| So what do we do with Megaphone Guy?
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| He’s not the smartest person at the party
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| Or the most experienced
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| Or the most articulate
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| But he’s got that megaphone
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| Megaphone guy
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| Some are agreeing with him, some disagree
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| But because he’s so loud
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| Their conversations will begin to react to what he’s saying
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| As he changes topics, so do they
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| If he continually uses the phrase «at the end of the day»
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| They start using it too
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| It’s our users who control what they see
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| (Making money making money)
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| Old technologies get confused with new ones
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| (Making money making money)
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| His main characteristic is his dominance
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| He crowds the other voices out
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| But who can polish information to the web?
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| His rhetoric becomes the central rhetoric
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| Because of it’s unavoidability
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| Host original content
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| Unfortunately
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| (Milliseconds)
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| When you use a search engine
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| (Unavoidability)
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| You will also find what is called «user generated content»
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| We consider speech to be the result of thought
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| But thought also results from speech
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| As we develop words towards meaning we discover what we think
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| The number one thing we do is give people a voice
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| This yammering guy has by forcibly putting his
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| Restricted language into the head of the guests
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| Put an intelligence ceiling on the party
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| Right, right
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| Thank you so much for articulating our business model
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| So what do we do with Megaphone Guy?
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| I mean, he’s here
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| And it pops you into the content itself
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| One thing I think you try to do is not be him
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| Which we all
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| Are |