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are ted talks kind of retarded

why is this shit all over the place
Federal box office trust fund
  03/30/15
no, but they are very retarded
Odious ape space
  03/30/15
...
sticky karate office
  03/30/15
Yes they are
Flirting Nowag
  03/30/15
Yes. It's just the same old self help shit packaged slightly...
wine contagious hell death wish
  03/30/15
99% of TED talks have no self-help message at all, wtf r u w...
amethyst stimulating old irish cottage heaven
  03/30/15
Here's the "Browse TED Talks" section of their web...
wine contagious hell death wish
  03/30/15
I found this one very informative: https://www.youtube.co...
cerise medicated private investor
  03/30/15
LOL. I forgot about this.
aggressive station coldplay fan
  03/30/15
Yeah it's a bunch of lofty smug bullshit
startling clown
  03/30/15
CHANCES are you will not attend TED this year. Tickets to th...
Balding Mediation Circlehead
  03/30/15
Cliffs?
startling clown
  03/30/15
that if you can't make it through 1 short NYTimes article, T...
Balding Mediation Circlehead
  03/30/15
We should start our own lofty talks and charge tons of dough...
startling clown
  03/30/15
TED talks are the modern Readers Digest: crap proles consume...
cobalt locale
  03/30/15
devastating
amethyst stimulating old irish cottage heaven
  03/30/15
my stupid wife is a huge fan. that's all i need to know abou...
Yellow ticket booth
  03/30/15
yeah, if you want to know just enough to get brutally embarr...
Balding Mediation Circlehead
  03/30/15
retardTED TALKS
magical gas station
  03/30/15
Lol'd
Fiercely-loyal Olive Market Gaping
  03/30/15


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Date: March 30th, 2015 7:57 AM
Author: Federal box office trust fund

why is this shit all over the place

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=2842207&forum_id=2#27580844)



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Date: March 30th, 2015 7:57 AM
Author: Odious ape space

no, but they are very retarded

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=2842207&forum_id=2#27580847)



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Date: March 30th, 2015 9:11 AM
Author: sticky karate office



(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=2842207&forum_id=2#27580980)



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Date: March 30th, 2015 7:57 AM
Author: Flirting Nowag

Yes they are

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=2842207&forum_id=2#27580850)



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Date: March 30th, 2015 8:57 AM
Author: wine contagious hell death wish

Yes. It's just the same old self help shit packaged slightly differently.

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=2842207&forum_id=2#27580948)



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Date: March 30th, 2015 11:18 AM
Author: amethyst stimulating old irish cottage heaven

99% of TED talks have no self-help message at all, wtf r u watchn

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=2842207&forum_id=2#27581459)



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Date: March 30th, 2015 11:52 AM
Author: wine contagious hell death wish

Here's the "Browse TED Talks" section of their website. I haven't watched any of this crap. The only TED talk I have ever actually watched was the one about body language by the semi hot blonde college professor. It sucked and had a self-help message. I'm not smart with percentages and stuff, but I'm fairly certain (based on reading the titles alone) that at least half of these have a self-help message.

https://www.ted.com/talks



(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=2842207&forum_id=2#27581668)



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Date: March 30th, 2015 8:58 AM
Author: cerise medicated private investor

I found this one very informative:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9cflCyyEA2I

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=2842207&forum_id=2#27580950)



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Date: March 30th, 2015 11:09 AM
Author: aggressive station coldplay fan

LOL. I forgot about this.

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=2842207&forum_id=2#27581413)



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Date: March 30th, 2015 10:51 AM
Author: startling clown

Yeah it's a bunch of lofty smug bullshit

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=2842207&forum_id=2#27581308)



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Date: March 30th, 2015 10:55 AM
Author: Balding Mediation Circlehead

CHANCES are you will not attend TED this year. Tickets to the gathering that begins Monday in Vancouver are sold out, this despite or rather because of the fact that gaining entry to the ideas conference entails more than pulling out your credit card. There’s a velvet rope of an application process, and questions to answer: “How would a friend describe your accomplishments?” “What are you passionate about?” Two references have to vouch for you.

But if you don’t make the cut and shell out the $8,500 fee for general attendance, no matter. The real action and measure of TED’s reach is online. In November 2012 TED announced its “billionth video view,” which, assuming an average length of 15 minutes, means that collectively by then we had clicked on roughly 10 million days’ worth of TED talks. At our desks or on our phones, we stare as sympathetic experts tell us we should reform education, admit to personal failings more publicly or invest in the developing world. It sounds great. The ideas, which TED promises are “worth spreading,” do indeed make the rounds. (Or as the Onion put it in TED-inspired mockery: “No mind will be left unchanged.”)

I grew up among Christian evangelicals and I recognize the cadences of missionary zeal when I hear them. TED, with its airy promises, sounds a lot like a secular religion. And while it’s not exactly fair to say that the conference series and web video function like an organized church, understanding the parallel structures is useful for conversations about faith — and how susceptible we humans remain. The TED style, with its promise of progress, is as manipulative as the orthodoxies it is intended to upset.

A great TED talk is reminiscent of a tent revival sermon. There’s the gathering of the curious and the hungry. Then a persistent human problem is introduced, one that, as the speaker gently explains, has deeper roots and wider implications than most listeners are prepared to admit. Once everyone has been confronted with this evidence of entropy, contemplated life’s fragility and the elusiveness of inner peace, a decision is called for: Will you remain complacent, or change? Jesus said to the crowds, “Whoever has ears, let him hear.” A skilled tent revivalist can twist those words to suggest that simply showing up to listen makes you part of the solution.

The process just outlined is rhetorically persuasive, and being party to it can be thrilling. As a small child I thought that my parents, who worked for an international Christian broadcaster, had boosted our family’s social standing through their commitment to spreading the word. We weren’t just believers, we were believing rock stars. I was perpetually antsy during church but also knew that some people attended services only on Christmas and Easter, and I remember thinking, thank goodness we’re not like them, so ignorant and apathetic.

So on a pure emotional level I understand the appeal of sitting in a darkened room as a speaker pulls you into a crescendo of conviction that you can and will improve — and more attractive still, that your individual change for the better will make the whole world better.

In the 1920s the French psychologist Émile Coué popularized the idea that success started with the repetition of a simple mantra. Twenty times a day you were supposed to tell yourself, as one translation put it, poetically, “Every day, in every way, I am getting better and better.” Prescriptions offered by many TED speakers are equally granular. The second most popular talk, measured by views on the TED site, is the one wherein Amy Cuddy of the Harvard Business School says that high-power poses — including standing up straighter, hands on hips — could “significantly change the way your life unfolds.”

It’s strange that this advice should have such a large audience today. (For one, it’s not really news. Studies on the effects of body language are about as old as the VHS.) Ms. Cuddy does make a fascinating case, as did Sheryl Sandberg in her 2010 talk, an early look at the “Lean In” theme, which included not one but three “powerful” pieces of advice.

TED talks routinely present problems of huge scale and scope — we imprison too many people; the rain forest is dying; look at all this garbage; we’re unhappy; we have Big Data and aren’t sure what to do with it — then wrap up tidily and tinily. Do this. Stop doing that. Buy an app that will help you do this other thing.

To imagine that small behavior tweaks are smart responses to big persistent challenges, like the gender gap in wages, is a stretch. These ideas don’t spread because people are rationally calculating the odds that they’ll work.

Perhaps the fact that there’s no intrusive voice from above makes this all more appealing than monotheism. Instead of sola scriptura, TED and its ilk offer more of a buffet-style approach to moral formation. I’ve talked to people who say they’ve happily dispensed with God, and don’t even find the general idea comprehensible. But a few, having announced they’re free of cant, spend many nervous hours assembling authority structures and a sense of righteousness by bricolage and Fitbit, nonfiction book clubs and Facebook likes.

I never imagined that the Baptists I knew in my youth would come to seem mellow, almost slackers by comparison. Of course they promoted Jesus as a once-and-done, plug-and-play solver of problems — another questionable approach.

If I were 19 again, and experimenting with sacrilege for the first but not the last time, I would heed some advice that was given to me then: “If you’re going to be an atheist, you should be having a lot more fun.”

But the truth is, now is a fun time to be a skeptic among true believers, since there are so many types of true believers to choose from. I sometimes wonder whether TED’s top 20 list will eventually morph into a creed, or whether, as in the early church, heretics will be asked to leave the party. I resist the urge to rewatch Ms. Cuddy’s talk, and stop myself from sniping at people slowing me down on New York sidewalks — people sliding forward tentatively, shoulders hunched, not because they’re tourists, but because they’re trying to move forward and look at their phones at the same time.

http://www.nytimes.com/2015/03/15/opinion/sunday/the-church-of-ted.html?_r=0

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=2842207&forum_id=2#27581346)



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Date: March 30th, 2015 11:07 AM
Author: startling clown

Cliffs?

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=2842207&forum_id=2#27581406)



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Date: March 30th, 2015 11:21 AM
Author: Balding Mediation Circlehead

that if you can't make it through 1 short NYTimes article, TED talks are unlikely to do anything for you

jk, they wouldn't do anything for you even if you could

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=2842207&forum_id=2#27581479)



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Date: March 30th, 2015 11:09 AM
Author: startling clown

We should start our own lofty talks and charge tons of dough.

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=2842207&forum_id=2#27581409)



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Date: March 30th, 2015 11:17 AM
Author: cobalt locale

TED talks are the modern Readers Digest: crap proles consume to make them feel "informed"

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=2842207&forum_id=2#27581450)



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Date: March 30th, 2015 11:22 AM
Author: amethyst stimulating old irish cottage heaven

devastating

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=2842207&forum_id=2#27581482)



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Date: March 30th, 2015 11:22 AM
Author: Yellow ticket booth

my stupid wife is a huge fan. that's all i need to know about TED.

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=2842207&forum_id=2#27581487)



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Date: March 30th, 2015 11:23 AM
Author: Balding Mediation Circlehead

yeah, if you want to know just enough to get brutally embarressed by someone who actually know what they're talking about,

TED talks are the way to go

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=2842207&forum_id=2#27581491)



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Date: March 30th, 2015 11:19 AM
Author: magical gas station

retardTED TALKS

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=2842207&forum_id=2#27581467)



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Date: March 30th, 2015 11:59 AM
Author: Fiercely-loyal Olive Market Gaping

Lol'd

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=2842207&forum_id=2#27581701)