarkable given football's ratings dominance.
More than half of all Americans count themselves as Swift fans. In a recent NBC News poll, she had the highest favorability rating of any person tested a 40/16 positive/negative rating that puts her above President Biden, former President Trump, and every other major political figure in the country. In naming her the Person of the Year, Time magazine called Swift "the master storyteller of the modern era."
In short, it's Taylor Swift's world, and we're all living in it. But one question about Swift's influence remains unknown: can she impact American politics?
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But a few celebrities have the notoriety and the cultural influence to shift the political tides. Oprah Winfrey's endorsement of Barack Obama in 2007 is estimated by one set of economists to have moved one million voters into Obama's column. Other research suggests that while Winfrey's endorsement didn't change voters' views on Obama, it may have had a subtler effect of reassuring them about Obama's viability as a candidate.
Winfrey's move was almost certainly the exception when it comes to celebrity endorsements. But while Swift has been a major star for years, in 2023 she is, as Oprah was in 2008, undoubtedly the most famous and influential cultural icon in the country. Could an endorsement of Joe Biden affect the outcome of the 2024 election?
MSNBC of courseQuote:
If a Swift endorsement brings just a fraction of her millions of supporters to the polls, that's still tens of thousands of people who might otherwise not vote. It could make a a potentially decisive difference. And would Republicans dare attack Swift and risk the wrath of enraged Swifties? Ask John Mayer or Kanye West how getting on the wrong side of Swift and her fans has worked out for them.
Thanks to the world of social "look at me" media, I can see Tay Tay's fans posting like crazy pics of them in line to vote and then with their "I voted" stickers. I wouldn't be surprised if they even have gatherings to wait in lines to be the first to post they voted.aggiehawg said:
But wait! It gets weirder!Quote:
Dollars aside, her cultural impact might be just as significant. There are now ten college courses decided to the study of Swiftology including one at Harvard. After she started dating Kansas City Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce, there was even a marked increase in television viewership for Chiefs games all the more remarkable given football's ratings dominance.
More than half of all Americans count themselves as Swift fans. In a recent NBC News poll, she had the highest favorability rating of any person tested a 40/16 positive/negative rating that puts her above President Biden, former President Trump, and every other major political figure in the country. In naming her the Person of the Year, Time magazine called Swift "the master storyteller of the modern era."
In short, it's Taylor Swift's world, and we're all living in it. But one question about Swift's influence remains unknown: can she impact American politics?Quote:
But a few celebrities have the notoriety and the cultural influence to shift the political tides. Oprah Winfrey's endorsement of Barack Obama in 2007 is estimated by one set of economists to have moved one million voters into Obama's column. Other research suggests that while Winfrey's endorsement didn't change voters' views on Obama, it may have had a subtler effect of reassuring them about Obama's viability as a candidate.
Winfrey's move was almost certainly the exception when it comes to celebrity endorsements. But while Swift has been a major star for years, in 2023 she is, as Oprah was in 2008, undoubtedly the most famous and influential cultural icon in the country. Could an endorsement of Joe Biden affect the outcome of the 2024 election?MSNBC of courseQuote:
If a Swift endorsement brings just a fraction of her millions of supporters to the polls, that's still tens of thousands of people who might otherwise not vote. It could make a a potentially decisive difference. And would Republicans dare attack Swift and risk the wrath of enraged Swifties? Ask John Mayer or Kanye West how getting on the wrong side of Swift and her fans has worked out for them.
So this weekend's win against Miami was because of Taylor? Damn, she's good.Stat Monitor Repairman said:
No Spin Ag said:So this weekend's win against Miami was because of Taylor? Damn, she's good.Stat Monitor Repairman said: