- Blogroll Me!
-
Cognoscenti, Agents Provocateurs and Casual Acquaintances
- Ace of Spades
- Ambivablog
- Anchoress
- Ankle Biting Pundits
- Becker & Posner
- Betsy's Page
- Big Lizard
- Tim Blair
- Bullwinkle
- Crooked Timber
- Dean's World
- Drudge
- The Fourth Rail
- Hit & Run
- Instapundit
- Jot Sheet
- Lileks
- LittleGreenFootballs
- Michelle Malkin
- Megan McArdle
- Minority Report
- Myopic Zeal
- Outside the Beltway
- Patterico
- Powerline
- Rachel Lucas
- Real Clear Politics
- Shape of Days
- Straight White Guy
- TMH Bacon Bits
- Truth Laid Bear
- Velociworld
- Venomous Kate
- Vodkapundit
- WILLisms
- Wizbang
- Yippee-Ki-Yay!!
- Althouse
- Above the Law
- Anonymous Lawyer
- Beldar
- Legal Pad
- Lowering the Bar
- Orin Kerr
- Overlawyered
- Point of Law
- Prof. Ribstein
- Rule of Law
- Volokh
- Jim Morin's Cartoons
- Cape Cod Chowder
- DaleyBlog
- Hub Blog
- Hub Politics
- Left Wing Escapee
- mASSbackwards
- Mass Federalist
- The Modern American
- Pundit Review
- Squaring the Boston Globe
- Sudden Stop
- Toys in the Attic
- Universal Hub
- Weekend Pundit
- Weekly Dig
- Mark Coffey
- Polipundit
- Scurvy Wench (Arrrrgh)
- Strata-sphere
- Tiger Hawk
- Viking Pundit
- Modern Drunkard Magazine
- Phat Phree
- Point Five
- Totally Absurd Archives
- Utter Wonder
- Oronte Churm
Truly Different/Et Alia
- Museum of Left Wing Lunacy
- Post Secret
- Jargon Database
- Detail Cops
- My Landscaping Adventure
- Pick It Up
- Motor Scooters & Brooms
- Be Careful What You Wish For
- Scaling the Pinnacle of Lunacy
- Pervis the Great Fisherman
- Partisan Politics & Filibusters
- On Morality & Hard Cases
- Spending Republican STyle
- And So It Begins
- Politics of Roe Reversal
- One Collosal Fraud
- Crybabies In Texas
- Reflections on Alito Hearings
- Real Lobbying Reforms
- Gerrymander Rules
- Bare Knuckles In The Limelight
- Limelight Fades to Black
- Bar Business Boston-style
- Big Mess, Dig
- Another Kennedy Tragedy
- Joan Plays Ball
- World Class My Ass
- Hot Air
- February 2005
- March 2005
- April 2005
- May 2005
- June 2005
- July 2005
- August 2005
- September 2005
- October 2005
- November 2005
- December 2005
- January 2006
- February 2006
- March 2006
- April 2006
- May 2006
- June 2006
- November 2006
- December 2006
- January 2007
- February 2007
- March 2007
- April 2007
- May 2007
- June 2007
- July 2007
- September 2007
- October 2007
- November 2007
- December 2007
- January 2008
- February 2008
- March 2008
- April 2008
- May 2008
My BestWork
Humor
National Politics
Boston Politics
Archives
Law Blogs
Pulitzer Prize-winning Cartoonists
New England Bloggahs
Coalition of the Chillin
(Partial List)
Humor
THIS IS MY VIRTUAL LIVING ROOM. COME ON IN AND SAY HELLO. THE BAR IS OVER IN THE CORNER -- HELP YOURSELF, BUT MIND YOUR MANNERS.
Wednesday, January 03, 2007
Master of Cliche
The other day while engaging in an exchange with a commenter here,I found myself amused by the fellow's use of cliches to make his (rather obtuse) point. Did I "just fall off the turnip truck," he asked; and "there's a new Sheriff in town," he crowed, referring to Deval Patrick (although his use of this phrase might be considered untimely, since the Governor-elect had just advocated that the legislature engage in lawlessness).
It is with this person in mind that I offer the follow report:
Frank Lingua, president and CEO of Dissembling Associates, is the nation's leading purveyor of buzzwords, catch phrases and cliches for people too busy to speak in plain English. Business Finance contributing editor Dan Danbom interviewed Lingua in his New York City office.
Danbom: Is being a cliché expert a full-time job?
Lingua: Bottom line is I have a full plate 24/7.
D. Is it hard to keep up with the seemingly endless supply of clichés that spew from business?
L. Some days, I don't have the bandwidth. It's like drinking from a fire hydrant.
D. So it's difficult?
L. Harder than nailing Jell-O to the wall.
D. Where do most clichés come from?
L. Stakeholders push the envelope until it's outside the box.
D. How do you track them once they've been coined?
L. It's like herding cats.
D. Can you predict whether a phrase is going to become a cliché?
L. Yes. I skate to where the puck's going to be. Because if you aren't the lead dog, you're not providing a customer-centric proactive solution.
D. Give us a new buzzword that we'll be hearing ad nauseam.
L. "Enronitis" could be a next-generation player.
D. Do people understand your role as a cliché expert?
L. No, they can't get their arms around that. But they aren't incented to.
D. How do people know you're a cliché expert?
L. I walk the walk and talk the talk.
D. Did incomprehensibility come naturally to you?
L. I wasn't wired that way, but it became mission-critical as I strategically focused on my go-forward plan.
D. What did you do to develop this talent?
L. It's not rocket science. It's not brain surgery. When you drill down to the granular level, it's just basic blocking and tackling.
D. How do you know if you're successful in your work?
L. At the end of the day, it's all about robust, world-class language solutions.
D. How do you stay ahead of others in the buzzword industry?
L. Net-net, my value proposition is based on maximizing synergies and being first to market with a leveraged, value-added deliverable. That's the opportunity space on a level playing field.
D. Does everyone in business eventually devolve into the sort of mindless drivel you spout?
L. If you walk like a duck and talk like a duck, you're a duck. They all drink the Kool-Aid.
D. Do you read "Dilbert" in the newspaper?
L. My knowledge base is deselective of fiber media.
D. Does that mean "no"?
L. Negative.
D. DOES THAT MEAN "NO"?
L. Let's take your issues offline.
D. NO, WE ARE NOT GOING TO TAKE MY "ISSUES" OFFLINE.
L. You have a result-driven mind-set that isn't a strategic fit with my game plan.
D. I WANT TO PUSH YOUR FACE IN.
L. Your perspective on this topic is very important to me.
D. How can you live with yourself?
L. I eat my own dog food. My vision is to monetize scalable supply chains.
D. When are you going to quit this?
L. I may eventually exit the business to pursue other career opportunities.
D. I hate you.
L. Take it and run with it.
It is with this person in mind that I offer the follow report:
Frank Lingua, president and CEO of Dissembling Associates, is the nation's leading purveyor of buzzwords, catch phrases and cliches for people too busy to speak in plain English. Business Finance contributing editor Dan Danbom interviewed Lingua in his New York City office.
Danbom: Is being a cliché expert a full-time job?
Lingua: Bottom line is I have a full plate 24/7.
D. Is it hard to keep up with the seemingly endless supply of clichés that spew from business?
L. Some days, I don't have the bandwidth. It's like drinking from a fire hydrant.
D. So it's difficult?
L. Harder than nailing Jell-O to the wall.
D. Where do most clichés come from?
L. Stakeholders push the envelope until it's outside the box.
D. How do you track them once they've been coined?
L. It's like herding cats.
D. Can you predict whether a phrase is going to become a cliché?
L. Yes. I skate to where the puck's going to be. Because if you aren't the lead dog, you're not providing a customer-centric proactive solution.
D. Give us a new buzzword that we'll be hearing ad nauseam.
L. "Enronitis" could be a next-generation player.
D. Do people understand your role as a cliché expert?
L. No, they can't get their arms around that. But they aren't incented to.
D. How do people know you're a cliché expert?
L. I walk the walk and talk the talk.
D. Did incomprehensibility come naturally to you?
L. I wasn't wired that way, but it became mission-critical as I strategically focused on my go-forward plan.
D. What did you do to develop this talent?
L. It's not rocket science. It's not brain surgery. When you drill down to the granular level, it's just basic blocking and tackling.
D. How do you know if you're successful in your work?
L. At the end of the day, it's all about robust, world-class language solutions.
D. How do you stay ahead of others in the buzzword industry?
L. Net-net, my value proposition is based on maximizing synergies and being first to market with a leveraged, value-added deliverable. That's the opportunity space on a level playing field.
D. Does everyone in business eventually devolve into the sort of mindless drivel you spout?
L. If you walk like a duck and talk like a duck, you're a duck. They all drink the Kool-Aid.
D. Do you read "Dilbert" in the newspaper?
L. My knowledge base is deselective of fiber media.
D. Does that mean "no"?
L. Negative.
D. DOES THAT MEAN "NO"?
L. Let's take your issues offline.
D. NO, WE ARE NOT GOING TO TAKE MY "ISSUES" OFFLINE.
L. You have a result-driven mind-set that isn't a strategic fit with my game plan.
D. I WANT TO PUSH YOUR FACE IN.
L. Your perspective on this topic is very important to me.
D. How can you live with yourself?
L. I eat my own dog food. My vision is to monetize scalable supply chains.
D. When are you going to quit this?
L. I may eventually exit the business to pursue other career opportunities.
D. I hate you.
L. Take it and run with it.